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June 4th, 2012
Cross-posted from BBYO.org.

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The numbers are in: dozens of gardens groomed, meals served, books read, senior centers visited, walks and blood drives organized, rallies planned and 92 communities in eight countries changed for the better this April as part of J-Serve, the International Day of Jewish Youth Service.

J-Serve, an event that began in 2005 as one day in April has grown to now engage a generation of teens to make service a continued and regular part of their lives throughout the month of April and all year long.

“In 2011, I went to my first J-Serve event and that event changed my life,” said Shayna Shulman, 17, from Detroit, MI and an avid J-Serve participant “I was surprised to see that many Jewish teens have the same passion as I do—volunteering! I’ve come back to every J-Serve event after that. I loved learning about why we are volunteering. I knew I was in the right place and that it was going to be life changing for me. That first day I volunteered with J-Serve was the day I knew I had to do more.” Read More »

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June 4th, 2012
10,145 JEWISH TEENS FROM 8 COUNTRIES SERVE THEIR COMMUNITY AS PART OF J-SERVE
June 1, 2011 – The numbers are in: dozens of gardens groomed, meals served, books read, senior centers visited, walks and blood drives organized, rallies planned and 92 communities in eight countries changed for the better this April as part of J-Serve, the International Day of Jewish Youth Service.

J-Serve, an event that began in 2005 as one day in April has grown to now engage a generation of teens to make service a continued and regular part of their lives throughout the month of April and all year long.

“In 2011, I went to my first J-Serve event and that event changed my life,” said Shayna Shulman, 17, from Detroit, MI and an avid J-Serve participant “I was surprised to see that many Jewish teens have the same passion as I do—volunteering! I’ve come back to every J-Serve event after that. I loved learning about why we are volunteering. I knew I was in the right place and that it was going to be life changing for me. That first day I volunteered with J-Serve was the day I knew I had to do more.”

In its eighth year, J-Serve 2012 engaged more teens in 6th through 12th grade, reaching more communities in countries across the United States, Canada and Europe than ever before, in an effort to encourage community building and establish connections among youth across religious and societal lines.

“I’ve always felt that it was more meaningful to do service with other Jewish teens, and felt more connected that way. I also was exposed to ideas like tikkun olam—things that I’d heard before but had flown over my head. But learning about them more deeply interested me, and has drawn me in,” said Ryan Ladd, 17, from Austin, TX..

Washington, DC area teen, Talia Katz, first found out about J-Serve when a friend was planning their local project at a women’s shelter, “It was one of the best service projects I’d ever participated in because with J-Serve, when I came home the experience wasn’t over. One of the pitfalls of most service projects is that they are just one time things. But this wasn’t just a “hop off the metro” and go serve project. We talked a lot about Jewish values and got updates about women’s issues from around the world,” said Katz.

Teens served at 275 community project sites around the world. Over the years, J-Serve has evolved to mean more than just service, but also service learning. In addition to doing physical work, teens explore the Jewish values of gemilut chasidim (acts of loving kindness), tzedakah (just and charitable giving) and tikkum olam (the responsibility to repair the world) through staff and teen facilitated discussions and post-project follow up and education.

J-Serve is a collaboration of the BBYO Panim Institute and Repair the World, and is generously underwritten by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation. J-Serve’s continued growth in new communities and countries can be accredited to the support of partner agencies including BBYO, Foundation for Jewish Camp, JCCA, Jewish Federations, Jewish Student Unions, Jewish Teen Funders Network, NCSY, NFTY, Rock the Vote, USY and Young Judea. As the Jewish service component of Youth Service America’s annual Global Youth Service Day, J-Serve was included in the recently approved US Senate Resolution officially designating April 20-22, 2012 as “Global Youth Service Day” (S. Res. 421).

“J-Serve is weaving a tapestry of stories into a moving narrative: thousands of teens united in answering the call to greatness by volunteering to repair their communities and our world. All of us who share a devotion and commitment to the Jewish future should be moved and inspired,” says Lynn Schusterman, chair of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation.

J-Serve 2013 is scheduled to take place on Sunday, April 28, 2013. To learn more about J-Serve visit, www.jserve.org or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/JServeForTeens

About J-Serve

J-Serve is the International Day of Jewish Youth Service and is a part of Youth Service America’s Global Youth Service Day. J-Serve is endorsed throughout the world by BBYO, Bureau of Jewish Education of New York, Foundation for Jewish Camp, JCCA, Jewish Federations, Jewish Student Unions, Jewish Teen Funders Network, NCSY, NFTY, Rock the Vote, USY, and Young Judea. J-Serve is in partnership with Repair the World and YOUTH SERVICE AMERICA and is generously underwritten by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation.

