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Malke Bina

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Malke Bina, 2008

Malke Bina is the founder and first teacher of Matan Women's Institute for Torah Studies. She has a master's degree in Hebrew Bible from Yeshiva University. She is married to a rabbi (who serves on Matan's Council of Rabbis) and is called by the term Rabbanit, which is less common in Modern Orthodox circles.[1][2][3] Bina does not consider herself a rabbi and, at a 2004 conference of Orthodox Jewish Feminists, emphasized her focus on Talmud study.[4] She was interviewed by JOFA in 2006[5] and serves on its Council of Advisers.[6] She also pioneered women's reading of Megillat Esther on Purim.[7]

In 2022, Bar Ilan University awarded Bina with an honorary doctorate.[8]

Education

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Bina attended a Bais Yaakov school in Baltimore where she did not study Mishna or Gemara.[5]

Immediately after the Six Day War Bina went to Israel to attend the Jerusalem Michlala, where she studied Mishna, “and felt that it was a pity not to further expand my learning, now that I had been given a taste of the subject. I also thought that I would learn Gemara in the future. If it was available, why shouldn’t women do it?”[5]

After meeting her husband, Rabbi Aharon Bina and moving to America, Bina completed a Masters program in Bible and History at Revel at Yeshiva University in 1972.[9] It was in this program that she learned various sugyot of Gemara.[5]

MaTaN

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Rabbanit Bina is the Founder and Director of MaTaN, an innovative institution dedicated to furthering women's Torah study, paving the way for them to learn Talmud, Tanakh and Halakha at the highest levels, in a vibrant atmosphere that is open to diverse spiritual and intellectual perspectives.[10]

She says, “My goal was to open up an institution B”H that would welcome any woman who wanted to come to study. The dream was not just to provide adult education for women, including high level Talmud studies, but to create a strong beit midrash that would be a wellspring for future female religious leaders...We wanted the learning at MaTaN to be a mainstream activity for post high school religious women who would devote themselves to Torah Lishma (Torah for its own sake), not necessarily for a degree. I consider that it took 10 years for MaTaN to become mainstream and no longer be peripheral. Originally there were 4 to 6 women in the beit midrash. Now we have 22 women in a three-year Talmud program, and 20 in the Tanakh program. These are women from other areas of study who spend between one to three years at MaTaN...The emphasis at MaTaN is on study as a religious act, but always combined with high intellectual goals...At MaTaN we try to stress that learning should be new and fresh and exciting every day—the stress on hayom (today).”[5][10]

On August 1 while 90,000 Jews celebrated Siyum HaShas, the completion of the daily learning of the entire Gemara, at New Jersey's MetLife Stadium “a significantly smaller, but just as intriguing group celebrated the event in skirts, scarves and a spirit of sisterhood in Jerusalem.” The group of women were from MaTaN and Rabbanit Bina told the Jewish Press, “Baruch Hashem, we were able to finish the Shas… There were 15 completers for Siyum HaShas from Matan, about 30 women from all over Israel…some of the women were crying...It was beautiful. .”[11]

Rabbi Mike Feuer, Educational Director of Yeshivat Sulam Yaakov in Nachlaot, told the Jewish Press, “[Teaching women Torah] is definitely not the definition of the issur (prohibition] any longer…The world has shifted...This just needs to happen – it’s not forbidden even if it may not be recommended traditionally... I see a place like Matan as trying to carve out a space of respect for women’s Torah… The playing field on which men win each other’s respect is the Gemara, and this is the expression of old school feminism, which is that a woman ought to be able to do what a man does.”[11]

When asked why women should study Talmud Bina Responded, “Why not? It’s an integral part of what Torah is – the written law and the oral law. You write and you speak, why shouldn’t we be active participants in the oral law? It’s not logical...In earlier times, when women were less educated, and socioeconomy didn’t permit, it wouldn’t fit in with what was happening in the big picture of the world. But the world is changing...Torah also wasn’t permitted, until Rav Shimshon Refael Hirsch and the Chofetz Chaim opened it up for women. That led to the opening of the Beis Yaakov movement… Now oral law has become available.”[11]

JOFA

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Bina is on the Advisory Council of JOFA, the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance, a grassroots non-profit organization established in 1997 to educate and advocate for women's increased participation in Orthodox Jewish life and to create a community for women and men dedicated to such change.[12]

Bina was interviewed by Rachelle Isserow in an article entitled “Creating New Leaders: Interview with Malke Bina, Founder and Director of MaTaN” which was published in The JOFA Journal of the Winter of 2006. In the interview Bina discussed how and why MaTaN was founded, its mission, and its plan for the future.[5]

Bina attended JOFA's “Second International Conference on Feminism and Orthodoxy: Exploring the Impact of Feminist Values on Traditional Jewish Life” in In February 1998[13] and JOFA's “Fifth International Conference on Feminism & Orthodoxy: Zachar u’Neqevah Bara Otam: Women and Men in Partnership” in February 2004.[14][15]

Honors and awards

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Bina has received the following awards:[16]

  • In 2002 Bina received the Hadassah Women's prize for her important work, along with Shoshana Damari and Orah Namir.[9]
  • In 2006 Bina received the Honorary Doctorate from Yeshiva University for her work in teaching Torah to women, aliyah, education and social services.[9]
  • In 2008 Bina was honored as Emunah's Woman of the Year.[9]
  • In 2014 Bina received the Bonei Zion Prize.[17][18][9]

References

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  1. ^ Sofer, Barbara (October 2, 2014). "The Human Spirit: Being Malke Bina". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  2. ^ Sokol, Sam (October 7, 2012). "The Female Talmudists". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  3. ^ Ettinger, Yair (August 1, 2012). "Learning Talmud without asking for men's permission". Haaretz. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  4. ^ Nacha Cattan (20 February 2004). "Discussion of Women Rabbis Causes Stir". The Forward.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Isserow, Rachelle (Winter 2006). "Creating New Leaders: Interview with Malke Bina, Founder and Director of MaTaN" (PDF). The JOFA Journal. 4 (1). JOFA.
  6. ^ "Leadership and Staff | JOFA | Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance". JOFA. Retrieved 2014-01-04.
  7. ^ Miriam Kresh (14 March 2014). "Women Read the Megillah". The Forward.
  8. ^ "Rabbanit Malke Bina Awarded Honorary Doctorate from Bar Ilan University".
  9. ^ a b c d e "Malke Bina Biography". Matan.
  10. ^ a b "Matan's Vision". Matan.
  11. ^ a b c Fleisher, Malkah (August 5, 2012). "Women Celebrate Completing Daf Yomi Cycle, Asking 'Why Not?'". The Jewish Press.
  12. ^ "Scroll of Honor" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-05.
  13. ^ "JOFA 1998" (PDF).
  14. ^ "JOFA International and Regional Conferences". JOFA.
  15. ^ "JOFA 2004 Conference" (PDF).
  16. ^ "Malke Bina biography". Matan. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
  17. ^ Israel National News
  18. ^ "Western immigrants honored at Knesset award ceremony" Israel National News.