Thousands gather at Mets’ ballpark — for Jewish learning

The event, which the OU says is the largest of its kind in North America, offered 45 classes along with special programs for high school and college students.

Citi Field baseball stadium in New York, home field of the New York Mets (photo credit: LUCAS JACKSON / REUTERS)
Citi Field baseball stadium in New York, home field of the New York Mets
(photo credit: LUCAS JACKSON / REUTERS)
More than 2,000 people came to Citi Field in New York on Sunday — not to root on the Mets, but to revel in Jewish learning.
Some 38 scholars led classes on traditional and contemporary Jewish topics at the Orthodox Union’s second annual Torah New York.
The event, which the OU says is the largest of its kind in North America, offered 45 classes along with special programs for high school and college students. Among the topics were Jewish politics, addictions, end-of-life issues and #MeToo.
Rabbi Tzvi Hersh Weinreb, executive vice president emeritus of the OU, spoke about addiction in the Jewish community.
“Five years ago we had a problem with OTD (‘Off The Derech’), today it’s OD (overdose),” said Weinreb, who has a doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of Maryland, using a term for those who leave the practice of Orthodoxy.
Sivan Rahav Meir, a prominent political reporter for Israel’s Channel 2 News who became Orthodox as a teenager, addressed a session on new technologies and religious faith.
Joseph Lieberman, the former US senator and vice presidential candidate, addressed contemporary issues in the news.
“Congress has become more like warring tribes,” he said. “They have lost sight of common national goals and the Constitution. We may need to have a national crisis to overcome this before we can correct this problem.
“The behavior of public figures has an effect on dialogue and the behavior of others and our political leaders need to understand this.”
The event was held in convention space inside the Mets’ nine-year-old stadium in Queens.