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Explore every episode of the podcast The Bridging Connections Podcast

Dive into the complete episode list for The Bridging Connections Podcast. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.

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TitlePub. DateDuration
Jewish Engagement Through Farmers / Modern Farmers Ancient Wisdom26 May 202300:36:45

Jewish Farmers Network (JFN)

Featuring: Shani Minsk, Co-Founder and Executive Director 
Jewish Farmer Network mobilizes Jewish agricultural wisdom to build a more just and regenerative food system for all. We connect Jewish farmers to each other and to the surprisingly relevant technologies, rhythms, and ethics of Jewish agriculture. We believe that a vibrant future for people, plants, and planet will be shaped by farmers, gardeners, and growers of all kinds. We are the AND that connects your story to the story of the Jewish people. 

 Their Mission : 

Jewish Farmer Network supports the economic, social, and cultural vibrancy of Jewish agriculture by connecting Jewish farmers to resources and community around the world. We mobilize Jewish wisdom to build a more just and regenerative food system for all.

 Their vision

We are building a world in which Jewish farmers are not regarded as an oxymoron or a curiosity, but rather, as valued community members with a unique connection to Judaism's ancient technologies for building a more just and regenerative food system for all. We envision a world in which all Jewish individuals and communities have access to farms and gardens that connect them to both the agricultural roots of Judaism and the timeless food justice principles contained therein. We envision a world in which any Jewish individual with the desire to both live a land-based life and be a part of Jewish community life has the technical, economic, social, and cultural resources to do so. We envision a world of social and ecological justice, where life in all forms is honored. We envision a world in which Jewish Farmers are a collaborative force for the collective liberation of all land and all peoples.

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Ethical Treatment of Animals05 May 202300:45:58

JIFA: Jewish Initiative for Animals
Featuring: Rabbi Jonathan Bernhard, Executive Director and Melissa Hoffman, Director of Programs

The Jewish Initiative for Animals supports innovative programs to turn the Jewish value of compassion for animals into action while building ethical and sustainable Jewish American communities in the process.

Jewish tradition urges us to keep a healthy skepticism about the sourcing of our goods and strive for ethical consumption. JIFA is ready to work with your community to help you establish your own values-based food practices.

We support Jewish community education for all ages through curriculum development, direct teaching, and partnerships with organizations that disseminate materials and promote learning about Jewish values and our food system.

JIFA’s Values:

Promoting compassion and preventing suffering to animals — in Jewish tradition, a core value called tza’ar ba’alei chayim (literally: the suffering of living creatures) — is central to our work to build a better food system

  • Climate and the environment - Bal tashchit and sh’mirat ha’adamah — the prohibition against destruction/waste and the imperative to protect our Earth — are cornerstones of JIFA’s work to end factory farming.
  • Food justice- We find our most ancient model for food justice in the laws of shmita, which Jewish communities have revived with renewed significance in recent years
  • Racial justice - We know that the structures that perpetuate factory farming are inextricably linked with those that perpetuate racist oppression and violence. To create meaningful change in our food system we must also help to build an anti-racist animal protection movement.
  • Inclusivity- Reflecting broadly held values — and serving food that everyone can eat — promotes inclusivity in gatherings and strengthens our Jewish community
  • Kosher- Kosher is a quintessentially Jewish concept to describe what is “fit,” including the food we eat

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Healing in the Wilderness21 Oct 202200:31:55

BaMidbar 

Featuring: Jory Hanselman Mayschak, Founder and CEO

Through a variety of modalities, BaMidbar supports mental health and wellness and envisions a Jewish community that actively supports its members in building the resilience to thrive.

BaMidbar  has a 6-14 week summer residential therapeutic program that focuses on using the environment to support skill building and self exploration while bringing in Jewish tradition and storytelling to explore meaning, values and purpose. They employ a multidisciplinary approach which integrates experiential education, Jewish learning, and mental health frameworks. Bamidbar focuses on four core outcomes:

  1. Improve mental health
  2. Boost resilience
  3. Strengthen circle of support (family, peers, mental health professionals)
  4. Increase understanding of how Judaism supports mental well being

Additionally, BaMidbar offers mental health and wellness retreats, fellowships and internships and partners with a variety of organizations to offer prevention programs, and create custom programs. Their programs are based on prevention, education and treatment.

BaMidbar’s mission is to ensure that Jewish youth and young adults have the confidence, skills, and community support to navigate life’s challenges and thrive in the face of adversity.

BaMidbar envisions a Jewish community that actively supports its members in cultivating mental health and wellness.

They achieve the mission and vision through community education and by providing wilderness-based journeys of self-discovery, hope, and healing. 

Their programs support and provide:

  •  Jewish young adults struggling with mental health challenges through immersive, wilderness-based, Therapeutic Expeditions.
  • All Jewish teens and young adults, regardless of their mental health history, through Wellness Programs focused on building resilience through increased self-confidence, skill-building, and healthy relationships.
  • Professional Development for Jewish community professionals looking to expand their mental health literacy and explore facilitation through the lens of social and emotional growth.

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Baking Bread As An Act of Love07 Oct 202200:39:06
Challah Back Girls

Featuring: CoFounders Sara Loffman and Marni Loffman

It’s amazing what beautiful things can come out of uncertainty and isolation. The four Loffman Siblings, Elana, Hannah, Marni and Sara, found themselves all back at home together at the beginning of the pandemic. This togetherness brought them to baking challah. Although the challah was initially for family and friends it soon turned into making food and challah for the hard working health care teams in the emergency rooms. 

They quickly realized that they had a marketable skill although they didn’t feel right to start a business at such an ominous time. The siblings saw the need to help change the landscape of our country and work toward a more equitable world. They felt called to do their part in the struggle for racial justice; to stand up for diversity, equity and inclusion. Hence, Challah Back Girls was formed. Challah Back Girls has become a symbol of ritual and togetherness. “Each strand of challah makes up a different layers of who each of us are, all the strands of challah come together as one., explains Sara. Now challah is shared weekly across the states in an effort to support those working toward social equality and racial justice. The Challah Back Girls work to amplify the voices of organizations that are advancing word and therefore living the value of tikkun olam.

The Loffmans were raised on values of community and shared food combined with Jewish observance and Jewish connectedness. Their family life was based on sharing meaningful moments around Jewish holidays and traditions. This makes for a seamless transition to creating this  platform of education, awareness raising and advocacy through challah.


The Mission

Challah Back Girls fundraises for, supports, and uplifts organizations leading racial equity work by connecting people to the Jewish ritual of challah—a traditionally braided bread. Through sharing this Jewish tradition, we provide an educational opportunity for healing and transforming social and racial injustice. 

The Vision

Our dream is to create collaboration and mutual support across minority communities through the power of food and ritual. We hope to use Challah as a thread that weaves together people from diverse backgrounds, so we can share histories and stories, to support and amplify each other’s work for social change.

Enjoy 20% off  delicious challah between now and Oct 31st with the code CHALLAHBRIDGES.

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



The Kibbutz Reimagined30 Sep 202200:44:30

Living Tree Alliance

Featuring: Co-Founders Koehenet Sephira Oshkello and Melanie Kessler

Meaningful Earth-Based Living
Living Tree is a modern kibbutz-inspired community designed for joyful, adventurous earth-based living in Vermont’s great outdoors. They are a cohousing curator, event producer, and education center dedicated to connecting participants to self, community, earth and spirit through homesteading, camping, celebrations, festivals and enrichment programs. They welcome residents, guests, students, families, and groups of all ages and backgrounds.

Their mission is to create, evolve, and manage a thriving earth-based intentional community with universal Jewish values for individuals and families of all backgrounds seeking greater connection, meaning and purpose in life.

The Seven Pillars of Living Tree Alliance: Decisions and actions in all circles of their organization are grounded in these principles. 

1. Regenerative Resiliency
We prioritize our ecological community in our thinking, acting and reflecting.

2. Service
We practice tzedakah (charity) and gemilut chassidim (acts of loving kindness) in work, hospitality, and economy.

3. Social Justice
We are informed by Jewish ethics and are committed to education, civic engagement and nonviolent communication.

4. Inner Work
We bring mindfulness, compassion & understanding to the cultivation of emotional, mental, physical, & spiritual well being.

5. Joy, Gratitude, and Celebration
We keep time to appreciate life each day, refrain from work on Shabbat and celebrate life cycle events with joy.

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Tzedakah at Its Best09 Sep 202200:24:23

Jewish Free Loan Chicago

Featuring: Leah Greenblum, Founder and Executive Director

In the Middle Ages Moises Maimonides (1), great philosopher, physician and rabbi, outlined eight levels of tzedakah (charitable giving). He describe the highest form of giving is to give a gift, loan, or partnership that will result in the recipient becoming self-sufficient instead of living upon others. Jewish Free Loan Chicago is embodying this level of giving in an effort to engage people to help those in need. 

Jewish Free Loan Chicago’s mission is to help Chicagoans discover small personal loans with zero-interest, in an effort to cut out the need for predatory lending, often in the form of risky payday loans and car title loans.

At Jewish Free Loan Chicago, people of all backgrounds can discover personal loans that are fast, easy, and accessible to anyone in the Chicagoland area. 

What is a Jewish Free Loan?

An age-old tradition recrafted for the 21st century, a Jewish free loan is a small personal loan that is interest-free and can be paid back on a timeline that meets each borrower’s individual needs.

Where do interest-free loans come from?

Rooted in teachings from the Torah and sages, Jewish free loans are a time-honored tradition in the U.S. and beyond. In fact, most U.S. cities play host to at least one Jewish or Hebrew Free Loan agency. Unlike JFLC, some Jewish loan societies cater only to the needs of the Jewish community and do not have income caps. JFLC serves low- to moderate-income people of all backgrounds who need access to capital.

Loan Possibilities 

JFLC borrowers’ financial status can be wide-ranging, and their potential financial needs can also run the gamut, including:

  • General expenses: transportation, technology, and debt consolidation
  • Employment: job-search, initial costs (transportation/relocation), job training
  • Healthcare: medical, mental, and dental
  • Women & children: childcare, education, fertility, adoption
  • Legal fees: divorce, immigration, discrimination
  • Education: tuition, supplies

Jewish Free Loan Chicago is part of the International Association of Jewish Free Loans, a large network of 50 related organizations.

  1. https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/moses-maimonides-rambam

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Living Well26 Aug 202200:30:23

Shomer Collective
Featuring: Rabbi Melanie Levav,  Executive Director
Inspiring End-of-Life Conversations and Experiences, Guided by Jewish Values

Who am I? What’s the meaning of life? What’s my legacy? What do I have left in the next portion in my life? These are all age old questions. Quite possible you have contemplated some of these in during your lifetime. These are questions that our sages have questioning for years. There is deep Jewish wisdom that we can find from the sages that will help us decipher some of these questions for ourselves. This helps us realize that we are not alone. 

