Ron Dermer, Israel’s ambassador to the United States, will deliver the keynote address and receive an honorary doctorate at Yeshiva University’s 86th Commencement on Thursday, May 25, at 11 a.m. at Madison Square Garden in New York City.
Dermer has been Israel’s Ambassador to the United States since 2013. Previously, he served as senior advisor to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu from 2009 to 2013, and as Israel’s Minister of Economic Affairs in the United States from 2005 to 2008. He was also a columnist for the Jerusalem Post for nearly three years, and co-wrote the best-selling book, “The Case For Democracy: The Power of Freedom to Overcome Tyranny and Terror,” with Natan Sharansky. In his role as ambassador, he works closely with the U.S. government to foster America’s relationship with Israel.
YU President Richard M. Joel will also confer an honorary doctorate upon university benefactor Tzili Charney, who with her late husband, Leon Charney ’60YC, has given generously to Yeshiva and most recently committed $1 million to establish the Leon Charney Legacy, focused on Israel studies. She also supports many organizations and institutions in both America and Israel, including Haifa University, Florida Atlantic University, The National Project on Trauma, Disaster and Civic Resilience in Israel, The Museum of the Jewish People in Tel Aviv, and the NIAD Art Center in California.
Rabbi Dr. Manfred Fulda, chair of the division of Jewish studies and associate professor of Talmud at Yeshiva University, will be awarded the Presidential Medallion.
Rabbi Fulda received semicha (rabbinic ordination) from YU-affiliated Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary in 1959 and has served as chair of the division of Jewish studies for nearly three decades. He continues to teach Talmud at the Isaac Breuer College of Hebraic Studies (IBC) and Stern College for Women. A child survivor of the Holocaust, he was interviewed for IBC’s Names Not Numbers program, and often speaks at the university on the anniversary of Kristallnacht. He served as principal of the Samuel H. Wang Yeshiva University High School for Girls more than 50 years ago and has taught thousands of students throughout his career at YU. In 2002, the Rabbi Dr. Manfred Fulda Scholarship was established by Walter and Randie Lowenthal as a personal endowment for both Yeshiva College and Stern College for Women students.
“Ambassador Dermer, Mrs. Charney and Rabbi Fulda are sterling representatives of the highest Jewish ideals that are at the heart of the Yeshiva mission,” said President Joel. “I’d like to extend heartfelt congratulations to them and to all of our 2017 graduates.”
In total, more than 1,700 students from Yeshiva College, Stern College for Women and Sy Syms School of Business, as well as graduate students in the fields of law, medicine, social work, education, Jewish studies and psychology, will be awarded degrees from Yeshiva University during its commencement season. For more information, visit www.yu.edu/commencement.