Wayne Firestone Steps Down as Hillel Chief
After seven years as the chief executive at Hillel, Wayne Firestone has announced that he will be stepping down from his post in June 2013.
Firestone, who has worked at Hillel for more than a decade and served as its CEO since 2005, spent Thursday and Friday informing the organization’s top board leaders and staffers bout his decision to step down as the head of the international campus organization. He took over the organization after the much-heralded tenure of Richard Joel, who left to become president of Yeshiva University.
“The organization is poised to grow to a new scale, in order to accommodate the rapid growth in student participation in the United States that we have driven over the past several years (from 33 percent to 45 percent student involvement from 2005 to 2012, according to a formal study),” Firestone said in a statement to Hillel leaders and staff. “This effort will require strong senior leadership and new financial resources.” Firestone says he is not sure what he will do next, but said he wished to remain active in Jewish affairs.
In recent years, Firestone has pushed for more programming aimed at Jewish students who keep away from their campus Hillel building, by organizing and supporting activities at other venues.
Firestone’s tenure has also coincided with the rise of the pro-Palestinian campaign to get universities to divest from Israel and paint its government as an apartheid regime. Firestone has argued that exposure to Israel and Israelis was the most effective response to efforts to demonize the Jewish state. He has also attempted to position Hillel as both an unapologetic defender of Israel’s democratic character and vital importance to the Jewish people; at the same time, he has argued for the need to provide students with space to engage in open and critical dialogue about Israel and Israeli policies, and warned that today’s students would rejected efforts to indoctrinate them on how to think about Middle East issues.
Thomas Blumberg, chairman of Hillel’s board of directors, praised Firestone’s support for innovative programs, while also saying this moment was an appropriate time for transition. “By every measure, the innovative peer-to-peer approach he championed has resulted in higher student involvement with Hillel than we have seen in decades, and in many more students seeking to deepen their Jewish identity and skills,” Blumberg said in a statement. “Wayne led Hillel during a period of extraordinary innovation. Now that much of that innovation has borne fruit, we will – following the roadmap in our recently passed five-year strategic plan – move to a phase of bringing the new engagement approaches to more campuses and students and deepening them where they have already succeeded.”
Edgar Bronfman, a one of Hillel’s leading philanthropic supporters, was also quoted as praising Firestone. “He has led nothing less than a historic transformation,” Bronfman was quoted as saying in the Hillel statement.
It’s our birthday and we’re still celebrating!
We hope you appreciated this article. Before you go, we’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s independent Jewish news.
This week we celebrate 129 years of the Forward. We’re proud of our origins as a Yiddish print publication serving Jewish immigrants. And we’re just as proud of what we’ve become today: A trusted source of Jewish news and opinion, available digitally to anyone in the world without paywalls or subscriptions.
We’ve helped five generations of American Jews make sense of the news and the world around them — and we aren’t slowing down any time soon.
As a nonprofit newsroom, reader donations make it possible for us to do this work. Support independent, agenda-free Jewish journalism and our board will match your gift in honor of our birthday!