Shomer Collective’s mission is to improve end-of-life experiences for individuals and their families— inspired by Jewish wisdom, values, and practices—by curating content and resources and building a diverse network of organizational partners.

Shomer Collective envisions a world where end-of-life matters are spoken about openly, thoughtfully and frequently creating more opportunities for folks to engage with Jewish wisdom values and practices. Having these conversations and experiences can be transformational not only for the individual but also the whole family. 

In the Jewish tradition we say to mourners “May you be comforted among the other mourners.” This reminds us that you are not sitting shiva alone, you’re part of the interconnected community that goes beyond the shiva house.

They do this through 4 roles: concierge, curator, convenor and change agent. Through the roles they hope to: 

  • Empower individuals as they plan for and/or confront death for themselves and loved ones.
  •  Make Jewish wisdom and expertise in end-of-life matters more accessible through referrals, teaching, counseling, and curation of learning experiences.
  • Spark innovation and culture change inside and beyond Jewish institutions, so that organizations will recognize that end of life is a lifecycle moment that can meaningfully engage people Jewishly.

The word Shomer means guardian; in Jewish tradition, a shomer guards over the body of the deceased from the time of death until the time of burial, accompanying the soul on the beginning of its journey in separating from the body. Shomer Collective seeks to accompany individuals and families as they confront and plan for end of life by curating partners and resources that lift up Jewish wisdom, values, and practices. 

Shomer Collective offers concierge services to help you navigate all things end of life, Jewishly. We curate the most accessible resources to help you find what you need when you need it, whether it’s a Jewish how-to video about end-of-life rituals or a link to a Jewish funeral home in your area.

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Cultivating Leaders, Nourishing Communities12 Aug 202200:34:35

Nazun (formerly Challah for Hunger)

Featuring: Rebecca Bar, Executive Director and Rabbi Lily Solochek, Director of Programs and Education

Food insecurity is prevalent throughout the United States. According to the USDA over 10% of American families were food insecure in 2019 and it is estimated that this has doubled since the onset of Covid. This is also a problem on our nation’s college campuses. According to the Hope Survey from fall 2020, 38 percent of students in two-year colleges and 29 percent of students at four-year colleges reported experiencing food insecurity. These statistics are disturbing.  Nazun is doing the important work to help end campus food insecurity and educate leaders in social justice advocacy. Episode 54 of the podcast is a conversation with with Nazun’s leadership. It is eye-opening and at the same time, it gives hope. 

About Nazon (from their website)
Mission + Vision

Nazun develops leaders and builds communities of people eager to take action to end campus hunger, and to work collectively to solve other urgent social challenges.

One in three college students experiences food insecurity; they don’t know where their next meal might come from and don’t have the resources, time or money to afford access to nutritious food. We are on a mission to ensure that no student ever has to choose between eating or an education. We work to destigmatize — and empower people to act against — the highly prevalent problem of food insecurity on college campuses.

Our work reduces the likelihood that college students will have to choose between eating or their education, and it also builds the next generation of confident leaders capable of contributing to solving the world’s most urgent social challenges.

The three pillars of Nazun are infused into all our projects: Advocacy, Community, and Philanthropy. 

Their Programs:
1. Campus Chapters: The Focus: Campus Hunger- Through Nazun’s program, our student leaders address the issue of campus food insecurity on a campus, state, and national level through our three pillars of philanthropy, advocacy, and community building. Our Cohort, a select group of student leaders, annually creates and implements campaigns and interventions on their campuses to address the issue of campus food insecurity.
2. Advocacy - The #FUELHigherEd program is advocating for fundamental, universal, equitable, long-term state and federal solutions to campus hunger and #FUELHigherEd by working toward

  1. Fundamental Change 
  2. Universal Access 
  3. Equal Opportunity
  4. Long Term Solution 

3. This program is the next step in building our movement by galvanizing our network of 100+ local and national organizations behind this campaign.
4. Community Programs 
5. Through a Nazun Community Program, you and your community can gather to build connections through baking challah, learn about and advocate against hunger in your local area and on college campuses, and engage in philanthropy to support the work of Nazun and local anti-hunger nonprofits in your neighborhood.

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Find Your People and Your Place29 Jul 202200:23:38

GatherDC

Featuring: Alexandra Tureau, Managing Director

GatherDC’s Mission and Vision

GatherDC helps Jewish 20s/30s connect to Jewish life and to each other.

GatherDC is a Jewish nonprofit that serves as the one-stop-shop for everything 20s and 30s need to live their best Jewish life. Whether you’re looking for Jewish events, people, synagogues, housing, jobs, rabbis, kosher food, or anything in between – we connect you.

We are here to make it easy for you to find your people and place in DC and NOVA Jewish life. Whether you’re looking for Jewish events, people, housing, jobs, rabbis, kosher food – we’ll connect you!

We envision a future where every Jewish 20- and 30-something finds a lasting, compelling connection to Judaism.

HOW DO WE GATHER? - 

*from GatherDc’s webpage

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Making Mikvah Meaningful18 Jul 202200:35:47

The Eden Center

Featuring: Dr. Naomi Marmon Grumet, Founder & Executive Director

Jewish identity is based on three foundations, according to Dr. Naomi Marmon Grumet, the Sabbath, the laws of kashrut and mikvah, ritual bath. In fact, our sages tell us that it is incumbent on a community to build a mikvah before building any other communal structure including a synagogue. They say that it is so important a community should sell a Torah scroll to acquire the funds for the construction of a mikvah. (Rabbi Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin, Meshiv Dabar, 1:45 and  Rabbi Shneur Zalman Lesches. "understanding Mikvah"). This helps us to understand the importance our rabbis placed on the rituals and laws surrounding ritual immersion. If mikvah is of such importance, it must serve a sacred role to protect women both emotionally and physically. 

During her university studies, Naomi was interested in women’s connections to Judaism. She recognized that Shabbat lighting candles, baking challah and going to the mikvah are the three major mitzvot that are specifically incumbent on women.  Of those three, she know the least about the laws regarding mikvah and choose to study this mitzvah deeply. From her intense studies and numerous conversation, The Eden Center was born.

Their Mission
The Eden Center focuses on enabling all women to have a personally meaningful and welcoming experience in the mikveh, providing support and resources for crisis and lifecycle moments and transforming the mikveh into a vehicle to promote women’s emotional and physical health, intimacy and well-being.

Their Story
For millennia, the mikveh was the pivotal institution for Jewish women, and considered central to Jewish family continuity. It provided women with a sense of connection and time for introspection and spiritual intimacy. Today, however, mikveh has lost meaning for many women and has even become a source of discomfort and alienation. Even among traditional and religiously committed women, research shows that increasing numbers stop immersing after negative experiences.  The disrepair of many mikvaot in Israel sends the implicit message that Jewish women are not valued. Moreover, many non-religious women, who encounter the mikveh as a state-ordained marriage requirement, become hostile toward Judaism and religious authority as a result of their experience. This makes Eden’s mission to make mikveh welcoming and relevant for modern women all the more imperative. The Eden Center imagines the mikveh as a focal point for addressing a variety of dynamics related to the Jewish woman and family, including but not limited to: 

  • Promoting tolerance and inclusiveness;
  • Promoting women’s mental and physical health;
  • Using the mikveh as a tool that connects women to sources of support within the community
  • Empowering women and enabling meaningful religious, spiritual and personal experiences;
  • Increasing public awareness of issues of women’s health and women’s well-being, including encouraging the intimate female voice in the context of marital relationships;
  • Allowing all wome

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Creating Caring Communities08 Jul 202200:58:45

The Gender Equity in Hiring Project
Featuring: Sara Shapiro Plevan, Founder & Executive Director

The Gender Equity in Hiring Project started in 2018 to have deep conversations regarding respectful, equitable workplaces. They established a growing network of female partners and thought leaders across our community to listen and collect data. With the stories they heard, they began the work of advocacy launching thief first cohorts and workshops in 2019. The goal is to create systems that support fair and equitable advancement for people of all genders. GEiHP continues to help people become workplace advocates, and empowers them to negotiate better. They also provide plethora of resources and tools, consulting and coaching. 

About The Gender Equity in Hiring Project*

We begin our work rooted in the belief that reformulating hiring and employment processes are key leverage points for Jewish organizations as they begin to address gender biases. In order for the change we seek to become embedded in our communal organizations and our individual actions, we must dig deeply into cultures of bias--and build capacity to recognize and correct these biases as we build support systems to align our employment practices with our Jewish values of equality and fairness.

Building an ecosystem and network of support helps us to think collaboratively, creatively, and differently as we solve work this challenge. This is why we do this work together. We strive to bring multiple perspectives and networks to our effort. Our decades of experience working with Jewish organizations and communities enable us to weave networks of partners, challenge the status quo, pivot to greater inclusivity, and demonstrate how to do so while living by our Jewish values.  

GEiHP is making changes…

Across our community, we see powerful steps toward change. We see individuals stepping forth, noticing gender inequities and calling them out. We see organizations working internally and externally on their processes, policies and workplace culture. We see small steps forward–and big strides, too. The pipeline for advancement, the pipeline for leadership is being strengthened every day. We are here to support you and serve as catalysts as we together build our movement for change. 

CONSULTATIONS
We are here to support you and your organization as you amplify your goals, hopes and dreams. Let's partner to change the system, not to change women; to dismantle bias, seek equity, and to bring feminist principles and values to bear on your work. 

Organizations: As we approach our work through an organizational change frame, we begin with support of Jewish workplaces as the ideal place to begin change in employment processes. We look forward to speaking with you about concerns that may range from the specific to the holistic, and partnering with you to address and design specific solutions.

Individuals: We are now able to offer a small number of individual consultations for employees and those seeking employment. While our work begins from an organizational change frame, we recognize that we may be able to offer support and guidance for individuals as they move through hiring processes or problem-solve around specific employment and workp

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Sacred Spaces17 Jun 202200:29:20

Sacred Spaces
Featuring:
Shira Berkovits, President & CEO
The Torah charges us to be an or l’goyyim (light unto the nations). We can not fulfill this important charge without looking inward. Looking within ourselves, our communities and institutions to do what is necessary to create safe surroundings.  The need and desire for safe environments is universal. Everyone wants to work in a safe environment. Everyone wants to send their children to schools, camps and synagogues where they are protected.  Our institutions must be safe places were we flourish and shine out to others. Being an or l’goyyim means we have a moral obligation to set an example to the world. This work begins within. We set the example by our own actions. Shira Berkovits, created Sacred Spaces to do this holy work. Sacred Spaces provides the tools, resources and training to prevent and and end workplace and institutional abuses. 

About Sacred Spaces

Their Mission: Sacred Spaces builds healthy Jewish communities by partnering with Jewish institutions to prevent and respond to sexual abuse and other abuses of power.

