April 15th, 2011

Cross-posted from the ROI Community.

This Pesach, when you are celebrating your freedom, with family and friends, take a minute and think of Gilad Shalit. This year he is in captivity, but next year, we hope Gilad too will be free to celebrate with his friends and family. Why don’t you take a minute to write him and tell him.

Last year, the Shalit family visited us at the 2010 ROI Summit. We spoke about how we could make a difference. Today with your help this Campaign (MeetGilad.com) can realize the vision so many of us had when we met with members of the Shalit family as they marched to Jerusalem last year. So please, join us. Write your message to Gilad, as part of the ROI Community, here. Sign up your own organization in English, French, Hebrew, Spanish, or Romanian (and please list ROI as your parent organization). Once you have signed up you will get a referral link you can share with others. Share the information available here about this campaign with others. See the other ways you can help. Get involved, get others involved, and between now and the anniversary of his capture in June, let’s make this campaign into a global success! Read More »

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April 12th, 2011

In March, we joined forces with Darim Online to host a gathering of the Tribe at the 2011 Nonprofit Technology Conference. Expecting somewhere in the range of the 30 participants, we were blown away when more than 70 professionals from national, regional and local organizations signed up, showed up and spoke up.

It was clear by the sheer quantity and quality of people in the room that there is a deep hunger for these conversations within our community. Indeed, our very presence indicated that we as a community recognize the important role technology plays in helping us achieve our respective missions—even if we aren’t using it as effectively as possible at the moment. It also indicated that we are ripe for learning how best to harness it for the betterment of the Jewish people as a whole.

But you know what else it indicated? That as connected as we are through technology, it also has a way of making us feel disconnected from the human experience. Gatherings like this remind us that Facebook is no substitute for face-to-face interactions—that it is when we are together in person that the most transformative partnerships are born. Indeed, they reinforce the importance of institutions, organizations and emerging initiatives working together to harness the power of technology to create new avenues through which large numbers of individuals can explore Jewish life in ways they find personally meaningful. Read More »

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April 11th, 2011

When the missiles and mortars began falling again on Sderot and other besieged Gaza-belt communities last week, social entrepreneur Nir Kouris went into high gear to give local teens a break.

He immediately approached ROI Community of Young Jewish Innovators, where he is a member, with an idea to find the funding to bring 700 kids to the Justin Bieber concert Thursday night. The Schusterman Foundation in Israel, The Morningstar Foundation, a private family foundation based in the Washington, DC area, and ROI Community responded with lightning speed. This enabled the entire project to move quickly.

“I feel blessed to partner with The Morningstar Foundation to counter the din of missiles and mortars with the exuberance of rock music for these young Israelis,” said Lynn Schusterman. Read More »

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April 6th, 2011

In March, Lynn generously made available two tickets to the attend The Points of Light Institute Tribute at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C. Points of Light is the largest volunteer management organization in the world. The tribute event celebrated voluntary action and honored President George H. W. Bush for his leadership in advancing the modern-day service movement. (It was H.W.’s inaugural address, after all, that invoked the idea of a “thousand points of light” in the national ideal of volunteer service and launched the organization’s mission!)

In order to win the tickets, we asked people to submit their best Tweet-able service-themed slogan. We got a lot of creative entries, both on our Facebook page and via email. The one we chose, however, came from Laurel Horn, an alumna of the 2009 REALITY Israel Experience for Teach For America Corps Members, who submitted the following via email:

“With compassion and awareness as illuminating guides, seek grace within grit, for it is in giving that we receive.”

Laurel teaches special education and works with at-risk kids at Thurgood Marshall Academy Public Charter High School with the D.C. Region Teach For America Corps. As her guest, she brought her fellow Scripps College alumna Erin Fry, who works in public health advocacy in DC and was a fellow at the National Academy of Sciences

They wrote a wonderful letter of thanks to Lynn that they are letting us share here …

Read More »

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March 30th, 2011

Adapted from the Lisa’s remarks during the 2011 Jewish Funders Network Plenary: The Power of Narrative to Drive Change. A version of this article also appeared on eJewishPhilanthropy.

