LONG READS Issue 890 · December 15, 2021

The Rest Is History

Dr. Henry Abramson believes in putting the past back into the hands of the people most connected to it

The Rest Is History

It has a glass door labeled “In Case of Emergency,” and inside is a manila envelope. You don’t actually have to break the glass, fire-alarm style, to access the envelope; he keeps a key in his desk. Now he jumps up to unlock it and display the contents: a transcript of his undergraduate grades.

Dr. Abramson, dean of Touro’s Lander College of Arts and Sciences and Machon L’Parnasa, takes it out whenever he feels it necessary to give a little chizuk and perspective to students who come in panic-stricken about less than stellar grades. “Academically, I only really took off in graduate school,” he admits, “I keep these transcripts handy to remind myself — and the occasionally dejected student upset by a C in Statistics — that one may emerge stronger, not weaker, from temporary setbacks.”

Despite one E (it didn’t stand for Excellence) and a few other academic blemishes, Dr. Abramson went on to earn a doctorate in history from the University of Toronto and post-doctoral fellowships at Oxford, Cornell, and Harvard Universities as well as a diploma from the Kiev State University in Ukraine. The author of seven books, he also claims the distinction of being the only author to have published books with both Harvard and Feldheim Publishers.

Mishpacha readers may recognize his name from one of his more recent people-friendly endeavors: He produces a daily two-minute segment for All Daf, the OU’s daf yomi site, in which he chooses something from the day’s daf — a person, a place, an animal, a form of labor — and provides the background.

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