Their Guiding Principles: The following is a set of ethical principles that guide Sacred Spaces in their daily operations and in navigating complex situations. We share them as a way of committing publicly to operating ethically and transparently, and allowing the public to hold us accountable. It is also our way of modeling the standards we ask for from the organizations with which we work.

We approach our task with a deep sense of responsibility toward our community, its institutions, and the members in its care. At the center of our actions is the biblical call in Exodus 25:8 to construct a sanctuary: “Let them make me a sanctuary that I may dwell among them.”. ועשו לי מקדש ושכנתי בתוכם When we create safe and sacred communal spaces, we invite God’s presence to reside in our midst.

We, the staff and board, undertake to cultivate a sacred workspace among ourselves, where the standards we seek to disseminate will be practiced and modeled. We commit to treating our colleagues, both those within our own organization and our partners in other institutions, with the utmost dignity.

Underlying Beliefs

  1. The work of creating safe and respectful institutions is a Jewish imperative that goes to the core of what it means to live a life informed by Jewish values.
  2. Most leaders and institutions want to create safe and respectful institutions but lack the knowledge and resources to adequately protect their constituents from abuse.
  3. Being pro-organization and pro-victim are profoundly compatible. Institutions can act in their best interests and be supportive of victims; in fact, they are intrinsically connected.
  4. The work of creating safe and respectful institutions can help communities come together across divides; this is a fundamentally constructive endeavor.
  5. Abuse prevention and response must be informed by two realities: Any person can be mistreated or abused, and  certain individuals – particularly those who are socially marginalized – are more vulnerable to mistreatment and abuse than others.

Follow Sacred Spaces on  Facebook

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



What is Jewish Farming?14 Apr 202300:51:51

What is Jewish Farming?

Featuring: Dr. Adrienne Krone

Adrienne Krone is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies and past Director of Jewish Life at Allegheny College.Her research focuses on communal Jewish farms and the sustainable Jewish farming movement in the United States. Her expertise ranges from the history of religion in the U.S., to modern Judaism, to religion and food. Krone holds a Ph.D. in American Religion from Duke University, and her extensive experience in Jewish communal service includes working with youth and young adult groups, teaching and directing a religious school program for Jewish teens, liturgical leadership, and staffing a Birthright trip.

Adrienne researches religious food justice movements and teaches courses in Jewish studies, food studies, environmental studies, and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies. Her current project is an ethnographic and historical study of the Jewish Community Farming movement in North America.

In this episode Adrienne and I define categories of Jewish farming. We touch on a bit of the history of Jewish Farming in North America. And we discuss Jewish biblical laws about farming, the three pilgrimage festivals (Sukkot, Passover and Shavuot). Finally Adrienne shares how varies Jewish farms around the country are creating and innovating food for long term sustainability.

Read more about Adrienne’s work and research here

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Jewish Mental Health Resources03 Jun 202200:33:42

Blue Dove Foundation     Featuring: Gabrielle Spatt, Executive Director

Blue Dove provides mental health education awareness and outreach through a Jewish lens and for the Jewish community. Mental illness often causes people to feel alone and separate. During this interview, Gabby Spatt, Executive Director of Blue Dove Foundation, vulnerably shares her story. Gabby states that this is part of her healing process. Being in a space where people share their story and hear other stories is where healing begins. Hearing someone’s story helps people realize they are not alone. Hearing someone’s story gives people courage to share their own story. We welcome you to dive into the resources that Blue Dove provides. To Listen to the stories. And when ready, share your stories to expand healing for a strong community and world. 

About Blue Dove Foundation: The Blue Dove Foundation was created to address mental illness and addiction in the Jewish community and beyond. We work with organizations and communities -- both Jewish and interfaith -- across the country and around the world.

Blue Dove’s Mission is to educate, equip, and ignite our Jewish community with tools to understand, support, and overcome the challenges presented by mental illness and substance abuse. As a community with a focus on tikkun olam, we work to eradicate the shame and stigma surrounding these issues. Once we achieve this goal, we can begin to improve and save lives.

Our Work: 1. Educate and raise awareness about mental health within the Jewish community. 2. Produce powerful and engaging resources about the connections between mental wellness and Judaism.
3. Spearhead and design programs that can be easily replicated in any community, like mental health shabbat dinners and community training programs.Communities of Practice

Creating vibrant and diverse communities of practice are core to Mitsui Collective’s long-term vision and ability to activate communities in the work of resiliency-building. Our aim is ultimately to center embodied Jewish practice and somatic antiracism as immersive and transformational foundations of contemporary Jewish life. As we continue to hone our internal capacity and operational strength for carrying forward our existing work to date, we are also laying the groundwork to expand our footprint both vertically and horizontally.

Vertically this includes further depth both in our local work in the Cleveland area — where we hope overtime to establish a physical homebase both for local community building and as a national headquarters for immersive programs and ongoing research & development — and our intensive work resourcing and training the growing field of embodied Jewish practitioners and educators. Horizontally this looks like catalyzing and growing the ecosystem of opportunities and platforms (both in person and online) to be in communities of practice with others for whom embodiment and liberatory anti racist practice are core to their Jewish expression and spiritual identity.

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Embodied Jewish Practices20 May 202200:53:50

Mitsui Collective : Featuring Yoshi Silverstein

How often in your life do you look at things through a Jewish lens? That’s how Yoshi Silverstein has lived his life from a young age. His career path has brought him to creating Mitsui Collective.
While attending the JPro Conference earlier this month, I had the opportunity to meet Yoshi Silverstein, founder of Mitsui Collective and this week’s guest in person. I attended a soulful morning minyan (prayer service) that he led in partnership with Kohenet Keshira HaLev Fife (See episode #43 here). I truly felt connected to G-d, community and myself during this moving service. That prayer experience was a powerful example of everything Yoshi teaches. I am honored to share my conversation with Yoshi.

About Mitsui Collective

Mission: Mitsui Collective builds resilient community through embodied Jewish practice and somatic antiracism.
Vision: Mitsui Collective brings the tools of embodied practice into the experience of Jewish life & learning through our bodies, and into the healing-centered work of addressing how our experiences of Judaism and Jewish community are impacted because of the bodies we are in. We seek to redefine the spaces and modalities through which Judaism prepares, supports, and nourishes both the individual and the collective for greater health, resiliency, and wellness in body and soul.
The need for spaces and practices that enable people to experience healing and wholeness in both body and soul has never been greater. Today, Jewish communities exist against a backdrop of ongoing racism and white supremacy, rising xenophobia, anti-semitism, the existential impact of climate change, and a pandemic that has often necessitated a “disembodied” Jewish practice experienced primarily on screen but in isolation. Within this setting, we increasingly see the need and desire for embodied Jewish learning and practices that help to strengthen our personal and collective connection to place, community, personal identity, ancestry and lineage for Jews of all racial backgrounds.
In a world shaped and dominated by over five centuries of racist ideology, we all have racialized identities. This culture is dense and opaque — but it can and must be transformed into a culture thick with the ability to heal and transform. Racism impacts all of us, and addressing racism and healing from its impacts is critical to transforming equitable and thriving Jewish spaces.
Mitsui Collective is open to all spiritual seekers while centering our work and community-building around those historically placed at the margins of Jewish life — including but not limited to Jews of Color and non-Ashkenormative Jews, LGBTQ, interfaith / intergroup families, and those of varied socioeconomic status. We view diversity and representation as a vital building block for vibrant, resilient community.

Communities of Practice

Creating vibrant and diverse communities of practice are core to Mitsui Collective’s long-term vision and ability to activate communities in the work of resiliency-building. Our aim is ultimately to center embodied Jewish practice and somatic antiracism as immersive and transformational foundations of contem

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Connecting to Social Justice06 May 202200:32:55

Tzedek America

Featuring: Avram Mandell, Founder & Executive Director
The words L'taken olam, meaning to repair the world are are found in the second paragraph of the prayer Aleynu which is included in almost all Jewish worship services.  The term Tikkun Olam is perceived as a core Jewish value and a hallmark of progressive Judaism. Tikkun Olam charges us to make the world a better place by being active participants in supporting of  poor (tzedakah), doing acts of loving kindness (g'milut hasidim), and pursuing justice (tzedek). Today’s guest, Avram Mandell, founder and executive director of Tzedek America grew up in, as he puts it, “a social justice home”. His career path, upbring and love for working with children brought him to creating Tzedek America. Tzedek America’s mission is to transform lives, strengthen Jewish identity, and change the world through immersive social justice-oriented experiences. They do this by creating experiential programs mostly for middle school aged children.  

Tzedek America’s Core Programs help students learn who they are , enable them to travel with a purpose and provide opportunities to explore tikkun olam. The participants get to: 

  • travel throughout the USA putting your values into action to make
    this country one that you are proud of being a part
  • connect and acquire knowledge from community leaders
    that enable you to be an active and informed citizen
  • make informed choices about your Judaism based on the
    range of what exists in Jewish life


Tzedek America program offerings: 

DAY TRIPS - Build strong community amongst like-minded Jewish young adults in Los Angeles – exercise your civic conscience through service trips, non-profit internships all while 
exploring Jewish values and addressing where you can make a difference

MULTI-DAY TRIPS - Immerse in customizable service-learning experiences from Downtown Los Angeles to villages in Guatemala – visit with philanthropic organizations, explore traditions and culture, and learn alongside local Jewish communities.

Virtual LEARNING - Inform,  Elevate, Inspire, Engage - Experience 10 motivational interactive digital workshops which elevate the voices of individuals impacted by social injustice and meet the organizations addressing the issues. All through the lens of Jewish texts, traditions, and values.

B’NAI MITZVAH PROGRAM - The B’nai Mitzvah process is about taking on more responsibility and connecting to the concept of mitzvot on a deeper level. Engaging mitzvah projects for 12 year olds is increasingly challenging. Tzedek America’s Mitzvah Project Central provides compassionate direction and support as we guide B’nai Mitzvah students through their mitzvah projects. Mitzvah Project Central motivates your students from our opening orientation session and during weekly Zoom office hours. We check-in on your students throughout their six to twelve-month process.

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You Are Not Alone29 Apr 202200:27:34

No Shame On U (NSOU)
Featuring: Miriam Ament, Founder & Executive Director

The most impactful organizations often come from one person who has lived through a traumatic experience and recognizes that they could be a catalyst for the solution. This conversation with Miriam Ament, the founder and executive director of NSOU is a great example of the power of one individual. Miriam realized that mental health conditions, which are often perceived at a “big negative”, shouldn’t be a secret. This awareness led Miriam to focus  on utilizing her life experiences in order to normalize mental health conversations. No Shame On U is dedicated to eliminating the stigma associated with mental health conditions and raising awareness in the Jewish community and beyond. Knowing that her story helps many others, Miriam shares vulnerably. On this podcast, she tells the story of how she started No Shame On U and gives examples of the impact it is making. I was personally impressed to hear that NSOU offered 240 programs over the pandemic. They continue to increase their impact. She also provides resources and tips for those who are struggling with mental illness. Two tools, of many possible ones, that Miriam mentions on this podcast are gratitude and exercise. 

