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December 11, 2024
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Dr. Mark Hasten, Jewish Philanthropist, Businessman and Touro Chairman Dies at 92

(Courtesy of Touro College) The Touro College and University System mourns the loss of Dr. Mark Hasten, chairman of the board. Dr. Hasten passed away on Friday, February 28, in Indianapolis. He was 92 years old.

Dr. Mark Hasten was a visionary leader and ardent supporter of Touro. An engineer as well as an entrepreneur in myriad businesses, including banking, real estate and healthcare. Dr. Hasten long focused his philanthropic interests on education.

As chairman during Touro’s most significant period of growth, he helped Touro launch its western divisions in California and Nevada and was a major contributor to the establishment of Touro’s Lander College for Women, The Anna Ruth and Mark Hasten School, in Manhattan. During his 25-year tenure as chairman of the board, Touro’s student body doubled in size––from 9,000 to over 18,000 students. Touro became one of the leading and largest healthcare educators in the U.S., and its university system grew to 34 campuses and locations, mostly in New York but also in California, Nevada, Moscow, Israel and Berlin.

“Nafla ateres roshainu,” said Dr. Alan Kadish, Touro president, at a funeral held Sunday at Touro’s Lander College for Men-Beis Medrash, L’Talmud. “Dr. Hasten was like a brother to Touro founder, Dr. Bernard Lander and he was my mentor and father. He spoke to our students often of the four Ps necessary for success––patience, persistence, positivity and perseverance, and he exemplified all those traits. His perseverance to accomplish goals in his personal and professional life came along with a certain toughness. He led an amazing life and his brand of toughness enabled him to get important things done. He was tough when he fought the Nazis, liberated Majdanek, fought for Israel’s independence and talked his way into engineering school at Southern Methodist University when he could barely speak English. He brought that perseverance and toughness to his role at Touro and he led us through a tremendous period of growth. His toughness was always tempered with kindness, humility and a collaborative spirit.”

Fighting for Jewish Survival on All Fronts

Hasten was born in Bohorodczany, Poland, in 1927. He and his family survived WWII in Kazakhstan, where he entered the military. The young Hasten fought with the Polish brigade of the Red Army against the Nazis on the Eastern Front during WWII and participated in the liberation of the Majdanek Concentration Camp in Poland. In a displaced persons camp, he joined the Irgun Tzvai Leumi and was aboard the Altalena, the famous ship, which was sunk by order of Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion. Hasten joined the Israel Defense Forces in 1948, and participated for two years in Israel’s War of Independence.

From Southern Methodist University to General Mills And First National Bank

In 1952, Dr. Hasten married Anna Ruth Robinson and they emigrated to the U.S. in 1953. Hasten’s education had been suspended at age 12 by WWII and he realized he needed training in order to advance professionally. He enrolled at Southern Methodist University in Dallas and in 1959, earned a bachelor of science in mechanical engineering. He then spent nine years working for General Mills in Minneapolis, first in research, then as chief design engineer for corporate engineering. While there, Hasten invented and designed the products and machines that produced the bendable straw, Cheerios, Pringles and Bugles.

In 1967, Hasten was invited by his younger brother, Hart, to join his healthcare business in Indianapolis. Hasten insisted that the company be Sabbath observant. As the business grew, they worked closely with banks to raise capital. Eventually, they decided they would rather finance their projects themselves and they acquired a total of 36 banks under the First National Bank and Trust name. They divested their bank holdings in 2007.

The brothers worked together for 40 years and were partners in both business and community service. With no Jewish day school in Indianapolis, they decided to create one. The Hasten Hebrew Academy began with 13 children and its roster now numbers to more than 150. The school produced numerous illustrious graduates who are engaged in full Jewish lives.

Visionary Leadership for Touro

Always passionate about education and especially interested in higher education that offered a Jewish environment, Hasten joined the board of Touro College in 1977 and became chairman in 1995. He and Touro founder, Dr. Bernard Lander, were extremely close, sharing a vision for building from the ground up.

