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For
the 4,500 Jewish students at Boston University, Hillel is
the center of Jewish life. It is a place of study and reflection,
of worship and celebration, of quiet conversation and lively
parties, a place to visit with other students from throughout
the University and also from Harvard, Brandeis, MIT, Northeastern,
and other nearby colleges.
Young
men and women of widely diverse interests are drawn to Hillel
by its welcoming ambiance. Here they are challenged to grow
as Jews, in interaction not just with the directors and staff,
but also with their peers. From a parent perspective, Hillel
may be the last chance for the organized Jewish community
to promote Jewish values.
Boston
University Hillel is a home away from home, where students
feel comfortable and where they experience - some for the
first time - the wisdom, joys, integrity, and continuity of
Judaism as they prepare for their professional, family, and
community lives.

Students
get together at parties, to play on intramural sports teams,
and for bowling, ice skating, concerts, ski trips, and other
activities in Boston and New England. Special-interest clubs
include the Graduate Student Society, Jewish Law Student Association,
Maimonides Medical Society, Latin American Jewish Student
Association, School of Management Jews, and the Israeli student
society, Chug Yisraeli.

Hillel
provides links with a variety of community-service activities
and enables students to shape their own projects. Connections
to College is an award-winning program that inspires inner-city
students to attend college or other higher education programs.
Generations connects Hillel students with senior citizens.
Hillel students also tutor students from nearby elementary
and secondary schools, work on environmental projects with
Roots, and help feed Boston's hungry through Family
Table.

For
those who want to know more about Judaism and themselves,
Hillel School offers weekly classes in Talmud, Halacha, Weekly
Torah Portion, Judaism 101, Hebrew, Prayer, and other topics.
The Holocaust Education Committee, Boston University March
of the Living Alumni Association, and Beit Midrash Society
all build on students' previous Jewish education and keep
them on the path of lifetime Jewish learning.

Students
come together at Hillel for their meals because they are both
kosher and delicious, and also for the sociability. They enjoy
visiting with friends, meeting other students, and the frequent
opportunity to chat with faculty members.
Rated
first in customer satisfaction among all dining programs in
New England and ninth in the country, the dining program is
a model for other colleges. Representatives from other major
universities often come to observe the program and consult
Hillel's dining manager.

Israel
2000-Birthright is a free ten-day travel program in which
students visit Israel for the first time, connecting with
the history and future of the Jewish people. They return with
an understanding of their counterparts in Israel, who must
deal with daily life when peace is, at best, fragile.
Students
also learn more about Israel through special speakers on political
and cultural isses and through folk dancing, food, films,
and political action.

In
recent years the Jewish Theater Group has staged The Dybbuk,
Arthur Miller's Broken Glass, Neil Simon's Brighton
Beach Memoirs, and other plays with Jewish themes. Kol
Echad, an a cappella group with a repertoire extending from
classic Jewish tunes to Israeli rock, performs in Boston and
on tour, and will soon release its second CD.
 
Hillel is a varied, united community. Reform, Conservative,
and Orthodox services are held every Shabbat and for all major
holidays. Representatives of each minyan serve on the umbrella
Religious Life Council.
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