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April 26th, 2013

Adobe Photoshop PDFWhat will it take to ensure a vibrant and relevant American Jewish community? It’s the question at the heart of Rabbi Sidney Schwarz’s new book, Jewish Megatrends: Charting a Course for the American Jewish Community of the 21st Century.

In the book, Schwarz and 14 leaders from all sectors across the Jewish community explore the challenges and opportunities the American Jewish community faces as it adapts to a social landscape and works to effectively engage the next generation of American Jews. Read More »

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March 21st, 2013

Congratulations Jeremy Balkin! Jeremy, an ROI Community member from Sydney, Australia, was recently selected for The World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders Class of 2013 for his Give While You Live Initiative.  Jeremy Balkin

Give While You Live seeks to inspire wealthy people to give philanthropically during their lifetime. It began in 2005 as an educational tool for people with the means to give substantially and has since developed into a major fundraising vehicle

Team Schusterman spoke with Jeremy about his “Give While You Live” initiative. We also found out what makes him such as excellent leader, what inspires him and if he were a superhuman, what power he would have. Read More »

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March 14th, 2013

Jeremy Belkin

We are excited to congratulate Jeremy Balkin, an ROI Community member from Sydney, Australia, on his selection for The World Economic Forum’s Young Global Leaders Class of 2013. Other honorees include Chelsea ClintonRandi ZuckerbergWilliam James Adams (aka will.i.am) and Nate Silver.

Balkin’s “Give While You Live” initiative seeks to inspire wealthy people to give philanthropically during their lifetime. It began in 2005 as an educational tool for people with the means to give substantially and has since developed into a major fundraising vehicle. Read More »

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March 12th, 2013

Media Contact:

Jake Sharfman, Puder Public Relations Office: 212.558.9400 | Cell: 248.318.1072 | Israel: 077.444.7158 (ext.1) | Jake@puderpr.com
Tamar Fox
| 773-744-7204 | tamar@haggadot.com
Roben Smolar
| 404-745-9482, ext 5 | rkantor@schusterman.org

HAGGADOT.COM LAUNCHES A CAMPAIGN FOR PASSOVER TO CREATE CROWD-SOURCED HAGGADAH

The Neverending Haggadah is a partnership with Schusterman Philanthropic Network to encourage people to personalize their Seders

Los Angeles, CA—March 12, 2013 – Every year, Jews around the world gather at the Seder table to re-tell the story of the Jewish Exodus from Egypt. While some still reach for the same standard Maxwell House Haggadah, increasingly people are personalizing their Seders by developing their own custom creations. At the forefront of this movement is Haggadot.com, an online platform that allows people to curate and publish haggadahs.

This year, Haggadot.com has joined forces with the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Philanthropic Network to crowd-source a modern-day haggadah using Haggadot.com’s first-of-its-kind group collaboration tool. Over the next two weeks, up until the first night of Passover on March 25, individuals, groups and organizations are invited to contribute content to and download The Neverending Haggadah. Learn more here.

“Our group collaboration tool is a new feature on Haggadot.com that we are excited to share just in time for Passover,” says Eileen Levinson, an artist who founded Haggadot.com in 2011. “It allows multiple users to subscribe and contribute to one collaborative haggadah. To pilot this new technology, we asked the Schusterman team to help us reach out to their partners, friends and allies. We look forward to seeing the conversation that unfolds as people around the world contribute to The Neverending Haggadah.”

On March 13, at 1:00 pm EST, Haggadot.com and Schusterman will host a free webinar for users who want to learn how to host a more interactive Seder by curating their own haggadahs. For more information and to register for the webinar, click here.

Currently Haggadot.com has more than 230 contributors who have added a total of 1,500 pieces of content.

Haggadot.com works like an interactive scrapbook. Users can login, upload personalized texts, graphics and audio and video content, and mix and match pieces from other contributors to create a standard 15-part Haggadah that fits their unique interests. Haggadot.com’s intuitive user interface and design makes the process simple.

In addition to essays, commentary and poetry, Haggadot.com offers artwork, music and multimedia content. Among the clips on Haggadot.com, users will find:

  • Passover yoga poses co-existing with selections from a traditional haggadah from the 1500s;
  • Options for Ashkenazi and Sephardi families that include both traditions in one haggadah;
  • A haggadah with the central theme of the Four Children, combining artwork, a game, a ballad and a lecture by Rabbi Benjamin Englander; and
  • A haggadah featuring poetry by A. E. Housman, Langston Hughes and Yehuda Amichai’s ruminations on the Seder’s popular concluding song, “Chad Gadya” (One Goat).

Haggadot.com contains material in many languages including English, HebrewItalian, GermanYiddish and Ladino.

Seed funding for Haggadot.com was provided by the ROI Community, a member of the Schusterman Philanthropic Network, and the Natan Fund. Haggadot.com was also among the nine recipients selected for the pilot Jewish New Media Innovation Fund, a partnership between the Schusterman Foundation, Righteous Persons Foundation and Jim Joseph Foundation.

