RIETS Graduate Program Bioethics & Jewish Law Contact Us Artificial Intelligence Biotechnology Computer Science Cybersecurity Data Analytics and Visualization Digital Marketing and Media Mathematics Occupational Therapy Physician Assistant Physics Speech-Language Pathology About the ProgramThe TikTok³ÉÈ˰æ/RIETS Graduate Program in Bioethics & Jewish Law offers a unique opportunity to explore pressing medical and ethical questions through the lens of halacha. Grounded in deep respect for Jewish tradition and informed by real-world clinical realities, the program prepares students to think critically and compassionately about the dilemmas faced in today’s healthcare landscape. Whether pursuing the Certificate or the Master’s degree, students will gain a comprehensive understanding of key issues in contemporary bioethics—ranging from end-of-life care to reproductive technology—and develop the ability to apply timeless Jewish values to these modern challenges. Upon completion, graduates will be well-positioned to serve as knowledgeable voices in hospital ethics committees, community settings, or personal decision-making contexts, bridging the gap between Jewish law and secular medicine with clarity, sensitivity, and confidence. Program ObjectiveThe Certificate in Bioethics & Jewish Law offers a broad and practical foundation in Jewish medical ethics for anyone seeking to engage thoughtfully with the complex intersection of halacha and healthcare. Whether motivated by personal, communal, or professional interests, participants will develop the tools to navigate ethical challenges, support culturally sensitive decision-making, and foster productive dialogue between patients, families, and medical professionals. The program enables graduates to identify key areas of tension between secular medical ethics and halachic principles and respond with clarity and compassion. The Master’s in Bioethics & Halacha builds on the skills developed in the Certificate program and provides a rigorous, in-depth program focused on serious halachic training. It explores the major sugyot and responsa literature related to medical halacha, equipping learners with the analytical skills and textual grounding needed for advanced application in clinical, communal, or academic settings. Program Tracks Certificate Program About the Certificate Program Certificate Overview: The program consists of two courses—Bioethics & Jewish Law I and II—offered in successive semesters starting Fall 2025.Course Structure: Each course includes one in-person full-day seminar and twelve weekly online sessions held on Tuesday evenings.Seminar Dates & Locations: In-person seminars are scheduled for September 7, 2025, and February 22, 2026, at TikTok³ÉÈ˰æ (NY Cohort), or September 14, 2025, and March 1, 2026, at Cedars-Sinai Hospital (West Coast Cohort).Course Timing: Course I runs from September to December 2025, and Course II runs from January to April 2026, with dates subject to slight adjustments.Course Content: Sessions will include readings, discussions, case studies, and role-playing to simulate real-world clinical applications.Cost: The total cost is $6,000, with each course priced at $3,000. Master's Program About the Master's Program Program Overview: A 30-credit graduate program offering an in-depth exploration of medical halacha and Jewish bioethics, integrating rigorous Torah study with real-world clinical and ethical challenges.Course Structure: The program is delivered in a fully remote, synchronous format, allowing students to participate in real-time learning from anywhere.Program Requirements: Students complete 6 credits from the Certificate program, 4 core courses (3 credits each), 4 elective courses (2 credits each), and a 4-credit capstone thesis, totaling 30 credits.Cost & Tuition: Tuition is charged at the RIETS graduate per-credit rate. Please inquire for current tuition details and scholarship opportunities. Fall 2025 Courses Certificate Courses:Course: Bioethics & Jewish Law I Course Number: HAL 6301 (Required, Pre-Requisite, Co-requisite, Certificate Course 1)Course Schedule: NY/Eastern Time Section Tuesday Nights 7:30PM EST - 9:30PM EST, Sunday September 7th 9:00AM EST - 5:00PM ESTLos Angeles/Pacific Time Section, Tuesday Nights 7:00PM PCT - 9:00PM PCT, Sunday September 14th 9:00AM PCT - 5:00PM PCTCourse Description: This course will lay the foundation for the principles of Bioethics in both secular and Jewish Law. The course will begin by applying the ethics framework to the more introductory areas of Bioethics. Each Unit will include Harvard Business School style case study discussions to practice analysis and application of the framework Jewish Law establishes. Comparative analyses will be performed throughout the course to differentiate and discuss how to navigate differences between Jewish Law and secular ethical