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  1. Connect With Old Classmates from Hillel Day School On Classmates.com. Search Classmates® For Yearbooks, Alumni & Old Sweethearts from High School. Register Free

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  1. Hillel Day School, named after the Jewish religious leader, sage and scholar Hillel, is an independent Pre-K – 8 Jewish day school in Farmington Hills, Michigan, a city in the Detroit metropolitan area. Founded in 1958, it became the first non- Orthodox Jewish school in Michigan.

    • 1958
    • ″Mind and soul. Better together.″
    • Rabbi Jacob Segal
    • Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit, Hillel
  2. www.hillelday.orgHillel Day

    The modern educational experience at Hillel, combined with a rich, deep, and meaningful Jewish education, grounds children with a strong identity and moral compass. These tools help us to fulfill our mission to “inspire a passion for learning and responsibility to self and community.”

  3. Welcome, and thank you for considering Katz Hillel Day School for your child’s education. At KHDS we have created a warm and nurturing environment where our students are inspired and empowered to reach their full potential intellectually, socially, and spiritually.

  4. Hillel Experience. Explore this section of our website to understand how the KHDS education is about so much more than academics.

  5. www.hilleldayschool.org › about-our-school › fast-factsFast Facts | Hillel Day School

    In September 1989, Hillel Day School opened in Boca Raton with 42 students. In 1998 the school moved to the 15-acre Milton B. Katz campus, in west Boca Raton, located adjacent to the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County. KHDS currently serves over 700 students from age 2 through 8th grades from Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties.

  6. Hillel Day School of Metropolitan Detroit 32200 Middlebelt Road | Farmington Hills, MI 48334

  7. Now entering its 66th year, Hillel provides an unmatched secular and Jewish day school education to Jewish children in the Detroit area. At a time when our children’s connection to Judaism and the State of Israel is being challenged in new ways, an ongoing commitment to Jewish literacy and Hebrew fluency has never been more important.