“Innovative initiatives like Haggadot.com ensure that Jews all over the world are more than passive participants in our rich heritage and traditions,” says Lynn Schusterman, Co-chair of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Philanthropic Network. “They enable us to take an active role in shaping our personal Jewish journeys.”

As part of its broader efforts to strengthen the Jewish future, the Schusterman Philanthropic Network provides young Jews with opportunities to create meaningful Jewish experiences and communities in their own image. This initiative is part of Schusterman’s celebration of 25 years of working to empower young people to create change for themselves, in the Jewish community and across the broader world.

Learn more and contribute to The Neverending Haggadah here.

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About Haggadot.com:

Haggadot.com invites Jews of all backgrounds to find their place in the Passover conversation through the seder’s central text, the haggadah. Users can upload, exchange and personalize haggadot gaining simultaneous access to classical texts and contemporary interpretations from their peers, creating more meaningful Passover seders and connective Jewish experiences. www.haggadot.com

 

About the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Philanthropic Network:

The Charles and Lynn Schusterman Philanthropic Network (CLSPN) is a global enterprise that supports and creates innovative initiatives for the purpose of igniting the passion and unleashing the power in young people to create positive change for themselves, in the Jewish community and across the broader world. CLSPN includes the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, Schusterman Foundation-Israel, ROI Community and REALITY.

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March 11th, 2013

Every Passover, Jews around the world gather at the Seder table to re-tell one of the greatest stories ever: the Jewish Exodus from Egypt. As much as we love tradition, this year we are giving the Seder ritual a new twist—and we want you to join us!

So, how will this Passover be different from all other Passovers?

Because we are forgoing ye olde faithful Maxwell House Haggadah! We are working with our friends at Haggadot.com to pilot their new group collaboration tool to create an online (and downloadable) crowd-sourced Haggadah. Are you up to the challenge for collectively creating a never-ending Haggadah? This is your chance to share content that will add color and depth to another Seder and also to find content that will make your Seder more meaningful. It’s a Haggadah of reciprocity! Read More »

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February 26th, 2013

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media contact: Jake Sharfman, Puder Public Relations.
Office: 212.558.9400; Cell: 248.318.1072; Israel: 077.444.7158 (ext.1); Jake@puderpr.com

ISRAEL INSTITUTE OPENS IN WASHINGTON, D.C., TO ENHANCE KNOWLEDGE AND STUDY OF MODERN ISRAEL

First-of-its-kind institute, to be headed by former Israeli Ambassador to the U.S., will support scholarship, teaching and research on contemporary Israel 

Washington, D.C., February 26, 2012 – A new institute has launched to advance the study of modern Israel in the United States and around the world. The independent, non-partisan Israel Institute will support scholarship, teaching and research in an array of academic and cultural disciplines—including history, politics, international relations, economics, society, culture, art and literature—to foster deeper, more multi-faceted knowledge of modern Israel.

The Institute reflects a growing interest in Israel and its fertile academic and cultural landscape over the past four decades, since the field of Israel Studies first began to blossom. Nearly a thousand faculty members participate in the annual meetings of the Association for Israel Studies in North America, Europe and Israel, and an increasing number of Israel Studies centers and programs are in place.  Moreover, according to a recent report by Brandeis University’s Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies, there has been a 69 percent increase in the number of Israel-focused courses at four-year colleges and universities across the U.S. since 2005. The study shows these courses are being offered on an ever-broader range of topics that go well beyond the Arab-Israeli conflict and peace process.

The Institute will help to meet the increasing demand for more extensive offerings about Israel across a wider array of institutions, especially within the academic and research communities, and will work closely with existing institutions. Ambassador Itamar Rabinovich will serve as President of the new Institute. Rabinovich was Israel’s ambassador to the United States and chief negotiator with Syria from 1992 to 1996. He is a renowned scholar on the Middle East, former President of Tel Aviv University and currently a Distinguished Global Professor at New York University.

“The State of Israel is an intellectual, scientific, artistic and technological hub,” said Ambassador Rabinovich. “Discussions of Israel, however, often focus on conflict, and while this issue merits careful analysis, there are other aspects of Israel worthy of study in the policy community and the academy. The rise of Israel Studies presents an opportunity to connect students, intellectuals, artists and policymakers to Israel’s vibrant society and culture and provide resources and relationships that can help the fruits of their work reverberate out in wider circles.”

The Israel Institute will advance scholarship and research focused on modern Israel by providing, among other offerings:

  • Doctoral and Post-Doctoral fellowships in Israel Studies;
  • Research grants for scholars, academics, policy analysts and independent researchers in Israel Studies around the world;
  • Visiting professorships on U.S. and European campuses for senior Israeli academics and policy experts;
  • Internships at Washington, D.C., think tanks for policy-oriented Ph.D. candidates;
  • Residencies for Israeli artists to teach, exhibit and expose audiences to the diversity of Israel in the U.S. and abroad;
  • Student fellowships in English-language Israel Studies programs at Israeli universities; and
  • Long-distance learning in collaboration with Israel’s Open University.