“My father had that wonderful blend of being a visionary and a person with the courage to pursue those goals,” said Rabbi Michael Hasten, noted educator and son of Hasten. “He really envisioned how Touro could be an all-encompassing dominant force in many fields of education and he realized that vision in his lifetime, while also creating a great opportunity for a young Jewish man or woman to gain their academic training necessary to pursue their careers of choice.”

“Dr. Hasten’s business acumen and expertise helped realize my father’s educational vision,” said Harav Doniel Lander, rosh yeshiva of Yeshivas Ohr Hachaim and chancellor of Touro College. “I don’t believe Touro could have developed into what it did without Dr. Hasten’s hands-on operational leadership and guidance as chairman of the board. He was a leader who supported the institution through thick and thin, who had vision, drive and tremendous ability,” said Lander. “He was a leader in business, government and education and always remained approachable, humble, warm and engaging.”

According to Rabbi Moshe Krupka, executive vice president, Touro College and University System,“Mark Hasten is a hero for the Jewish people, the State of Israel and higher education. He is the hero of people of good faith who wish to achieve on behalf of others. Touro exists to prepare our students to set and achieve goals, and then keep striving in their lives to be successful in their career and personal lives. Dr. Hasten saw what he created at Touro as incredible vengeance against Hitler and the anti-Semites he encountered early on in his life. He led Touro with tenacity and a force of personality that was unmatched.”

At yesterday’s funeral, Krupka recalled how often he had to get Dr. Hasten’s signature on official documents. Every time he made this request, Hasten put a big “bet hey” on the documents. He said, “Without Hashem’s name, these documents mean nothing, we will not be able to accomplish anything.”

Harav Yonason Sacks, rosh yeshiva of Touro’s Lander College for Men, Beis Medrash L’Talmud, spoke of the three pillars the world rests on––Torah, avodah and gemilut chasadim. He said that the Mishkan and Beit Hamikdash are microcosms of the world and these three pillars are absolutely essential for building them. He explained that any Jewish institution must also exemplify Torah, avodah and gemilut chasadim.

“Our yeshiva and Touro exemplify the world’s three pillars and the only way we and others can accomplish this is by positioning ourselves on the shoulders of giants,” Sacks said. “For us, Dr. Hasten was that giant who held up those three pillars for our institution. He had an unwavering commitment to Torah and avodah and a natural disposition for chesed.”

A Heart in Every One of His Organs

Rabbi Michael Hasten recounted the words of the family’s rabbi in Indianapolis who said, “Your father had a heart in every one of his organs. He gave money to Jewish causes when he had money and when he didn’t have money.”

Rabbi Hasten said, “My father had incredible gratitude to Hashem for saving him early on. After he was saved, my father was literally everywhere in Jewish history over the course of his life. The only thing he missed was Mashiach. Just a short while ago, he said to me ‘if we could just bring Mashiach now, I’d be the engineer to build the third Beit Hamikdash.’”

Rabbi Hasten recounted how much his father loved Dr. Lander and everyone at Touro and also loved doing chesed. He urged those at the funeral to do a simple chesed for another in the merit of Dr. Mark Hasten.

“Pay it forward,” he said. “Hold the door open for an elderly person, or invite someone into your home. Do something he would have done in his zechut.”

Dr. Mark Hasten truly lived a remarkable life and he always expressed gratitude for the opportunities he was granted.

Looking back at his life a few years ago, Hasten said, “I saw gehenom and lived Gan Eden…I’ve worked my entire life to create success for Yiddishkeit and for those around me and as a lifelong inventor and creator, I believe success is the mother of invention.”


Hasten is survived by his wife, Anna Ruth Hasten; his daughters Judy Kaye and Monica Hasten; sons Edward Hasten and Rabbi Michael Hasten; and his brother Hart Hasten.

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