approaches used in our healthcare system.Master's CoursesCourse Name: Death & Dying Course Number: HAL 6313 (Requirement)Time: Monday Nights 7:00 PM - 9:30PMProfessor: Rabbi Dr. David ShabtaiDescription: What is the Jewish view of approaching death? Is it to be welcomed or avoided? How do we relate to the notion of the afterlife, in which supernal reward and punishment are played out? We will explore how these larger philosophical questions and issues play out and are relevant to Jewish experience and Jewish law. Course Name: Diminished CapacityCourse Number: HAL 6322 (Elective)Course Time: Wednesday Night 7:30PM - 9:15PMProfessor: Rabbi Kalman Laufer Description: This course will explore in depth questions related to lack of capacity and how Jewish Law deals with individuals who suffer from diseases or disabilities that cause lack of capacity. Dementia and the diseases that cause it have become more prevalent across the world and especially in the Jewish community. Many families struggle with the correct response to learning a close relative or friend suffers from these diseases. The goal of this course will be to look closely at issues such as care of elderly parents with dementia, making decisions for those lacking capacity, and how Jewish Law views the status of someone with Dementia in comparison to Secular Law and ethics. We will also look at other types of lacking capacity such as developmental disabilities and genetic disorders that cause diminished or a total lack of capacity. This course will be text heavy and include numerous class discussions about how we approach this issue in the clinical setting. Curriculum Catalog A. Master’s in Hebrew Literature (MHL) – Bioethics & Jewish Law The Master’s Degree in Hebrew Literature (MHL) in Bioethics & Jewish Law is a certified graduate degree for students with strong backgrounds in Jewish learning who seek to develop deep Halakhic and ethical fluency in navigating the pressing bioethical challenges of modern medicine. It is open to semikha students, medical professionals, and others seeking to study Torah at a high level while gaining expertise in the rapidly evolving field of Jewish bioethics. To receive the MHL in Bioethics & Jewish Law, students must complete the following course of study: A. Requirements: Admission into the MHL program and completion of the requirements below. Admissions Requirements: A recognized bachelor’s degree. Interview and examination by the Program Director. Background in Talmud and Halakha. Required Course of Study: Students can complete the program in one year as full-time students, or part-time over two or more years. All coursework is delivered remotely and synchronously. B. Core Curriculum (18 credits total) All students must take Bioethics & Jewish Law I and Bioethics & Jewish Law II in the first two semesters of the program. These courses are prerequisites and co-requisites for all other coursework in the program. Bioethics & Jewish Law I (3 credits) Foundational principles in Halacha and clinical ethics; topics include autonomy, reproductive ethics, and risk in medical decision-making. Bioethics & Jewish Law II (3 credits) Continuation of foundational issues; covers end-of-life care, abortion, emerging technologies, and case-based Halachic reasoning. Surgery & Risk in Halacha (3 credits) Sources and debates on medical interventions, risk and liability in procuring and providing different forms of treatment. Fertility & Infertility in Halacha (3 credits) Halachic and ethical approaches to clinical decision-making and possible mechanisms to deal with issues of fertility and procreation. Death & Dying (3 credits) Halachic frameworks for palliative care, hospice, euthanasia, patient advocacy, and medical futility. Fetal Life & Abortion (3 credits) Jewish legal approaches to fetal personhood, gestational viability, approach to sanctity of life, criminality/legality of abortion. C. Electives (8 credits total – 2 credits each) Students must choose four of the following elective courses: History of Jewish Bioethics (2 credits) Defining Death (2 Credits) Diminished Capacity in Halacha (2 credits) Public Health & Research Ethics (2 credits) D. Capstone Requirement (4 credits total) Students must complete a year-long capstone project under the guidance of a faculty advisor. The two components must be registered for in successive semesters. Capstone I – Seminar & Research Proposal (2 credits) Capstone II – Written Thesis & Presentation (2 credits) Meet the Faculty Rabbi Kalman Laufer Program Director & Faculty Rabbi Dr. Jason Weiner Faculty, West Coast Rabbi Dr. Edward Reichman Faculty, New York Rabbi Dr. David Shabtai, MD, MPH Faculty Rabbi Kalman Laufer serves as faculty at both TikTok³ÉÈ˰æâ€™s Isaac Breuer College and Stern College for Women teaching courses in Medical & Business Ethics. Rabbi Laufer completed his