Dr. Beth Sharon Samuels, a”h, was a gifted teacher of Torah and
mathematics, inspiring her audiences with her passion for learning and
life. She was born and raised in Los Angeles, California and was an alumna
of Hillel Hebrew Academy, YULA High School and Michlalah in Jerusalem.
During her high school years, Beth became an activist in causes of hesed and women’s opportunities for serious Torah study. She continued
to pursue these causes fervently throughout her brief life.
Her childhood education gave her a profound appreciation for a Torah-encompassing
life. However, she was not exposed to what she described as the “intellectual
immersion” into Torah study until she began learning at Drisha
Institute during her college years at Columbia University. At Columbia,
she also directed the hevrutah program, “ Wednesday Night Learning,” attracting hundreds of students to commit
to serious weekly Torah learning. She was active in Lights-in-Action,
an organization concerned with providing a forum for Jewish education
and awareness at secular colleges, and she spent time with YUSSR in
the Ukraine running programs for Russian Jews.
After graduating college, Beth studied full time in the Scholars Circle
at Drisha, in the Talmud and Tanakh program. She also served as an
auxiliary New York City police officer while she was living there.
At this time,
Beth married Ari Tuchman. Her pursuit of knowledge then led her to
earn a doctorate in mathematics from Yale University, where she focused
on
number theory and automorphic forms. She continued to teach Torah extensively
to the New Haven community, as well as to lead women’s prayer groups
and Purim megilah readings. As a graduate of the Drisha Scholars program,
she frequently traveled around the country as a scholar-in-residence,
including a memorable visit to Los Angeles in 2000 when Beth was invited
by the Orthodox Union to give shiurim at a number of Westside shuls for
Leil Shavuot. For two years, she commuted to New York City in order to
direct and teach in the Drisha high school program. Beth and Ari’s
family also grew with the joyous birth of daughter, Danelle.
Soon after relocating to Palo Alto, CA, Beth and Ari celebrated the
birth of their daughter, Natalia. Beth prioritized her time with her
family,
infusing her love for Judaism and her unwavering emunah into her home.
She became an assistant professor of mathematics at UC Berkeley, and
continued to be active in the ritual, intellectual and communal life
of the Bay Area Jewish community. Beth also remained continuously connected
to both women’s learning in general and Drisha specifically. She
returned to New York to teach both at the Drisha dinner and the new winter
week for high school girls and consulted on high school activities. Just
two months before she passed away, Beth was the keynote speaker at a
Los Angeles conference on girls’ education at Modern Orthodox
schools.
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