No Shame on U held their first official event in November, 2015. They hosted speaker/author Kevin Briggs. Kevin Briggs is known as the Guardian of the Golden Gate. Kevin is a California Highway Patrol officer noted for his work in suicide intervention, having dissuaded more than two hundred people from jumping off the Golden Gate Bridge into San Francisco Bay. In 2013, Briggs retired from the California Highway Patrol to focus his efforts on suicide prevention. He is the author of “Guardian of the Golden Gate: Protecting the Line Between Hope and Despair.” His book can be found here on Amazon. He also has a Ted Talk from 2014 found here

Most importantly,  to those with mental illness Miriam’s and the message of No Shame On U is that they are not alone. I am grateful to share Miriam’s story and the work of NSOU. If you or someone you know is in crisis please utilize the resources listed below. 

Research on Mental Health Conditions (from  No Shame On U’s Website)

More than one in four Americans ages 18 or older lives with a diagnosable mental health issue - 26.2%. This means that on average, every family is touched by mental illness. Yet two thirds of those diagnosed do not get treated. Research shows that stigma is one of the key barriers to people seeking mental health treatment. Founded in November, 2014, No Shame On U is dedicated to breaking the stigma associated with mental health so the people who need the help will seek it, family members and friends will know how to provide proper support, and to save lives. We achieve our mission through our community outreach programs, classes and workshops, our online presence of over 120,000 social media followers, our weekly blog, our podcast, distribution of our fact sheets, crisis information magnets and videos, and educational presentations.

For No Shame On

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Ending Stigmas08 Apr 202200:40:59

Jewish Addiction Awareness Network (JAAN)
Featuring: Marla Kaufman, Founder/Executive Director

Today’s topic is much more serious than most of the other topics that we deal with on this podcast. At the same time it may be one of the most important topics. We are grateful to amplify the voice of JAAN and its founder Marla Kaufman. The important work that they are doing to call attention to the devastating endemic of addiction is certain to save lives. I am grateful that JAAN is working to eliminate the stigma for those suffering from the disease of addiction and their loved ones.

From JAAN’s website: Across the U.S. and Canada, millions of individuals grapple every day with addiction. This disease is having a devastating impact on lives, families, and entire communities — including Jewish communities.

While battling addiction, Jewish individuals and families must also confront the stigma and shame associated with a disease so misunderstood. The myth that Jews do not suffer from addiction as much as other groups often leaves families and individuals feeling isolated and disconnected from their friends, congregations, and communities. We’re changing that.

Jewish Addiction Awareness Network (JAAN) connects families and individuals to information, support, tools, and Jewish perspectives to help them face addiction and work toward recovery. Through partnerships, community-building, outreach, and education, we are helping Jewish communities better understand substance use disorder, as well as the power of Jewish traditions and wisdom in providing comfort and guidance.

If you or someone you love is living with addiction or in recovery, know this: You are not alone. And we will no longer be silent.

JAAN’s Mission:To increase understanding of the disease of addiction and decrease stigma by connecting individuals, families, and professionals across the Jewish spectrum in order to explore the intersection of Judaism and recovery, exchange resources, and support those in crisis.
Recommended Reading

A Common Struggle: A Personal Journey Through the Past and Future of Mental Illness and Addiction by Patrick Kennedy and Stephen Fried (Find it here on Amazon.)

Recovery, the 12 steps and Jewish Spirituality: Reclaiming Hope, Courage & Wholeness by Paul Steinberg (Find it here on Amazon.)

 JAAN's website has detailed pages with Jewish and General Resources for those struggling with addictions and their loved ones. For a complete list of Jewish resources please visit JAAN’S Jewish resource page.  For a expanded list of general resources please visit JAAN’s general resource page.

Contact JAAN.

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A Mosaic of Jewish Recipes25 Mar 202200:38:44

Tlaim Patchwork Cookbook
Featuring: Alana Chandler

T’laim’s Mission:

A project supported by Be’chol Lashon, is cookbook aims to celebrate the racial and ethnic diversity within the Jewish community. We want to celebrate the myriad unique experiences that each of us has as a product of our identities. We will pair recipes with poems, stories, essays, and photographs from submitters so that it becomes more than just a cookbook but also a mosaic of experiences from a plethora of backgrounds. 

T’laim: The Patchwork Cookbook is currently accepting submissions! Visit their website to learn more and submit your own recipe.

Articles about Tlaim Patchwork Cookbook

ALANA CHANDLER USES FOOD TO EXPLORE THE EXPERIENCES OF JEWS OF COLOR  in JCUA Feb. 7, 2022

A new cookbook will connect — and celebrate — Jews of Color  in The Forward on Dec. 28, 2021

Jews of Color Get Spotlight in MIT Student’s Cookbook in Jewish Boston on Nov. 10, 2021

A college student collects recipes for a Jews of Color cookbook in EJewish Philanthropy on Oct. 28, 2021

Submit A Recipe.     Donate to T'laim.      T’laim on  Instagram.      Check out Alana’s Instagram.

Organizations Mentioned in the Episode:

Alma              Be'chol Lashon                JCUA              Jewish Liberation Fund    

Jews for Racial and Social Justice              Jews of Color Initiative              Lunar

 Jewish Chefs Mentioned in this Episode:

Leah Cohen             Jake Cohen              Michael Twitty              Molly Yeh


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Reclaiming Feminist Judaism11 Mar 202200:38:39

THE KOHENET HEBREW PRIESTESS INSTITUTE
Featuring: Keshira HaLev Fife, Executive Director

Mission: Kohenet Kavannah (Organizational Intention):
Kohenet Hebrew Priestess Institute reclaims and innovates embodied, earth-based feminist Judaism. Kohenet's spiritual leadership training, ordination programs, publications and community offerings center ritual as transformative practice. They draw from ways women and other marginalized people have led across time - shrinekeepers, prophetesses and wise women of the Hebrew Bible and beyond. Kohenet honors the ways in which Shekhinah appears to them through traditions, imaginations, prayers, dreams, ancestors, and role models throughout Jewish history. They celebrate the sacred in the body, the earth and the cosmos. Kohenet is a training program, a sacred community, and a movement changing the paradigm of Jewish spiritual leadership. Kohenet Shabbat, holidays, and Virtual Temple / online classes are open to all.The three-year Kohenet training and ordination program welcomes applications from trans women, cis women, and nonbinary people, who are drawn to Kohenet’s kavannah (intention). 

Kohenet’s Why:
The first known poet, Enheduanna, served as a priestess of Inanna in Sumer, and there were priestesses in many cultures throughout the known world.  Yet the title of priestess does not appear to exist in the Hebrew Bible, and indeed, the patriarchal authorities who compiled the Bible eliminated most references to women's spiritual leadership. However, some aspects of women's spiritual power shine through. From these hints, we can deduce how women participated in the sacred cult of the Israelite nation: as mothers, prophetesses, and even ritual officiants. We know, for example, that women baked cakes for the Queen of Heaven as part of a sacred rite honoring the Divine feminine.
Our later Jewish foremothers did not entirely abandon the priestess role even after it was written out out of the tradition.  The title "priestess" appears several times on Jewish gravestones during the Roman period. Other titles such as "eldress" "mother of the synagogue," and "head of the synagogue" on similar gravestones lead one to believe that women served in leadership functions in pre-Talmudic and Talmudic times.  However, following this period the title fell entirely out of practice. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, women served as dreamers and diviners in communities of Jewish mystics in Sfat and elsewhere.  In their names, we seek to re-establish this sacred tradition.

Definitions and Clarifications
Brit Shalom-lit. Covenant of peace; alternative to medical circumcision, welcoming a baby into Jewish tradition
Kohain- priest
Kohenet/ Kohenot- priestess / priestesses
m’beit- from the house of
Mizrahi (s) / Mizrahim (pl) - A Jewish member or descendant of the Jews who lived in North Africa and the Middle East and whose ancestors did not reside in Europe.
Pogram- an organized massacre of a particular ethnic group, in particular that of Jewish people in Russia or eastern Europe.
Safardi(s) / Safardim (pl) - a Jewish person of Spanish or Portuguese descent. They retain their own distinctive

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Accessible Judaism25 Feb 202201:05:22

The Den Collective

Featuring: Rabbi Aderet Drucker, Executive Director & Community Rabbi

 Offering cozy, collaborative, accessible Judaism all around DC

the Den is a collective of people creating a Judaism that is relevant, accessible, and deeply rooted in tradition throughout the greater DC area. We seek to build spaces of meaning that invite people to deepen their connection to Judaism, feel part of a community, and enrich their lives. the Den strives to be collaborative, experimental, transparent, and radically welcoming.

Rabbi Aderet explains, "this population (millennials) really has deep spiritual cultural Jewish identities yearnings and questions for a space where they can really connect and grow their Judaism."

the Den's Values

  1. Personal Connection -  They belief that the best experiences develop organically. That’s why we start with a 1-to-1 conversation and build our gatherings from there.
  2. Learning - They belief that Judaism empowers each of us to live lives that are rich and imbued with meaning, and that learning is the gateway to that discovery.
  3. Authenticity - They believe that safe and sacred spaces allow us to truly be ourselves; vulnerable, transparent and real. 
  4. Radical Welcoming - They believe that whoever you are, whatever you believe (or don’t!), however you love, pray, eat, vote or sing—you’re family.
  5. Healing Our World - They believe in our shared commitment to repairing our broken world with increased love, kindness, and justice.

 the Den's Vision + Mission

Vision: The Den envisions a more connected and inclusive world where people feel seen, heard, and cared for; where people feel welcome as they are and safe to explore ways to deepen their connection to Judaism, to ask tough questions, and to express their needs. When each of us feels cared for and supported in community, we are better equipped to reach out and work together to address the pressing needs of our neighbors, the greater community, and the world.

Our hope is that through our work people will feel more connected to Judaism, deepen their ownership and understanding of the treasure trove of Jewish wisdom available to them, develop a deepened clarity of meaning and purpose, feel empowered to impact change, and feel a strong sense of belonging in a community that values interpersonal relationships and a commitment to repairing our world.

Mission: The Den builds intentional Jewish community in partnership with people throughout the Greater Washington area. We invite people to belong in community where everyone is welcome and people know each other; to enrich their lives through deep and authentic Torah study, intimate gatherings, and ongoing dialogue with accessible rabbis. Exploration of Jewish wisdom is foundational to our classes and gatherings and serves as the cornerstone for the social change we seek to create. Our unique model combines personal connection with pastoral care, where discovering people’s yearnings and what moves their hearts and souls is the inspiration behind the ways we gather and build inclusive community together. The Den strives to be collaborative, experimental, transparent, and radically welcoming. 