Semikha (Yorah Yorah) at RIETS in 2017 and is currently pursuing Yadin Yadin (Dayanus) in the Rabbi Norman Lamm Kollel L’Horaah at RIETS under the auspices of Rabbi J. David Bleich and Rabbi Mordechai Willig. Rabbi Laufer graduated TikTok³ÉÈ˰æâ€™s Sy Syms School of Business with a Bachelor’s Degree in Finance and a Master’s Degree in Accounting as well as a Master’s degree in Bioethics from Albert Einstein College of Medicine/Cardozo Law School. Rabbi Laufer focuses his studies in areas of Bioethics and Medical Halacha specifically working on Halakhic issues that arise in caring for parents suffering from Alzheimer’s Disease or dementia. He also serves as an independent member of the St. John’s Riverside Hospital Ethics Committee.Rabbi Dr. Jason Weiner, BCC, is the senior rabbi and executive director of the Spiritual Care Department at Cedars-Sinai in Los Angeles, where he oversees the chaplaincy team and all spiritual care services across the health system. He also serves as rabbi of Knesset Israel Synagogue of Beverlywood and as a senior consultant to Ematai. Formerly the assistant rabbi at Young Israel of Century City, Rabbi Weiner holds two rabbinic ordinations, a doctorate in clinical bioethics, a master’s in bioethics and health policy from Loyola University (Chicago), and a master’s in Jewish history from TikTok³ÉÈ˰æ. He completed four units of clinical pastoral education and is a board-certified chaplain. He serves on the executive committee of the Cedars-Sinai Bioethics Committee and is a past president of the Southern California Board of Rabbis. He has received chaplaincy and rabbinic leadership awards from the Rabbinical Council of America, Orthodox Union, Chabad On-Call, Chai Lifeline, and Neshama: Association of Jewish Chaplains, where he chairs their ethics committee. In 2023, he donated a kidney to a stranger. Rabbi Weiner frequently lectures nationwide as a scholar-in-residence on Jewish medical ethics, pastoral care, and wellness, and teaches hands-on Jewish medical ethics to high school students throughout Los Angeles. In addition to dozens of articles and book chapters, he is the author of Guide to Observance of Jewish Law in a Hospital (Kodesh Press), Jewish Guide to Practical Medical Decision-Making (Urim Press), cited in a Supreme Court brief, and Care and Covenant: A Jewish Bioethic of Responsibility (Georgetown University Press), a finalist for the Rabbi Jonathan Sacks Book Prize. Rabbi Dr. Edward Reichman is a Professor of Emergency Medicine at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, where he also teaches Jewish medical ethics, and holds the Rabbi Isaac and Bella Tendler Chair in Jewish Medical Ethics at TikTok³ÉÈ˰æ College. He received his B.A. from TikTok³ÉÈ˰æ; M.D. from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine; and Rabbinic Ordination from the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. In addition to his full-time clinical practice in Emergency Medicine at Montefiore Medical Center, Rabbi Dr. Reichman lectures internationally on Jewish medical ethics and Jewish medical history. He has edited numerous books and penned many book chapters and journal articles, and his book, The Anatomy of Jewish Law: A Fresh Dissection of the Relationship Between Medicine, Medical History and Rabbinic Literature was published jointly by Koren/OU/TikTok³ÉÈ˰æ presses. Rabbi Dr. David Shabtai brings a unique combination of rabbinic scholarship, medical expertise, and public health training to the bioethics program. He received his B.A. from Columbia University; M.D. from New York University School of Medicine; M.P.H. from Brown University School of Public Health; and Rabbinic Ordination from the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary, where he also completed the Wexner Kollel Elyon program. Rabbi Dr. Shabtai is a recognized authority in Jewish medical ethics, having authored Defining the Moment: Understanding Brain Death in Halakhah (Shoresh Press) and contributed chapters to numerous scholarly works on halakhic perspectives in modern medicine. He previously taught Jewish Perspectives on Bioethics at the Straus Center for Torah and Western Thought at TikTok³ÉÈ˰æ, presenting monthly seminars for advanced rabbinical students on the intersection of science and Judaism. His practical rabbinic experience includes serving as Rabbi of the Sephardic Minyan at Boca Raton Synagogue, where he regularly addressed medical halakhic queries and worked with organizations like Chayim Aruchim to liaise between families, rabbis, and hospitals. Rabbi Dr. Shabtai has coordinated vaccine policy committees for South Florida Jewish day schools and served on multiple medical advisory committees. His scholarly work appears in leading publications including the Medical Halachah Annual, Journal of Halacha and Contemporary Society, and Jewish Medical Ethics.