Categories: Judaism 101
Jerusalem Study Center Strives to Bolster Diaspora Community Leaders’ Torah Expertise
(JNS) In a modest room that serves as a Beit Midrash (House of Torah study) atop a large synagogue in Jerusalem’s Kiryat Moshe neighborhood, a group of Israel’s leading Torah scholars is poring over the Talmud, books of halachah (Jewish law) and other holy texts.
The Orthodox men studying in this special Kollel (an advanced institute for full-time Torah study) aren’t doing so just for their personal growth. Rather they are brushing up on their knowledge base of Jewish law so they can spread the information they obtain to other rabbis, aspiring rabbis and other individuals who are looking for structured Torah learning from Miami to Melbourne, and many points in between.
Meet the International Halacha Institute (IHI), an Israeli nonprofit organization founded three years ago with the goal of empowering future leaders of the Jewish people around the world.
IHI offers personal VIP-style online training in four languages (French, English, Hebrew and Spanish) for those seeking to advance their knowledge of Jewish law in order to serve as spiritual leaders and teachers in their communities.
Dozens of rabbis currently use the service, which operates under the aegis of Jerusalem Chief Rabbi Shlomo Moshe Amar, the former chief Sephardic rabbi of Israel.
In addition, IHI assists with the training of future dayanim—senior rabbis who preside over courts known as batei din, which adjudicate cases involving religious practices and other spiritual matters.
Such dayanim often offer rulings in complex civil cases involving litigation between two parties, for example in marriage/divorce, but also tackle issues involving monetary laws, Jewish identity, kashrut certification, birth and death, and many other topics that impact Jewish ritual observance.
During a tour of IHI headquarters, Dayan Avraham Ya’akov Dadoun, the founder of the organization and a member of a beit din in his hometown of London, explained to JNS, “In communities outside of Israel, there is no umbrella like [Israel’s Chief] Rabbinate. From an academic point of view, it’s frustrating for those rabbinic figures in places like Las Vegas or San Francisco who want to have the knowledge to be able to lead their communities in a proper halachic manner but don’t have the ability to do so.
“That’s where we come in. We have gathered the leading Torah scholars in Israel, who are able to pass on the necessary information, in all aspects of religious service, to these communities.”
“What makes IHI unique is that we have a whole team here in Jerusalem holding your hand along the way. Our specialty is catering towards the person himself, adjusting to fit his schedule in order to help get him where he wants to go,” said Dadoun.


July 10, 2026 





