The Latest From The Foundation

Dispatches from the network and updates from the Foundation.

"This is not the religious school you dreaded as a child," proclaims the website of Adventure Rabbi Kids, a Boulder, CO Jewish educational program for children.  "A unique weekday Hebrew school that works for your busy family" is how Atlanta-based Jewish Kids Groups Afterschool Community describes itself.  "We partner with children in long-term, project-based Jewish exploration, in a warm, Hebrew- and text-rich environment," says the publicity for the Chicago-area Jewish

Wilderness Torah led 150 people into the desert to experience the Passover Story. With thanks to NPR, All Things Considered, who broadcast our adventure. Click here to listen or read.  Zelig Golden is a current Wexner Graduate Fellow in Class 27 and the Founding Director of Wilderness Torah. A community Maggid, wilderness guide, youth mentor, environmental educator and attorney, Zelig has helped develop and guide programs such as the Jewish Vision

The dishes I planned for Seder would have gone well with rice, were it not Pesach and were I not Ashkenazi. Little potatoes would be okay, too.  But upon learning that quinoa is not chametz, I thought, “Perfect. So healthy, so organic, so trendy, and so pretty with its red curls, it could symbolize the Red Sea.” Standing in the pasta aisle of my currently-being-renovated Key Food Store, where they

Photograph of Judith Trijtel, 1943 by Annemie Wolff (Copyright:  Monica Kaltenschnee, Haarlem Holland) This is the time of year we tell stories.  At Passover, we are commanded to tell the story of our ancestors’ exodus from Egypt.  We recall the story as if we ourselves came out of Egypt, from slavery to freedom.  For the generation of Holocaust survivors and their immediate descendents, this story of oppression and liberation goes

On the Seder night, we have many textual and culinary contradictions that force us to hold opposing sentiments together in complex relationship to each other. We eat a peculiar sandwich of matza – the bread of our freedom – and maror with a small amount of haroset. The bitter and sweet, the slave and free human being, collapse into each other. We celebrate the release of our people from bondage

We asked our members, fellows, and alumni from all over the world to weigh in on the Israeli elections. Please feel free to add your responses and best visions for the future below. Mike Blass, WIFA (Class 14), Israel Now that the election campaign is over, and we know who will be the Prime Minister, it is a time to remind the new government that it will be the government

“Ladies and Gentlemen, the Prime Minister of Israel” and thunderous applause erupted.  And thus Bibi Netanyahu entered the chamber of Congress directly beneath my gaze. It was a spine-tingling, tear-inducing moment for many of us in the gallery. Not because we were ardent Bibi supporters, kvelling over his reception. Goodness no.  And yes, we chose to be present, unaffected by the regrettable Speechgate kafuffle which attended his visit.  The pomp

WHA David Rudis (Chicago 3-99) comments on the win-win merger of JTA and My Jewish Learning.  “The combined entity will touch more than 1 million readers monthly. Our board has made a priority of reaching and communicating with as many Jews as possible. We are a people who become a community with a minyan. 70 Faces Media (our new name) is a journalistic minyan.” David Rudis, a Wexner Heritage Alum

As the Wexner Graduate Fellowship Alumni (WGFA) Community continues to grow and evolve, colleagues are tackling more and more “Big Issues” in their local, national and international Jewish communities.  As we endeavor to do so, extra resources have been developed to fortify our Wexner community’s internal health and strength.  Thanks to The Wexner Foundation’s partnership with the Jim Joseph Foundation, a year-long mentorship program was launched two years ago to

Reprinted with thanks to The Jewish Theological Seminary. Please feel free to post a link to your shpiel below. The Shabbat prior to Purim, known as Shabbat Zakhor, takes its name from the first word of the special maftir (additional Torah reading) for the day, which retells the story of the first post-enslavement attack against the newly freed Israelites: Remember (zakhor) what Amalek did to you on your journey, after