"the Den is abou

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Mending Hearts, Building Bridges11 Feb 202200:37:43

Save a Child’s Heart

Featuring: Brianna Fowler

“I hope that people feel that they have Save A Child’s Heart in their back pocket as a story to tell to shed light on the good that is happening in Israel,” explains Brianna.

1 IN EVERY 100 CHILDREN IS BORN WITH A CONGENITAL HEART DEFECT.

Save A Child’s Heart mend hearts regardless of race,  religion, gender, nationality or financial status. SAVE A CHILD'S HEART saves the lives of critically ill children suffering from heart disease in countries where access to pediatric heart care is limited or nonexistent. Through bringing children to Israel for medical care, performing missions abroad, and training medical personnel, we are bringing hope to families, communities, and countries. As ISRAEL'S PREEMINENT HUMANITARIAN ORGANIZATION, they are transforming pediatric cardiac care around the world.

As long as children with rheumatic and congenital heart disease around the world continue to suffer without access to care, SACH will treat children, train medical professionals and raise the level of pediatric heart care worldwide, from their heart in ISRAEL. 

SAVE A CHILD'S HEART exists today because of the vision, passion and boundless energy of their founder, the late DR. AMRAM "AMI" COHEN, an excellent surgeon, an inspiring leader and a warm and caring person.

Read here about Dr. Cohen’s life, vision and legacy. Watch the heartwarming video, Ami’s Dream. 

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Transformative Spiritual Practice28 Jan 202200:40:19

Or HaLev: Transforming Jews, Judaism, and the world through contemplative Jewish Practice

Featuring: Rabbi Dr. James Jacobson-Maisels, Founder

Or HaLev is a Jewish Path to a more vibrant, whole and awakened life through mindfulness and innovative Jewish practice. Or HaLev believes that Judaism is a precious resource for crafting a meaningful life, and a gateway to transformative spiritual practice. We teach contemplative, pluralistic, connective Judaism as a way of life.

History

Founded in 2011 by Rabbi Dr. James Jacobson-Maisels, Or HaLev’s vision is one of transformational Judaism that is capable of healing the individual as well as the collective. 

Or HaLev was launched with the goal of giving people access to a deep meditation practice through a cross-denominational approach to Judaism. Or HaLev is a destination for Jewish mindfulness that creates open and immersive opportunities for deepening spiritual practice in Israel, the UK, and North America. 

In doing so, they offer a taste of Judaism as we know it can be – welcoming, renewing, inspirational - and then work to support our students year-round to integrate this into their lives. Or HaLev has touched thousands of people so far, across five continents, regardless of prior meditation experience or Jewish background. We offer a broad tent and all are welcome.

Their work in Israel brings innovative and inclusive Judaism to Israeli Jews from all backgrounds and denominations supporting the growth of pluralism and democratic Judaism in Israel. 

Or HaLev offers a range of classes, retreats, and other opportunities to engage in deep spiritual practice that can heal and transform you in a way that is deeply rooted in Jewish tradition.

Or HaLev’s work is guided by the following values:

  1. Repair/Tikun -Judaism is a source of deep wisdom and tools to effect transformation (tikkun) of ourselves, our community, our world and God. Such repair has always been the ultimate goal of the Jewish mystical tradition.
  2. Practice/Tirgul -Transformation occurs through discipline and practice and requires concrete techniques of self-development. Other traditions also have wisdom and tools, and we are open to drawing on those techniques that aid our transformation.
  3. Spiritual Community/Hevriah - Spiritual community is a crucial component of self-transformation. We work together to tend our spiritual garden through communally-held spaces that welcome people from all backgrounds, identities, and outlooks. Diversity is what gives our community strength and we are committed to being an open and welcoming place for all.
  4. Humility/Anava-Our teachers are themselves on the path of transformation, succeeding and failing, and sharing their journeys with their students.
  5. Divinity/Tzelem Elokim - Honoring the sanctity of all beings made in the image of God, in our dealings in the world, we celebrate our intrinsic belovedness as children of the divine.
  6. Lineage/Masoret - Opening to the gifts we receive from our tradition, we commit ourselves to sharing this practice with others.

Visit Or HaLev at: https://www.orhalev.net. Follow Or HaLev  on

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Honoring Death in Life31 Mar 202300:23:34

Kavod v’Nichum

Featuring: Sarit Wishnevski, Executive Director

Their Mission: Kavod v’Nichum provides the Jewish community resources, education, and training about the end of life, from serious illness through dying, death, bereavement, and mourning.

Their Vision is to  transform the final life transition for every Jewish person so that it is understood, cared for, and respected.

About:  Kavod v’Nichum, כבוד וניחום, is Hebrew for “honor and comfort”. Founded in 2000, Kavod v’Nichum is a Jewish nonprofit dedicated to providing end-of-life education, support and training in the Jewish tradition. They embrace the mitzvot of kavod hamet, honoring the body which held the neshama, soul, of a person who died; and nichum aveilim, comforting the mourners and the community of the living after a death.

Kavod v’Nichum values: 

  1. KAVOD: HONOR: They lead with honor and respect for people, tradition, and infuse kavod in every aspect of our work
  2. NECHAMAH: COMFORT & SUPPORT: The end-of-life space is difficult for many; They welcome community with care and support.
  3. B’TZELEM ELOHIM: IN GOD’S IMAGE: We are holy people created in the image of the divine; all are welcome and wanted. 
  4. HIDDUR MITZVAH: BEAUTIFICATION OF THE MITZVAH: They elevate the beauty of Jewish end-of-life traditions through learning, adaptation to our modern world, and making accessible what is often hidden.
  5. KEHILLAH: COMMUNITY: Community support is foundational in Jewish end-of-life rituals and practices; they are expansive in our understanding of community and encourage all to consider themselves a part of ours.

Kavod V’Nichum serves any individual or organization seeking to learn and engage around Jewish end-of-life rituals and practices.

Contact Kavod V’Nichum for more information.

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Meaningful Virtual Learning16 Jan 202200:52:46

“I think part of the exciting challenge and possibility in contemporary Jewish life is how do we celebrate our diversity? How do we be that mosaic? and how do we share identity?” — Joshua Krug, Founder, Opening Doors

Featuring: Josh Krug, Founder, Opening Doors

Opening Doors is an educational intervention that deploys the power of text, context, and technology to help people find genuine connection, belonging, and meaning. Opening Doors seeks to offer virtual infrastructure for gathering and learning that corresponds with emergent technologies and social shifts.

It has been described as “a real-time harbor, a kind reminder to all of us- there is a way to find virtue and gain strength” with others, and as a community "driven by question asking and being better more ethical people.”

Mission: Opening Doors empowers young adults to step into their futures, as they encounter classical and contemporary Jewish sources, one another, and their own imaginations. In such a way, Opening Doors educates, inspires, and incubates visionaries.

Vision: We envision a world in which we are simultaneously, and in our own ways, harvesters of our heritage, holders of the fertile soil of the present, and planters of the future. 

Opening Doors’ Primary Initiatives:

  1. Salon- helping folks have access to Jewish innovators, thought leaders, game changers, community builders also referred to as “prophets, pioneers & pariahs” , allowing space for meaning conversation.
  2. Lehrhaus- (definition-house of learning/house of meaning making: Hebrew: beit midrash) a space to engage in text, parsha study and making meaning
  3. Reflection series- What matters? A series of conversations and discussions engaging in Jewish tradition for personal relevance. discussions based on contemplating how we celebrate what matters to us.

The future of Opening Doors:

Josh is  interested in creating medium for folks to connect diversity of Jewish learning, jewish knowledge, creating opportunities for Jewish learning.  

Listen to Rabbi Sharon Brous’ Ted Talk on Reclaiming Religion.

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Life in Sisterhood23 Dec 202100:58:05

Ariele Mortkowitz is passionate about working with and for women. She creates communities that help women interact with each other, their families and their faith. Ariele has dedicated herself to the pursuit of fulfilling female spiritual and communal experiences. Prior to the creation of SVIVAH, she created the Agam Center to establish a Jewish communal home for women's spirituality, wellness, ritual, and education. She has dedicated her life to learning and becoming a woman who spiritually uplifts other women. Through her work, she had developed many connections that inspired and encouraged her to create SVIVAH. Although Ariele describes the creation of SVIVAH as a happy accident, Ariele’s experience and learning positioned her to successfully launch SVIVAH. In the three years of SVIVAH’s existence they have grown from a gathering of 50 women to a database of over 2,000. 

ABOUT SVIVAH (From their website)

SVIVAH is a multigenerational, inclusive, powerful community of Jewish women*.
SVIVAH is a women-designed, women-run, women-centered community dedicated to exploring, designing, and discovering a more nourishing, inspiring, and connected Jewish communal experience for women. The purpose of “community” is to make us stronger, nurture our values, show us where we belong, inspire and enable us to achieve more than we can alone. It is time for women to ensure that our Jewish community fills these universal communal needs for ourselves. As an inclusive, women-only space in the Jewish community, SVIVAH serves as a training ground, a safe space for skill-building and exploration, a “dugout” to empower women to be at their best when they go back out on the “playing field” of our professional and social spheres. SVIVAH is committed to creating communal conversations and support for women’s health, wealth, spiritual, professional, and personal empowerment as a vehicle for strengthening us as individuals and making us more powerful as a collective. It is a space for meaningful interactions with like-minded, like-hearted individuals and an opportunity to be strengthened by what we have in common, while growing from the ways we differ. Let us not waste the incredible strength and value of our diverse, multigenerational Jewish womanhood. Women are strengthened by each other; the Jewish community will be better for our strength. Of us. By us. For us.

In an ever-increasingly egalitarian global society, there is need for a women-only space for Jewish women to convene, connect, and build confidence through community. There is proven scientific benefit to women connecting meaningfully with other women. Neurologically, women benefit from the community of other women – women who share their values and life-experience. We want to invest in connections built on shared experience rather than common demographics or location. We want to widen the pipleline to the bounty of community resources intended to help us live our strongest lives. In times that are increasingly fraught by “the plague of loneliness”, lack of connection, limited time, why not maximize the purposefulness of our Jewish community and its value to its women? Women are stronger with community – let’s give it to them.

In Hebrew, “svivah” means “to surround her” – and that’s exactly

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Outreach and Engagement10 Dec 202100:43:37

Featuring: Dr. Rabbi Kerry Olitzky
Rabbi Dr. Kerry Olitzky explains, “parents access religion through their children…books like these allow people to transcend institutional borders and access Jewish thought.”

Rabbi Olitzky tells us in the podcast that he is optimistic for the future of Jewish life. He explains that the Jewish community requires adaptive leaders and mission driven organizations that will continue to bring Jewish content into the marketplace of ideas and make Judaism and its content radically accessible.

The following is Rabbi Dr. Kerry Olitzky’s bio found on Mersky and Associates website:

 “Kerry Olitzky is a futurist who deeply understands population trends in synagogue membership and new options for successful financial resource development. He is a bold innovator and creative fundraiser who led Big Tent Judaism and created its many outreach programs and strategies.

