AZA Blue Book 2014 | Page 14

THE FOUNDING AND EARLY HISTORY OF THE ALEPH ZADIK ALEPH TIMELINE The organization that was to become the Aleph Zadik Aleph came together in early . A group of Jewish boys in Omaha, Nebraska, organized a fraternity and named it the “Aleph Zadik Aleph,” using Hebrew letters in the style of Greek fraternities, which often excluded Jews. The group elected Abe Baboir as their first president and chose a local chemist, Nathan Mnookin, to be their first advisor.  existed mainly as a local social group until Mnookin moved to Kansas City a few months later, where he founded a second chapter. The first chapter was without an advisor until it approached Sam Beber with a proposal. Beber accepted the post under one condition: he told the young men that he envisioned the creation of an organization of Jewish fraternities that would stretch beyond the United States to encompass the entire world. Beber wanted the Omaha Jewish fraternity to be the starting point of his vision. It was with this intention that Beber called a meeting on May , . On this day, in the home of Harry Lapi1923 So many important events and occurrences have happened since 1924 that a timeline structure is perhaps the best way to understand the gradual development of the AZA program into what it is today. Fourteen boys in Omaha, Nebraska form the Aleph Zadik Aleph (AZA). Abe Baboir is elected as the first president and Nathan Mnookin is the first advisor. 12