Situated in beautiful Western Massachusetts, University of Massachusetts at Amherst sits on nearly 1,450-acres. The campus provides a rich cultural environment in a peaceful, rural setting. UMass enrolls 23,000 undergraduate students. There are thousands of Jewish students on campus, including approximately 100 students who attended Modern or Centrist Orthodox day schools. Most Orthodox students live in the Central Residential area, Orchard Hill Residential area, or the Jewish Living and Learning Community on the third floor of the Hillel House. All of these dorms are close to the Franklin Dining Commons where Kosher Dining is located. UMass is very accommodating to Orthodox students: they understand when students miss class because of the Chagim and will work with students to pair Orthodox students as roommates, upon request. JLIC supports Degel, the Orthodox student group at UMASS Amherst’s Hillel House, and they work together to provide creative, engaging programming for all Jewish students on campus.JLIC coordinates a variety of learning, social, and religious activities for students. For students who are interested in maintaining the kosher kitchen on campus and at Hillel, there is a Student Mashgichim group where you learn the laws of kashrut and supervise the kosher kitchens. JLIC also ensures there is davening and meals for all holidays when school is in session. Orthodox Students experience Shabbat and Chagim at UMASS Amherst as active members of a warm, cohesive community. Each Shabbat, students daven and enjoy Shabbat meals together. On Friday nights, Orthodox, Conservative and Reform students sing Yedid Nefesh together before joining their respective services. The Friday night Orthodox minyan has around 30 students who each enjoy the singing and energy of the uplifting Kabbalat Shabbat services. Following services, Hillel provides a free catered Shabbat dinner attended by 90-110 students. At the beginning and end of each semester there is a student-led Friday night oneg. Each week, around 25 students daven at the Shabbat morning minyan that is followed by a kiddush, Torah reading and Musaf. After services, there is a free student-cooked lunch for the community at Hillel; once a month the JLIC Directors host students in their home for Shabbat meals. On Shabbat afternoons at Hillel, students hang out, take walks, play games, read, sing and learn. Prospective students are encouraged to visit for Shabbat at UMass where they can fully immersive themselves in the inviting UMass community. UMass Amherst offers a daily morning minyan during the week, and minyanim on Shabbat. Throughout the week, students can enjoy shiurim and chaburot in Gemara (Talmud), Halacha (Practice) and Machshavah (Thought), with opportunities to have student chavrutot, sing niggunim, and have one-on-one meetings and chavrutot with the JLIC Directors. Several distinguished Rabbis and professors visit campus to teach. Our campus, as well as the neighboring Amherst College campus is equipped with an eruv and a mikvah.

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Raffi and Ariella Leicht, JLIC at UMass educators


Meet The Educators
Students Speak

“Here in Amherst, we are blessed to have a tight-knit community with everyone who is involved in Hillel and OU-JLIC. Everyone is comfortable with each other, we are open, accepting, and genuinely happy to be part of a family-like Jewish community. Our OU-JLIC educators are part of this family. We are as comfortable with them as we are with each other. This campus is fortunate enough to have educators that want more than a day-time relationship. They want to enlarge our Jewish community with love and invest all that they can.” EITAN

It's True

The UMass library is 296 feet and 28 stories tall and is reported to be the second tallest library in the world and the tallest university library in the world.

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The Grinspoon Hillel House: UMass Amherst Hillel, 388 N Pleasant St, Amherst, MA 01002