An experienced educator, Kerry directed the school of education at Hebrew Union College and was vice president at the Wexner Heritage Foundation. Kerry is an author who has written more than 70 books and hundreds of articles that have helped shape communal responses to various issues. Kerry also served as a congregational rabbi.

He can help your synagogue financially prepare for its future or guide your start-up so that it can thrive to meet the needs of current and future generations.”

Rabbi Dr. Olitzky’s specialties include: Building a Synagogue’s financial strength, nonprofit start-up guidance, fundraising/annual fund development, strategic planning, executive coaching.

Most of Rabbi Olitzky’s books can be purchased at Amazon. His Amazon author page lists many of his works here. Some of his children’s book can be found at Target or at Kalaniot Books (a division of Endless Mountain Publishing.)

Follow Rabbi Olitzky  on  Facebook  and  Instagram and Twitter.

Definitions

Gabbai- (Hebrew: גבאי‬), also known as shamash שמש‬  or warden (UK, similar to churchwarden) is a beadle or sexton, a person who assists in the running of synagogue services in some way. In many communities the gabbai is charged with making sure that all synagogue services run smoothly, a logistical job that can be a lot of work.

midrash- (מדרשׁ) is an interpretive act, seeking the answers to religious questions (both practical and theological) by plumbing the meaning of the words of the Torah. (In the Bible, the root d-r-sh [דרשׁ] is

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Connecting to Israel12 Nov 202100:35:52

Featuring: Anne Lanski, Founding  Executive Director of The iCenter

“We’ve created a new Israel education paradigm…where Israel is really understood as integral to Jewish identities,” explains Anne Lanski, the founding executive director of The iCenter. 

The iCenter’s tagline is “Inspiring Meaningful and Enduring Connections to Israel.” Throughout her career, Anne Lanski had  created immersive Israel experiences that lead to greater understanding of engagement with Israeli. She has led The iCenter to incorporate experience education and a learner centered approach to develop the professional field of Israel Education. This work truly captures the essence of their tagline. The goal of The iCenter is for Israel to become an integral part of Jewish education. The iCenter is a model for excellence in education that can be adapted for a variety of topics. 

From The iCenter’s website: 

We are passionate people with dreams, interests, and beliefs. We care about Israel and Israelis. We are educators: rabbis, lay leaders, teachers, students, parents, teens, and youth.

Our work is across North America: in day schools, public high schools, summer camps, synagogues, youth groups, universities, and beyond.

Founded on these passions in 2008, The iCenter strives to transform the professional field of Israel Education. We focus on the learners, helping them develop their identities and build relationships with Israel and Israelis. We also focus on the entire system, creating a dynamic ecosystem of passionate and knowledgeable educators, rich and nuanced content, and institutions centered around their learners. With these two approaches, The iCenter continually moves Israel education to the heart of Jewish life.

Our Mission is to catalyze excellence in the professional field of Israel Education by supporting the development of educators, pioneering new educational approaches, and relentlessly promoting a relational and learner-centered philosophy.

The iCenter envisions a world in which every Jewish child develops a lifelong relationship with Israel.

Definitions and Clarifications:

Am Israel - the People of Israel

balagon-mess

Eretz Israel- the Land of Israel

Midinat Israel- the State of Israel

mifgash- experience

shanat sherut-a year of service (Gap year)

Shelichim-emissaries. Read more about the Jewish Agency for Israel’s Shelichim here.

Shinshinim- Israeli high school graduates serving as emissaries in Diaspora communities prior to their mandatory Israeli army service.

Visit The iCenter's website here. Follow ICenter on  Facebook,  Instagram, YouTube, Twitter and Link

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Earth-Based Judaism29 Oct 202100:48:19

Wilderness Torah

Featuring: Rabbi Zelig Golden, Co-Founder and Executive Director

When discussing the concept of retreat into the wilderness, Rabbi Zelig suggests, “The Torah is teaching us that there is a powerful and essential medicine in the wilderness and that when we go and receive that medicine…it has the power to fundamentally change who we are, to help heal us and to become more clear on who we are.”

Mission: Wilderness Torah awakens and celebrates the earth-based traditions of Judaism to nourish the connections between self, community, earth, and Spirit.

Wilderness Torah creates a pluralistic, multi-generational community celebrations to reconnect us to the earth-based traditions of Judaism. Everyone is welcome at Wilderness Torah Events: Jews, people with other faiths and backgrounds, interfaith couples and families, the LGBTQIA community, people of color—anyone who feels called to attend. We offer a range of activities so that people of all backgrounds and experiences can plug in, and we partner with inclusivity nonprofits on programming and training.

Offerings:

Kabbalat Shabbat: Join for our monthly Kabbalat Shabbat with Urban Adamah and other spiritual community leaders. 

Annual Festivals:  We can’t wait to celebrate the ancient Jewish pilgrimage festivals together again, with our annual earth-based events like Passover in-the-Desert, Shavuot on the Mountain (new in 2022), and Tu B’Shvat in the Forest. 

Village Circle is Wilderness Torah’s yearlong, dialogue and training cohort. 

Introduction to Earth-based Judaism: Dive into the Torah and cosmology of earth-based Judaism in this virtual course. 

Adult Neshama Quest: Gather safely during COVID for a backpacking trip led by well-seasoned outdoor Jewish educators. 

Adult B’hootz is an immersive daylong nature experience that will take place in one of our beautiful East Bay parks. Each event will happen around a Jewish holiday and explore themes related to the Jewish calendar cycle of life. 

Cycle of Teshuvah: Jewish tradition honors seasonal cycles in accordance with the cycles of our lives. Each Fall, as the dry season comes to a close, we enter the Teshuvah Cycle of spiritual renewal. 

Children’s Programs:

B’hootz- (literally means outside) is for children going into grades K–5. The program integrates caring mentorship and nature-based exploration with Jewish spirituality, tradition, and wisdom. 

B’naiture- two-year experiential program for kids entering 6th or 7th grade. It is a coming-of-age journey supporting the transition from childhood to adolescence through mentorship, deep nature connection and Jewish wisdom. 

Shomrim- (literally means - guardians) is for graduates of B’hootz and B’naiture, as teens begin the journey as assistants and mentors in grades 8–12.  We offer special immersive programs for teens including the Neshama Quest backpacking journey and an overnight camping trip during our annual Passover in the Desert pilgrimage.

Follow Wilderness Torah on 

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Engage Your Spirit15 Oct 202100:41:23

Kabbalah Experience
Featuring: David Sanders, Founder and Melanie Gruenwald,  Executive Director
“Our world is so challenging and we can’t and don’t want to tune it out, we have to really pay attention. So one of the things we try also develop…is looking at what are our shared experiences, what is it about the human narrative that challenges us to really work on ourselves,” eplains David about how we engage with the learning and practices of Kabbalah.
Their mission: Kabbalah Experience provides an open and inclusive learning community committed to encourage individual and spiritual growth through the study and application of Kabbalah’s insights into the parallels between physical and spiritual reality. Kabbalah Experience is a place where you begin to understand and appreciate the soul awareness that connects all of created existence and to apply that understanding in your daily life.
Kabbalah Experience reaches to a diverse audience of wisdom and spiritual seekers and educates them with unique teachings of Transformational Kabbalah. Students can access transformational kabbalah to realize their purpose in life, contribute to the well-being of family and friends, affect positive change in their communities, and ultimately, radiate peace to the world.
Their History: Founded in 2006 by Dr. David Sanders, Kabbalah Experience was born out of a love for teaching and studying Kabbalah. In the years since Kabbalah Experience was founded, more than 1300 students have experienced the life-changing power of David’s practical and empowering teachings. In 2019, Melanie Gruenwald became the Executive Director of Kabbalah Experience and led growth of the organization.
Kabbalah Experience offers 4 years of curriculum, and advanced courses for continuing students. The organization also offers a self-study video series for asynchronous learning.Transformative Kabbalah: For seekers of spiritual growth and knowledge who want to transcend limitations and realize practical benefits, Kabbalah Experience’s unique teachings of Transformative Kabbalah offer the opportunity to…experience life richly in the present moment, increase compassion and personal peace, bring positive change to your life and a troubled world
Their Why: We seek to shape our world into a more harmonious, egalitarian and peaceful planet.  The Tree of Life, the central map of the Kabbalah teaching culminates in “manifestation” because spiritual practice and learning is best expressed when you walk your talk.
Gandhi’s quote “Be the change you want to see in the world” implies two important messages: First, don’t shirk from your responsibility to make the world better. As is stated in Jewish tradition: Do your part even if you can’t get it all done. Second: See the change that is needed in you to make the world better. As is stated in Kabbalah tradition: You are the project, not your projections.
 We are ordinary people from diverse backgrounds dedicated to experiencing our amazing light and seeing clearly our challenging blind spots. We are all student-teachers (our teachers are life-long learners and our students share their wisdom and shape the curriculum) dedicating ourselves to a deepening awareness of the masks we wear and the stories we live in.
We try to b

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Global Jewish Connections01 Oct 202100:35:35

Featuring: Madison Jackson, Founder and Executive Director

“I realize there needed to be some program, some organization, just some way, of connecting individual people from around the world because the human level is where we grow more accepting, meaning when we get to know a person face to face, get to know their own story, and feel that emotional attachment then we (might) become more open minded to the idea of Jewish life existing in all corners of the world,” say Madison while sharing her rationale behind starting The Global Jewish Pen Pal Program. 

The Global Jewish Pen Pal Program matches Jews from around the world as pen pals in order to help people learn more about Jewish life in other countries. The goal of the Global Jewish Pen Pal Program is to remedy the lack of connections between Jews from all over the world, specifically between Jews in different parts of the diaspora. Pen pals can choose to communicate through handwritten letters, or virtually via emails, video calls, or messaging. All ages are welcome and there is no cost to participate in the program. Pen pals will be matched with someone of a similar age, from a different country. We supplement the experience that people have communicating with their pen pals, through hosting a variety of online events for the Global Jewish Pen Pal Program participants.
Follow Global Jewish Penpal Program on  Facebook  and  Instagram

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The Jewish Asian-American Experience17 Sep 202100:29:12

Featuring: Gen Slosberg, Co-Creator & Producer

“I would say that the primary purpose and core reason that Lunar exists is to serve Asian-American Jews…We are like a love letter to our community. We want our community to feel seen and (feel) like they belong,” explains Gen Slosberg. 

LUNAR’s Purpose is to cultivate connection, belonging and visibility for Asian American Jews through authentic multimedia storytelling and intersectional community programming.

