Rabbi Yitzhak Kesselman, a 40-year-old Chabad Hasid and Microsoft's most senior ultra-Orthodox engineer, has been promoted to corporate vice president (CVP) at the tech giant. Kesselman specializes in enterprise software and leads Microsoft's "real-time data analytics" sector through a management product called Fabric. This software enables even non-technical employees to extract meaningful insights from massive datasets. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella highlighted the product's significance at the company's conference in May, describing it as a tool that will "fuel the next generation of AI services."
Now based in New York, Kesselman is married with five children and was one of the first ultra-Orthodox employees at Microsoft's development center in Israel. Born in Riga, Latvia, to a secular family, he immigrated to Israel at age 6 with his academically educated parents and grew up in a mixed Jewish-Arab neighborhood in Ramla. He attended high school in Tel Aviv and became religious during his teenage years.
Kesselman served in the IDF's technology unit as part of the academic reserve program. In a LinkedIn post, he shared: "In the mornings, I studied differential and integral calculus and data structures as part of the academic reserve, and in the evenings, I studied the Talmudic tractate Berakhot and Chabad teachings at the yeshiva."
After completing his military service, Kesselman worked as a development manager at the information systems company Retalix before joining Microsoft in 2013 as a product manager. In 2021, he left the company for a position at Google, relocating with his family to New York. Last year, he returned to Microsoft and was immediately appointed vice president of "real-time messaging and analytical platforms." From the company's New York headquarters, Kesselman now oversees a global team of 400 employees — many of whom are based at the Herzliya development center — and regularly travels to Israel as part of his role.... Read More: Ynet