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Masada College is an independent Jewish co-educational early learning, primary, and secondary day school located in St Ives, on the Upper North Shore of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Established as Australia's first Jewish international co-educational school, [ 1 ] Masada College welcomes students from diverse backgrounds ...
Massada College was an independent Modern Orthodox Jewish co-educational early learning and primary day school, located in Glenside in Adelaide, South Australia. It shared a suburban campus with Adelaide Hebrew Congregation. The school served students from Orthodox and Progressive Jewish backgrounds, as well as non-Jewish students. The school ...
Pages in category "Jewish secondary schools in Sydney" ... Emanuel School, Australia; K. Kesser Torah College; M. Masada College; Moriah College This page ...
The building is old and in desperate need of repair. Erlanger also said that a new site should include Massada College. [10] [11] The congregation purchased 1.2 hectares of land adjacent to the Glenside Hospital from the Government of South Australia for $1.1 million and with an estimated cost of $3.2 million for the project. [11]
On Sky News Australia, AJA president David Adler stated that there is a "crisis of antisemitism" in Australia after AJA received death threats. [11] CEO Robert Gregory stated that AJA is shocked at the level of support for Hezbollah on the streets of Sydney and Melbourne during a series of protests after the death of its leader Hassan Nasrallah ...
Pages in category "Jewish primary schools in Sydney" ... Emanuel School, Australia; K. Kesser Torah College; M. Masada College; Moriah College This page ...
The largest Jewish school in Australia today is Moriah College, Sydney. The Jewish day school system provides an excellent academic, religious, Zionist, sporting and social experience. In recent decades, the ultra-orthodox and Reform movements have established their own schools and community schools have also formed.
It was founded in 1948 at the University of Sydney and is affiliated with the World Union of Jewish Students. AUJS' constitution lists its four pillars as Judaism, activism, Zionism, and pluralism. AUJS runs social, educational, political and religious events on University campuses.