LUNAR’s Values:

  • By us for us: We strive for our leadership to reflect the identities of our community. Our offerings are rooted in our community’s most pressing needs.
  • Embodying Authenticity: We showcase the honest and nuanced textures of being an Asian American Jew. We want our work to feel organic and accessible to our audience.
  • Practicing Inclusivity: We recognize the broad range of cultures in the Asian and Jewish communities. We respect and welcome Asian American Jews of all ages, abilities, ethnicities, religious/secular backgrounds, and gender expressions/identities. Inclusivity is something we continuously practice, refine, and ingrain into our work.
  • Honoring Nuance: We are committed to maintaining respectful discourse and making space for nuance and varied perspectives in our diverse community.
  • Embracing Joy: Amid ongoing hatred and violence targeting our communities, it is essential that we celebrate and find joy in who we are.

Visit Lunar to view their film first season and donate here.

Follow LUNAR on  Facebook ,  Instagram , and Twitter.

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Reimaging Ancient Rituals03 Sep 202100:38:41

Featuring: Carrie Bornstein, CEO, Mayyim Hayyim

“I found out about Mayyim Hayyim before it opened actually…I was really drawn to the idea of taking something that seemed like it should be one way and flipping it on it’s head to make it better and more relevant and accessible,” explains Carrie Bornstein about her path to working at Mayyim Hayyim.

Mayyim Hayyim is a 21st century creation, a mikveh rooted in ancient tradition, reinvented to serve the Jewish community of today. Mayyim Hayyim is an intimate center for spirituality, learning, celebration and community, an international model of Jewish creativity and vitality.

Mayyim Hayyim is a resource for learning, spiritual discovery, and creativity where women, men, and people of all genders and ages can celebrate milestones like weddings and b’nai mitzvah; where conversion to Judaism is accorded the honor and dignity it deserves; where survivors of trauma, illness or loss find solace; and where those who immerse monthly can explore the ritual on their own terms.

Mayyim Hayyim is a fountain of creativity that, since its opening in 2004, inspired new liturgies and curricula, publications, music, artwork, and plays. A busy center of community life, Mayyim Hayyim provides 1600 immersions and over 110 education programs every year, art exhibits in our gallery, national consultation services, and meaningful volunteer opportunities and training. We also offer a collection of original films.

Mayyim Hayyim makes mikveh accessible and meaningful for the full diversity of our people for the first time in Jewish history. A local treasure and an international model since 2004, Jews from around the US and Israel routinely stop at Mayyim Hayyim to tour, learn, and immerse. And whoever calls, or walks through our doors, or sends an email receives a thoughtful response and a warm welcome. In the words of Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook, “The old becomes new, and the new becomes holy.” That is Mayyim Hayyim.

Mayyim Hayyim’s mission is to reclaim and reinvent one of Judaism’s most ancient rituals–immersion in the mikveh–for contemporary spiritual use; to teach about this resource to all who are interested; and to make the mikveh a sacred space that is open and accessible to all Jews and those who are becoming Jews.

Visit Mayyim Hayyim's website here.
Follow Mayyim Hayyim on  Facebook ,  Instagram , and Twitter.

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Reinvigorating Jewish Life Across the Globe20 Aug 202100:33:01

Featuring: Aharon Ariel Lavi, Founder and Executive Director
“What communities give to people is invaluable…they give a sense of belonging, sense of friendship, and of support and of identity. It’s something that is at the core of our lives,” explains Aharon Ariel Lavi when sharing his passionate journey toward working with and supporting intentional communities.

Founded in 2014, Hakhel is the first and largest global incubator for Jewish intentional communities. Its mission is to spark and support new expressions of Jewish life in the Diaspora by nurturing the growth of intentional communities.  Aharon Ariel Lavi, founder and executive director, says Hakhel’s vision is to give every young Jew in the world an opportunity to be a part of an active Jewish community, step away from loneliness and be part of something bigger.  Hakhel amplifies and strengthens new expressions of Jewish community life.

A  Jewish intentional community share three main principals space, time and mission/vision. They are formed to create a sense of belonging. An intentional community is for those who seek for intimacy through connection to a group that isn’t complicated  by bureaucracy or hierarchy. These communities intend to create partnerships with  people that share core values and opportunities to work for a common good. Although an intentional community may use social media, social media does not replace real life encounters. Most communities  gather in person at least once per month to fulfill their shared mission. 

Aharon Ariel Lavi shares his personal journey toward living in and working with intentional communities. He’s been  involved in youth communities from the time he was a boy. In 2011, after a lifetime of activity in various communities, Aharon founded Makom Pioneers. Makom Pioneers is  an umbrella organization for 260 intentional communities in Israel. Makom Community Pioneers are made of young, creative and idealistic people from all sectors of Israeli society; working, living and leading local and regional social innovative initiatives throughout Israel. After attending a Jewish intentional community conference lead by Hazon in 2013, Aharon recognized an opportunity to work with Israeli diaspora relationships. This awareness led him to create Hakhel in 2014.  Hakhel launched globally  in 2017, under the umbrella of Hazon. As the Jewish lab for sustainability, Hazon is building a movement that strengthens Jewish life and contributes to a more environmentally sustainable world for all.

Hakhel operates in partnership with Israel’s Ministry of Diaspora Affairs, which works to strengthen Jewish life in the Diaspora and its connection to Israel. While the world is transitioning from hierarchical and centralist structures to networks and shared economies, Hakhel is on the forefront of implementing a spirit of innovation in Jewish life.

Hakhel empowers community building from the grassroots. They seek out partners all over the world and bring them together to share, teach, and inspire each other. Each community is set up with a professional advisor and is invited to a learning trip in Israel, an international annual conference and offered many other opportun

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Customizable Judaism17 Mar 202300:39:03

Haggadot.com

Featuring: Eileen Levinson, Founder and Executive Director
Haggadot.com is part of Custom & Craft, a nonprofit design lab using technology, art and new media to imagine new formats for engaging with ancient traditions. Founded in 2011, our online platforms Haggadot.com and Custom and Craft make home-based Jewish ritual accessible, meaningful, and diverse – giving individuals of all faith backgrounds the tools to create for themselves and to discover the other creators in their community. 

Judaism can be beautiful and welcoming. Haggadot.com believes Judaism can look and feel that way too. They envision a world in which every Jew, and the Jew-curious, regardless of background, can find a place for themselves in Jewish life through thoughtfully-designed products and media.

They believe that Passover is primarily an exercise in empathy. At the seder, we tell the story of Exodus as though we personally exited Mitzrayim, or “the narrow place.” Haggadot.com’s core values emphasize how a deep personal connection with the Passover story drives empathy. Read more here: https://www.haggadot.com/values

Haggadot.com is a design lab for the Jewish community, experimenting with technology, media and user experience to imagine new formats for engaging in ancient traditions. Their platforms, Haggadot.com and Custom and Craft enable over 500,000 users annually to make their own haggadahs and other DIY materials for Jewish ritual. They facilitate new product development through collaborations with leading Jewish organizations and thinkers across a diverse spectrum of perspectives.

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



By Jewish Girls. For Jewish Girls.06 Aug 202100:52:50

Featuring: JGirls  Magazine with Elizabeth Mandel, Founder and Executive Director

Elizabeth Mandel defines attributes of feminist leadership as “…to be able to think expansively, holistically, and generously, to be able to create space for other’s ideas, really listen to those ideas…to be able to use positions of authority, to create space for a multitude of voices that are different from your own.”

jGirls has two main components. The first is the Online Magazine. Here they hosts a variety of voices and expression.  Teens write about virtually everything. And whether or not the topics are Jewish, we are aware that which is written is filtered through the lens of the lived experience of the author. Additionally, jGirls foster leadership. Their editorial staff members are all teens. Both editors and artists are selected to be a part of a feminist leadership training  as staff of jGirls. All the teens received a stipend for their work in order to professionalize their experience and learn to value their own work. 

Mission: jGirls Magazine provides a platform for self-identifying Jewish teenage girls to share their voices with the world and each other. In doing so, they have the opportunity to hone their communication skills, share their challenges and victories, explore their identities, talk across difference, and engage with a community of peers on their own terms.

Our teen Editors are given real-world decision-making experience. Their ideas hold weight, their opinions have value, they are responsible for their own editorial choices, and those choices make an impact. Additionally, Editors use their positions to create spaces for—and amplify the voices of—their peers.

In providing this forum for expression and exploration, jGirls contributes to long-term social change in the Jewish community by cultivating the next generation of bold, committed Jewish female leaders.

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Mindfulness, Connection and Jewish Life23 Jul 202100:39:41

Featuring: Institute for Jewish Spirituality with Rabbi Josh Feigelson

“In my experience, spirituality is about…presence, being present with what is and not judging it and awareness, living with awareness and intention,” says Rabbi Josh as he shares his definition of spirituality. He goes on to teach us Rabbi Levi Yitzchak of Breditchev’s (Bio here) interpretation of the pasuk -sentence- in Exodus 25:8, “Make Me a sanctuary that I may dwell in them ( וְעָ֥שׂוּ לִ֖י מִקְדָּ֑שׁ וְשָֽׁכַנְתִּ֖י בְּתוֹכָֽם )” explaining that the use of the words ‘in them” means that the Divine Presence is in our own heart.

IJS’s Mission:  

The Institute for Jewish Spirituality seeks to revitalize Jewish life by teaching spiritual practices that cultivate mindfulness on the individual and communal levels, so that we can act with enriched wisdom, clarity, and compassion. IJS teaches people who are seeking a deeper, richer and more meaningful life experience Jewish spiritual practices that are grounded in mindfulness.

IJS online courses and retreats offer you Jewish spiritual practices you can use to cultivate awareness; connect with greater authenticity to yourself, others, and God; access wisdom and resilience; deepen your connection to Judaism; and help you find greater meaning in life. They utilize traditional and contemporary forms of authentic Jewish practice to enrich everyday life with Jewish wisdom, link the search for inner wholeness with tikkun olam (repair of the world), and create a vibrant, enduring Judaism now and for generations to come.

IJS teaches 5 foundational practices:

  1. Jewish Mindfulness Meditation -cultivating awareness and the ability to access wisdom and resilience even in the midst of chaos.
  2. Desirable Character Traits (Tikkun Middot - development of ethical character traits) -fine-tuning the way we show up in daily life and in our relationships by cultivating traits like loving kindness, patience, generosity, truth telling etc.
  3. Reflective Text Study - gaining insight into one’s inner life by using Jewish texts as a mirror.
  4. Embodied Practices - accessing the wisdom of your body through yoga and singing.
  5.  Contemplative Prayer (Tefillah) -moving from rote recitation to meaningful prayer.

Definitions and Clarifications

daven (davening) - Yiddish for pray (praying)

Halachah- spiritual discipline

Hasidisim-  a religious movement which arose among the Polish Jews in the eighteenth century, and which won over nearly half of the Jewish masses. In its literal meaning the word "Ḥasidism" is identical with "pietism" ("Ḥasid" = "the pious") .  See more at Jewish Encyclopedia. 

 kain yehiy ratzon- so may it be

nefesh- soul

neshama-spirit

pasuk- verse

Shechinah- the Divine feminine

Visit Institute for Jewish

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Jewish Identity through Music09 Jul 202100:27:33

Featuring: Tkiya with Carla Friend, Founder and Executive Director

“The music really transformed me in a number of ways. I felt an instant and deep connection to my father and also to my Jewish heritage in general,” reflects Carla Friend about attending Shabbat Services.