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April 18th, 2011

Cross-posted from BBYO.org.

This April an estimated 10,000 teens participated in J-Serve, the National Day of Jewish youth service. This year marks the seventh year in which Jewish youth from across North America, Europe and Israel have participated in J- Serve, in an effort to encourage community building and connections across religious and societal lines.

J Serve 2011 is the Jewish service component of the annual Global Youth Service Day of Youth Service America and is a collaboration of The PANIM Institute of BBYO and Repair the World. It is supported nationally by partner agencies BBYO, Bureau of Jewish Education of New York, Foundation for Jewish Camp, JCCA, Jewish Federations, Jewish Student Unions, Jewish Teen Funders Network, NCSY, NFTY, Rock the Vote, USY, and Young Judea, and generous support from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation. Read More »

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April 26th, 2010

J-SERVE 2010 MAKES AN IMPACT ON THE WORLD

10,000 Jewish teens aim to improve the world during day of service, Sunday, April 25

Jewish teens from across North America, Europe, and Israel came together for J-Serve, a National Day of Jewish Youth Service on Sunday, April 25.

With over 120 projects internationally, the teens participated in a variety of different projects that explored the Jewish values of gemilut chasidim, acts of loving kindness, tzedakah, just and charitable giving, and tikkum olam, the responsibility to repair the world.

Among the many projects this year were a wheelchair basketball program in Winnipeg, Canada, aimed at bringing awareness about athletes with disabilities; in Atlanta, GA teens participated in “My Own Backyard,” where their service focused on local issues, based on Rambam’s teaching “to your brother and your city shall you help first”; and in Northern Ohio where teens focused on helping the impoverished by making blankets and boxed lunches for the homeless and hungry.  Most of the community projects were planned by the teens in partnership with their adult community advisors.

“We were thrilled to be participating in J-Serve once again,” says DC J-Serve project coordinator Rachel Hillman.  “Having a day where the entire Jewish community can come together, setting aside our differences, to serve and lead is important to both the local and the global Jewish communities.”

J-Serve 2010 was the sixth year in which Jewish youth from around the world came together in force for J-Serve, in an effort to encourage community building and connections across religious and societal lines.

J-Serve 2010 is the Jewish service component of the annual Global Youth Service Day of Youth Service America and is a collaboration of The PANIM  Institute for Jewish Leadership and Values of BBYO and Repair the World.  It is supported nationally by partner agencies BBYO, Bureau of Jewish Education of New York, Foundation for Jewish Camp, JCCA, Jewish Federations, Jewish Student Unions, Jewish Teen Funders Network, NCSY, NFTY, Rock the Vote, USY, and Young Judea, and generous support from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation.

“All of us who share a devotion and commitment to the Jewish future should be moved and inspired by the thousands of Jewish teens who are volunteering to repair their communities and our world through J-Serve,” says Lynn Schusterman, chair of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation. “Through their efforts, they are helping to make service a central part of American Jewish life.” J-Serve 2011 will be on Sunday, April 17, 2011.

To learn more about J-Serve please visit the  J-Serve website, www.jserve.org.

ABOUT J-SERVE

J-Serve 2010 is the National Day of Jewish Youth Service and is a part of Youth Service America’s Global Youth Service Day.  It is a collaboration of The PANIM  Institute for Jewish Leadership and Values of BBYO and Repair the World.  It is supported nationally by partner agencies BBYO, Bureau of Jewish Education of New York, Foundation for Jewish Camp, JCCA, Jewish Federations, Jewish Student Unions, Jewish Teen Funders Network, NCSY, NFTY, Rock the Vote, USY, and Young Judea, and generous support from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation. www.jserve.org

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May 1st, 2009

Summary: J-Serve was launched in 2005 by PANIM: The Institute for Jewish Leadership and Values, in cooperation with the Jewish Coalition for Service, to mobilize Jewish youth across North America to engage in service to their communities as part of Global Youth Service Day. This evaluation of J-Serve 2008 was designed and conducted by BTW Consultants for CLSFF to increase understanding of J-Serve’s implementation and its impact on participants.

Author: Tina Cheplick, Cinnamon Daniel, Karissa Yee

Download: Reflections on J-Serve

www.btw.informingchange.com

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