In addition, the Institute will foster academic exchanges between Israel and other countries; host conferences for academics, researchers and policymakers in coordination with top universities and think tanks; support educational seminars in Israel for university leaders; and enable the development and publication of books and other resources for academics and other interested parties.

In February, the Institute is cosponsoring a conference at Brandeis University on Zionism in the 21st century; in March, at American University on Israel Studies and Jewish Studies in America; and in June, the annual meeting of the Association for Israel Studies. It is also organizing its own conference in October that will focus on major issues and developments in the field of Israel Studies.

Moreover, the Institute is already supporting a partnership between the University of Maryland and Tel Aviv University to link the universities’ Israel and Jewish Studies programs and is collaborating with the University of Arizona to develop a professorship in Israel Studies. Internationally, the Institute is facilitating collaborations between Chinese and Israeli universities, academics and policymakers, bringing Chinese and other scholars to Israel in the summer of 2013. It is also participating in a broader effort to bring visiting Israeli professors to Oxford and the University of Munich during the 2013-14 academic year.

The Israel Institute’s newly hired executive director, Dr. Ariel Roth, holds a Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University, where he was the founding director of the school’s Global Security Studies graduate program. Dr. Roth has also written about Israeli security doctrine and the strategic basis of U.S. military support for Israel. The Institute’s Advisory Board and Board of Directors include renowned academics and heads of Israel Studies centers at leading universities in North America, Europe and Israel.

Initial funding has been provided by the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, a member of the Schusterman Philanthropic Network, which has been at the forefront of expanding opportunities for students to study modern Israel in academic environments that promote exemplary teaching and scholarship.

“We have seen a growing commitment to the study and exploration of Israel taking root across the U.S. and well beyond,” said Lynn Schusterman, Co-Chair of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Philanthropic Network. “The Israel Institute will be at the vanguard of advancing the field by investing in a range of efforts to educate and engage young people with contemporary Israel in all of its richness and complexity.”

Leading figures in academia, research and think tanks believe the Israel Institute will generate more comprehensive opportunities within their respective fields to gain deeper insight into Israel and will make significant contributions to enhancing the broader Israel Studies landscape.

“I applaud this serious, non-partisan effort to illuminate the culture and institutions of Israel through intellectual initiatives and collaborations,” said University of California President Mark G. Yudof. “There is a growing appetite for knowledge about Israel beyond the news of the day, and the Institute is responding with scholarship, teaching and research.”

More information about the Israel Institute can be found at israelinstitute.org.

About the Israel Institute

The Israel Institute works in partnership with leading academic, research and cultural institutions to enhance knowledge and study of modern Israel in the United States and around the world. Founded in 2012 as an independent, nonpartisan organization based in Washington, DC, the Institute supports scholarship, research and exchanges to build a multi-faceted field of Israel Studies and expand opportunities to explore the diversity and complexity of contemporary Israel.

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December 10th, 2012

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November 20th, 2012

Summary: Repair the World commissioned Teaching to the Moment: A Study of Immersive Jewish Service-learning Educators to provide a comprehensive look at the qualities of effective immersive Jewish service-learning (IJSL) educators and the training they need to continue providing deep and engaging IJSL experiences. Though this study focuses on the IJSL field, given that IJSL is a subset of Jewish experiential education, its findings also have relevance to the broader field of Jewish experiential education. Many of the skills, capacities and knowledge areas that IJSL educators need to be effective are shared with other Jewish experiential educators. The framework that this study offers for testing these competencies serves as a model that can be used in other areas of education.

Author: Dr. Shelley Billig, RMC Research Corporation

Download: Teaching to the Moment: A Study of Immersive Jewish Service-learning Educators

Download: Teaching to the Moment: A Study of Immersive Jewish Service-learning Educators Executive Summary

www.werepair.org

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November 19th, 2012

On November 12, the Human Rights Campaign—the nation’s largest lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) civil rights organization—released its first-ever index of inclusion within a faith-based community. The Jewish Organization Equality Index (JOEI) provides benchmarks for gauging, and resources for improving, LGBT inclusivity policies and practices of North American Jewish communal organizations. The entire report is available at www.hrc.org/joei.

The Index was intended to create a starting point for a broader dialogue about inclusion within the Jewish community. Read more about what has been written on the Index and join the conversation at #jlgbt!

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November 12th, 2012

We are very excited to announce the release of the Human Rights Campaign’s Jewish Organization Equality Index! It is HRC’s first-ever survey of inclusion within a faith-based community and the nonprofit sector.

Together with The Morningstar Foundation and Stuart Kurlander, we engaged HRC—the nation’s largest LGBT civil rights organization—to create a preliminary snapshot of how a broad range of Jewish organizations—from national umbrella and advocacy groups to local nonprofits and synagogues—address LGBT diversity and inclusion. For more than a decade, HRC has done a similar Index in the corporate and healthcare sectors.

Our goal is to push the Jewish community to prioritize inclusion of LGBT members, clients, employees and volunteers into communal organizations.

So without further adieu, the results! Read More »

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