Everything you need to write about Bayit Lepleitot accurately - facts, photos, logos, and boilerplate, ready to use under standard editorial terms.
Last updated · April 2026 · Press inquiries answered within 24h
The figures below come from the home's internal census, refreshed monthly. Reproduce exactly as written.
1949 in Jerusalem by Rabbi Naftali Rosenfeld z"l, a Holocaust survivor who lost his entire family in Auschwitz.
800+ girls and boys across four sister programs - the largest census in the home's history.
Bayit Lepleitot (flagship residential), Nivcheret (transitional), Bishvilech (mentorship), Beyachad (day program for boys from divorced families, opened 2022).
4,200+ children have called Bayit Lepleitot home over 77 years. Twenty-three returned to become social workers within the home itself.
75 continuous years - through three wars, ten Israeli governments, and three generations of the founding family.
Rabbi Naftali Rosenfeld arrived in Jerusalem in 1947 with no surviving family. He opened the door of a three-room flat to 24 girls in 1949. His grandson, Rabbi Chaim Elazar Rosenfeld, directs the home today.
SVG only - sharp at every size, light on the file. Clear space equals the height of the letter ב in the wordmark. Do not recolor, re-italicize, or set on a patterned background.
Full color, for light backgrounds. Use at 32px minimum width.
Download SVG ↓Linen on ember. For dark backgrounds and event materials.
Download SVG ↓בית לפליטות in Frank Ruehl Libre, our display weight.
Download SVG ↓Bayit Lepleitot in display italic. For headlines, ledes, and pull quotes.
Download SVG ↓Photos available for editorial use with credit 'Courtesy of Bayit Lepleitot.' No alteration of faces or context. Children pictured have written consent on file; faces of minors not in our consent registry are obscured at our discretion.
The home reads warm and quiet. These are the marks we hold to in print, on the web, and in broadcast - the same on a poster as on a Form 990 cover.
bg-emberbg-brickbg-copperbg-honeybg-linenbg-parchmentA home, not a shelter.
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Georgia · Charter · Times New Roman
Founded 1949 in Jerusalem. 800+ children today.
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בית לפליטות
Hebrew display
Frank Ruehl Libre
Three lengths, three languages. Each version mentions the founder, the year, the four programs, the 800+ children, and the third generation of leadership. English is canonical; Spanish and Hebrew copy is published as-is and may be edited for local idiom.
Bayit Lepleitot is a 75-year-old home in Jerusalem founded in 1949 by Holocaust survivor Rabbi Naftali Rosenfeld z"l. Today, the third generation of his family directs four sister programs serving 800+ children - girls in residential and transitional care, and boys in a day program for divorced families.
blphome.org/pressBayit Lepleitot, founded in 1949 by Holocaust survivor Rabbi Naftali Rosenfeld z"l, is a 75-year-old home in Jerusalem for vulnerable girls and, since 2022, boys from divorced families. The home operates four sister programs - Bayit Lepleitot (flagship residential), Nivcheret (transitional housing), Bishvilech (mentorship), and Beyachad (day program for boys) - serving more than 800 children today. The third generation of the founding family directs the home from Jerusalem, with satellite offices in the United States and Mexico. For three generations, the home has been known up close and trusted by the leading rabbinic authorities of the generation, who stand behind its work.
blphome.org/pressBayit Lepleitot - "House of the Survivors" in English - is a 75-year-old home in Jerusalem for vulnerable girls and, since 2022, boys from divorced families. The home was founded in 1949 by Rabbi Naftali Rosenfeld z"l, a Holocaust survivor who lost his entire family in Auschwitz and arrived in Jerusalem in 1947 with no surviving relatives. In a three-room flat, he opened the door to 24 girls in the first year. By the end of his life he had welcomed more than 800. His son, Rabbi Yosef Rosenfeld z"l, expanded the home through the second half of the twentieth century. His grandson, Rabbi Chaim Elazar Rosenfeld, directs the home today. Bayit Lepleitot operates four sister programs. The flagship residential home serves girls ages eight to eighteen who cannot remain with their families of origin. Nivcheret provides transitional housing for graduates moving into independent adult life. Bishvilech is a one-to-one mentorship program serving girls in their own homes. Beyachad, opened in 2022, is a day program for boys ages eight to fourteen from divorced families - the first time in seventy-three years the home built a program for boys. Together, the four programs serve more than 800 children today, with a waiting list of 240. Over the home's history, 4,200+ children have called Bayit Lepleitot home; twenty-three of them returned to become social workers within the home itself. For three generations, Bayit Lepleitot has been known up close by the leading rabbinic authorities of the generation, who have visited the home, guided it, and stood behind it. That trust - earned quietly, never sought through publicity - is what has carried the home for seventy-five years.
blphome.org/pressEvery press inquiry is routed to one person, so you talk to someone who knows the home. Out of hours, urgent breaking-news requests reach a backup desk in under four hours.
Devorah Frankel
Director of Stories & Communications
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