It all started on a blind date in 1961. He was an hour and a half late. She was getting ready to leave when he finally showed up. Less than a year later, they were married.

He was a risk taker by nature, she a caretaker, and this unique combination was the hallmark of their lives together. She supported his gamble on drilling wells. He was in awe of how much she gave to those around her – from the tiniest victims of abuse and neglect who she accompanied to court, to her children and grandchildren, to him in later years when he was diagnosed with an illness that would eventually cut his life short.

When they were blessed with abundance, they established a family foundation that they infused with the same family values that filled their home: a love for Judaism, the Jewish people and Israel; a passion for repairing the world and for helping their hometown of Tulsa, Oklahoma. They viewed themselves less as grantmakers and much more as change makers determined to help create more vibrant, relevant, value-driven communities.

Nearly 25 years later, their foundation has expanded into a global network of programs and organizations that has impacted the lives of hundreds of thousands of people around the world. And yet the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation is still grounded in the same values Charlie and Lynn established with their initial investment. Read More »

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March 25th, 2011

The Wall Street Journal recently covered the Jewish New Media Innovation Fund in its Donor of the Day column, which specifically focuses on the New York metro area. In it, Lynn talks about why we decide to join with the Righteous Persons and Jim Joseph foundations to create the Fund. You can learn more about the initiative and the 2011-2012 award recipients at www.jewishnewmedia.org.

“Putting the Torah into app form and translating Jewish liturgy into slang are just two of the projects being funded by the Jewish New Media Innovation Fund.

The fund is a joint collaboration of the Jim Joseph, Righteous Persons and Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family foundations. Over $500,000 was recently awarded to nine projects, including funding of roughly $170,000 to four projects based in the New York area. This is the first year for the fund and its purpose is to support projects that use digital media to reach the under-40 audience and connect them to Jewish traditions.

“We believe it will help create new, innovative ways for young Jewish adults to explore their identities, connect with their peers and build strong communities,” says Lynn Schusterman, chair of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, one of the funders. “We also hope this initiative will result in the greater utilization and increased funding of new media tools and technologies by a wide range of Jewish organizations and individuals seeking to enhance, enrich and strengthen Jewish life.”

Read the rest on the Wall Street Journal website Read More »

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March 23rd, 2011

Cross-posted from The Jewish Week.

The Jewish Week’s Aaron Herman reports from the 2011 Non-Profit Technology Conference in Washington, DC. The Schusterman Family Foundation and Darim Online hosted an affinity group session to educate Jewish professionals in using emerging technologies more effectively in their organizations.

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March 16th, 2011

Cross-posted from ROICommunity.org.

Unmasking Micro Grants: Available from March 16, 2011

ROI’s new Micro Grant program is ready for lift-off before Purim! Starting from March 16, 2011 members of the ROI Community can apply for one of four types of Micro Grants. Without making a Megillah out of this, in short, each member of the ROI Community can apply for a Micro Grant of up to U.S. $1,000 per calendar year.  Applications will be open all year round and the process is both quick and easy! Read More »
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March 15th, 2011

On the Jewish holiday of Purim, we are actually commanded to be joyful and to engage in revelry. Our friends at G-dcast help us fulfill this mitzvah with their latest creation: a Purim tale that reminds us to “always have the courage to stand up for what you believe in.”

Sarah Lefton and the G-dcast crew are members of the ROI Community of Young Innovators and now a 2011-2012 Jewish New Media Innovation Fund award recipient for a project on which they will collaborate with Moishe House.

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March 14th, 2011

The 2011-2012 Jewish New Media Innovation Fund award recipients were announced today, to much fanfare. So much so, in fact, that the website actually crashed!

We too are really excited about the selected projects and the potential they hold for helping us learn how to use emerging technologies to foster meaningful engagement in Jewish life. The $500,000 in grants and technical support went to nine digital media projects designed to engage 18 – 40 year olds in Jewish life, learning, culture and community.

They were selected from amongst a pool of 300+ outstanding, diverse applications by a six-member advisory council consisting of experts ranging from the former Chief Digital Officer of MTV Networks to the current vice president of interactive learning and engagement for Teach For America. Read More »

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