As one of his current secular teachers, I can without a doubt say that never have I in my over 30 years of teaching been so inspired as well as given ample latitude to teach- to greet each work day with more passion and desire to be my absolute best. Our work place is sacred ground, not for the focus of the many students we have in attendance but for each individual. Thank you, Rabbi Sadigh!
Rabbi Sadigh is the best! Boca is lucky to have him. Rabbi Sadigh speaks from the heart through the heart. Ezra as a school really reached far beyond it's own students, but trickled to the wider community. ❤
To KNOW Rabbi Sadigh is to admire, respect and believe in him. His success is due to believing that change is possible. It’s a pleasure to have had him as my sons Rebbe and now to see and respect the impact he has and continues to have on educators, parents and students.
I can attest to how remarkable Rabbi Sadigh is as a teacher , mentor and person . I met him when he taught my son in YCQ He had 23 boys from one neighborhood and within a few weeks he had them in his pocket because he could relate to them so well. Being a big sports fan helped I have followed his growth and career I’m honored to call myself a friend
I went to Ezra with Rabbi Yaakov Sadigh. Everything he says about Ezra is accurate. What an amazing story. As usual your podcast is amazing and I love listening to it.
I met Rabbi Sadigh in 1989. We were counselors in camp simcha Far Rockaway aka Hartman Y. Very nice person , curious about yiddishkeit. Met him in Great neck 5 yrs later giving shiurim. Met him in ycq as principal.
Rabbi Sadigh was my first rebbi in Yeshivah at Ezra Academy. I still remember his shiur whenever I learn masechta Sukkah. More my own jokes that he loved, especially when I translated אינו סוכה as "it ain't no Sukkah" 😂 lol
It's interesting that he has no accent, Gad Saad (also Mizrachi) left Lebanon around a similar age (at 9) and still has a slight Arabic accent (you might not hear that it's an Arabic accent but he speaks in a way that sounds accented and (imho a great thing 😏) lacks the Canuck "eh" in his speech.
25 years ago I interviewed 3rd generation Jews all over the world about their identity. I happen to interview a Canadian man and it turned out that his family on his mother's side were from Iran. He told me how the grandfather was imprisoned while they were preparing to flee, so the mother made the decision to leave alone with her children. They made it out through Irak and it took them a year to make it to Israel where another year later, the grandfather was able to join. And while the grandparents remained in Israel, the daughter went later to study abroad where she fell in love and ended up in Canada.
Gentlemen, please take the camera off of autofocus and try to balance the light so that we can get to see the face of the person being interviewed. The camera focused on the light outside, which put the face inside the window into shadow. That's why you two interviewers are easy to see - the light is on your faces, not coming up from behind.
Mazel tov to ostad RABBI yakoov yaqoob sadeq sadigh best wishes from a Pakistani American lover of eretz yisrael 😎😉🇺🇸🇺🇸🇵🇰🇵🇰😘😍benei yisrael klal yisrael Shabbat shalom good shabbos shomer shabbos 🇮🇱🇮🇱🇵🇰🇵🇰🇺🇸🇺🇸
As one of his current secular teachers, I can without a doubt say that never have I in my over 30 years of teaching been so inspired as well as given ample latitude to teach- to greet each work day with more passion and desire to be my absolute best. Our work place is sacred ground, not for the focus of the many students we have in attendance but for each individual. Thank you, Rabbi Sadigh!
Rabbi Sadigh is the best! Boca is lucky to have him. Rabbi Sadigh speaks from the heart through the heart. Ezra as a school really reached far beyond it's own students, but trickled to the wider community. ❤
He really is the best!
To KNOW Rabbi Sadigh is to admire, respect and believe in him. His success is due to believing that change is possible.
It’s a pleasure to have had him as my sons Rebbe and now to see and respect the impact he has and continues to have on educators, parents and students.
I can attest to how remarkable Rabbi Sadigh is as a teacher , mentor and person . I met him when he taught my son in YCQ
He had 23 boys from one neighborhood and within a few weeks he had them in his pocket because he could relate to them so well. Being a big sports fan helped
I have followed his growth and career
I’m honored to call myself a friend
Shout out to Rabbi Sadigh!
An extremely special Rabbi and Menahel ( Principal) of the Day School in Boca Raton. Thank you for posting.
Amazing episode - Rabbi Sadigh, thank you for sharing your story and inspiring us all!
I went to Ezra with Rabbi Yaakov Sadigh. Everything he says about Ezra is accurate. What an amazing story. As usual your podcast is amazing and I love listening to it.
Thank you for listening! We hope you subscribe!
Thank you for yet another Remarkable episode. It gave me a lot to think about
Wow amazing job meaningful people once again! Hearing his story is unreal!
Thank you for representing the Persian story
I met Rabbi Sadigh in 1989. We were counselors in camp simcha Far Rockaway aka Hartman Y. Very nice person , curious about yiddishkeit. Met him in Great neck 5 yrs later giving shiurim. Met him in ycq as principal.
Thats so cool!
Incredible story.
What an amazing principal.
Loved this!
wonderful Mechanech!!
Rabbi Sadigh was my first rebbi in Yeshivah at Ezra Academy. I still remember his shiur whenever I learn masechta Sukkah. More my own jokes that he loved, especially when I translated אינו סוכה as "it ain't no Sukkah" 😂 lol
Amazing episode!
It's interesting that he has no accent, Gad Saad (also Mizrachi) left Lebanon around a similar age (at 9) and still has a slight Arabic accent (you might not hear that it's an Arabic accent but he speaks in a way that sounds accented and (imho a great thing 😏) lacks the Canuck "eh" in his speech.
25 years ago I interviewed 3rd generation Jews all over the world about their identity. I happen to interview a Canadian man and it turned out that his family on his mother's side were from Iran. He told me how the grandfather was imprisoned while they were preparing to flee, so the mother made the decision to leave alone with her children. They made it out through Irak and it took them a year to make it to Israel where another year later, the grandfather was able to join. And while the grandparents remained in Israel, the daughter went later to study abroad where she fell in love and ended up in Canada.
Gentlemen, please take the camera off of autofocus and try to balance the light so that we can get to see the face of the person being interviewed. The camera focused on the light outside, which put the face inside the window into shadow. That's why you two interviewers are easy to see - the light is on your faces, not coming up from behind.
💥😊💥THANK YOU🌈💥 SHANA TOVA❤violet Ada c. (Toronto ~ Australia) 🌳🌲🎄🦚🌲🌳🌳
Good episode, but the ads are becoming too long and frequent. They're also not relevant half the time to those outside the US.
great talk, rabbi. you boys need to do your research before the interview! keep up the good work
Mazel tov to ostad RABBI yakoov yaqoob sadeq sadigh best wishes from a Pakistani American lover of eretz yisrael 😎😉🇺🇸🇺🇸🇵🇰🇵🇰😘😍benei yisrael klal yisrael Shabbat shalom good shabbos shomer shabbos 🇮🇱🇮🇱🇵🇰🇵🇰🇺🇸🇺🇸
Jews in America should be like his parents and not like those that needed to cross deserts to get out... America is no different
Wait how do you spell the Machadis "the Persian moronos?
Mashhadi Jews
To understand a bit about the Mashadi story: en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allahdad
A lot were murdered for being Jews.