Oholei Torah was founded in 1956 by Rabbi Michoel Teitelbaum and Reb Dovid Deitsch at Rabbi
Menachem Mendel Schneerson's direction. The school opened in a
synagogue in
Brownsville with a handful of students. In 1958, the school expanded and a kindergarten for young boys was introduced. In 1964, Oholei Torah added a junior high school division, followed several years later by Oholei Torah
Mesivta High School. The
Beis HaMedrash, Talmudic Seminary Oholei Torah was founded in 1970, for post-high school Talmudic studies. In 1975, the school began renting space for the elementary classes at the Brooklyn Jewish Center at 667
Eastern Parkway, built in 1920, and purchased the building outright in 1982. Beginning in 1997, the building underwent a major expansion, with a new wing (known as the Deitsch Campus, after the school's major financial patron Dovid Deitsch) and a study hall for the Talmudical Seminary. In 1994, the elementary school was renamed "Oholei Menachem" in honor of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, though the old name persists in general usage. Today Oholei Torah enrolls approximately 1600 students in its various divisions. In 2016, the school was the subject of an exposé in
Newsweek for its decades long history of failing to fire teachers who physically abused and molested students. ==Divisions==