Tkiya’s mission is to use participatory music experiences to help people of all ages find their unique connection with Jewish culture and to reinvigorate diverse Jewish communities.

Imagine an experience where people of all ages come together to experience the feeling of Jewish community. Where a celebration of culture brings together people of diverse backgrounds, and where the unengaged feel welcome and inspired. Tkiya recognizes that families are becoming less engaged in Judaism due to a lack of convenient, accessible experiences and seek a sense of belonging and connection. We create participatory music experiences that meet participants where they are – physically, psychologically, and spiritually – to find their unique connection to Jewish culture and community. In this new age of physical distancing, Tkiya was one of the first organizations able to pivot our programming model to continue to provide meaningful connection in a time when it is so deeply needed. 

 Tkiya partners with more than 50 other organizations, offering dozens of experiences each week. In addition to offering free Jewish community music experiences, Tkiya also facilitates classroom music for preschools, enrichment classes, musical theatre experiences, private lessons, and several secular weekly Parent & Me singalongs.

Definitions and Clarifications
Ashkenazi - a Jewish person of central or eastern European descent. 

Mizrahi -a Jews person of  Middle East or North Africa descent. 

Sephardi -  a Jewish person of  who descends from the Iberian peninsula (Spain and Portugal).

“I discovered my Jewish identity through music. Now, my mission is to use music to help others connect and to strengthen the bonds of our diverse Jewish community.” -Carla Friend

Visit Tkiya's website. Follow Tkiya on  Facebook ,  Instagram , and Twitter

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Artists 4 Israel25 Jun 202100:34:04

Featuring: Craig Dershowitz, Cofounder & CEO

My driving force is ‘how do I do the most good with my work?’ …and I can’t think of a better way than supporting (Israel) the country that helps the causes about which I am passionate, explains Craig Dershowitz, Cofounder and CEO of Artists 4 Israel.  

Artists 4 Israel prevents the spread of anti-Israel bigotry through art and helps communities and people affected by terrorism and hate. Artists 4 Israel’s international network of artists are agents of change who place Art Over Hate. Their creativity and talents beautify society, uplift people and enhance our understanding of Israel. Hate takes many forms: ideologically through words of intolerant speech and calls for BDS or violently through the actions of terrorism and war. Artists 4 Israel combats, solves and heals for both of these extremes.
 Follow Artist 4 Israel on  Facebook , and  Instagram 

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FED: Like Ted Talks but you get fed.11 Jun 202100:24:26

Featuring: Deborah Fishman Shelby

“Shared meals around Jewish values and holidays is a really powerful way for people to connect to something larger than them and with each other….when people break bread together in this way it transcends boundaries and it allows people to really connect on a deep level.” 
FED is a platform for ideas built into an inclusive community with delicious food; inspirational talks, music, and art; and the company and creative energy of others you find at FED. Speakers and performers interact directly with the participants, who are encouraged to immerse themselves in a community animated by hospitality, openness and dialogue. FED restores our human capacity for empathy through allowing people to learn from others' stories and discover new ideas. FED provides a platform for Jewish creativity, including through art and culture, where those from a variety of backgrounds feel welcome and included. Creativity with the tradition and how it can inspire reflection, help us find and realize a sense of purpose, and be our best selves is what Judaism (and FED) is all about. Since August 2015, FED has held over 100 local, national, and international events. We are excited to invite you to our table and community to experience what it's all about. A FED event presents motivational and entertaining stories, ideas and art from the rich spectrum of people across the world and right here in New York City in the context of a dinner party.

Deborah Fishman Shelby is the founder of FED. Deborah is an entrepreneur and network-weaver. With a background in international Jewish cuisine, Deborah works at the intersection of people, food and ideas, weaving together relationships that spark unexpected dialogue, synergy, and connection. Deborah views her mission in life as making sure everyone is fed — physically, intellectually, spiritually and on a basic human level.

Visit Fed Social's website here.

Follow FED Social on  Facebook ,  Instagram , and Twitter.
Definitions and Clarifications

Schpiel- Yiddush term borrowed from German meaning game, play or performance or long speech.

A Purim spiel or Purim play is an ensemble of festive practices for Purim. It is usually a comic dramatization of the Book of Esther, the central text and narrative that describes what transpired on the holiday of Purim. 

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More Meaning, More Spirit, More Love28 May 202100:40:47

Featuring Educator and Musician: Eliana Light

“Prayers were written by people… in response to what was going on in their lives and the universe at that time…we have been given the incredible gift and challenge of using other people’s words for our prayer practice and on the other side we have the challenge of bring our own selves to it, our own words…” explains Eliana Light during this podcast. 

Eliana’s explanations of prayer and Jewish liturgy, allow for deep thought. I don’t have conversations about prayer or God often. This conversation with Eliana was inspiring and uplifting and thought provoking. Hopefully this podcast spark thoughts and conversations for you. I look forward to continuing to think about how I understand God and therefore how I speak and teach about God.  If you have thoughts or comments about this conversation, I encourage you to send us a note so we may continue this discussion and amplify many voices. 

Eliana’s Bio

Eliana is working towards a world of One-ness, guided and inspired by Jewish heritage. She focuses on translating liturgy, prayer practice, and G!D-concepts in ways that are deep and accessible for all people and all ages. Eliana’s music, programs, and teaching reflect a spirit of playfulness, embodied wisdom, empathy, and joy.  (For complete bio; https://elianalight.com/ )

Eliana’s Offerings

Meaningful Music: Eliana writes songs that engage in Jewish content for the head, heart, and spirit. 

Powerful Prayer: From soulful Friday nights to spirited Saturday mornings, from family Havdalah to Hebrew school Sundays, Eliana brings knowledge, skill, empathy, and playfulness to the crafting and leading of worship experiences. 

Excellent Education: Intentionality, passion, and leadership are at the core of facilitating and planning meaningful educational moments. Eliana creates and implements programs full of powerful content and creative methodology for any age, from song sessions to lunch and learns. 

Creative Consulting: Perhaps you have participated in services at your synagogue, camp, or school, and walked away thinking, “I think prayer here could be better.” Let’s work together to explore what better looks like, but first, what prayer is, and what purpose it serves in your community.

For more info and links to Eliana's social media, visit here website at:  https://elianalight.com/ 

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Jewish Drinking Podcast14 May 202100:41:34

Featuring Rabbi Drew Kaplan
“Judaism has a lot of wisdom on life and, since drinking alcoholic beverages has been a cornerstone of humanity for thousands of years, Judaism has a lot to say about this topic,” explains Rabbi Kaplan on his website.
JewishDrinking.com is the #1 English-speaking resource for Jewish wisdom, history, textual, and other similar resources regarding drinking. There’s a lot in the Jewish tradition about drinking – whether in the Torah, Talmud, history, or more. JewishDrinknig.com started out as a place for clever and insightful blog posts about Jewish drinking texts. It quickly morphed into also providing podcast/video episodes with notable guests speaking about intriguing topics. That then led to parashah sheets!
Judaism has a lot of wisdom on life and, since drinking alcoholic beverages has been a cornerstone of humanity for thousands of years, Judaism has a lot to say about this topic. Moreover, there is much material in Jewish texts concerning drinking and people are interested in what our tradition has to say.  Jewishdrinking.com  seeks to connect those looking for these texts and the texts.

Offerings found at Jewishdrinking.com:

  1. The Jewish Drinking Show is the leading podcast/video show on drinking in Judaism. Hosted by Rabbi Drew Kaplan, The Jewish Drinking Show publishes on a weekly basis, in both video and podcast formats. All of the episodes are listed below in chronological order. If there are guests and/or topics you would like to recommend, please let me know (email me at Drew@JewishDrinking.com). If you, yourself, would like to join an episode as a guest, here is what you can expect.
  2. Source Sheets http://jewishdrinking.com/source-sheets/ 
  3. Secondary Literature http://jewishdrinking.com/secondary-literature/ articles, book chapters, books, and dissertations. 

More information on Rabbi Drew Kaplan and his work:
Rabbi Drew is the Director of Pastoral Care, Cedar Village Senior Living Facility in Ohio, a licensed real estate agent,  a knowledgeable Jewish communal leader as well as an experienced Jewish educator.  See Rabbi Drew’s full bio here.

Star Wars in Judaism Series- Here you will find Rabbi Drew’s a series on Star Wars & Judaism, looking at all of the theatrically-released Star Wars films and comparing/contrasting them with corresponding Biblical and Rabbinic texts. 

Rabbi Drew on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn.

Visit  The Jewish Drinking website here. 

Follow Jewish Drinking  on  Facebook ,  InstagramTwitter and YouTube

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Jewish Studio Project30 Apr 202100:39:28

Featuring: Rabbi Adina Allen, Co-founder & Creative Director

“The world isn’t lacking more information.  What we need is a way to process and hold and to integrate that information so it can actually have an effect on us and can shift our actions,” are the thoughts that led Rabbi Adina to realize that  both with art making and Judaism are ways that could help us stay with what is hard so that it can move through us and something new and and transformative can come out. 

Jewish Studio Project (JSP) exists to expand the capacities of individuals and communities to be with challenge and change. Through a unique methodology (the Jewish Studio Process) that combines creative practices from the field of art therapy with Jewish learning techniques and spiritual community building, JSP helps people to cultivate curiosity, navigate uncertainty, sit with discomfort, and process complexity so that right action can emerge. JSP is founded on the belief that creativity exists within each of us and that creativity is a vital resource in the work of social transformation. The creative process is JSP’s central tool for expanding empathy and resilience, supporting the work of dismantling oppression, and drawing forth the new narratives, insights and images that can help bring a more just world into being.

JSP innovates a new approach to Jewish creativity—one in which art is not just for artists and Jewish texts are not just for scholars. Rabbi Adina Allen, Co-Founder and Creative Director, developed JSP’s methodology as a rabbinical student after identifying a need for new ways of seeking and processing personal insights from Jewish texts. The Jewish Studio Process provides individuals and teams a way to activate their imagination and bring emotions and intuition into their engagement with Jewish life. 

Through community programs, immersive experiences, trainings and professional development engagements, JSP has brought its work to nearly ten thousand participants and collaborated with over 100 organizations seeking creative approaches to Jewish engagement.

Visit  Jewish Studio Project’s website here. Check out their upcoming programs here.

Follow Jewish Studio Project on  Facebook ,  Instagram , and Twitter.

Support the show

Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Hebrew Helpers16 Apr 202100:56:25

Featuring: Todd Shotz
“You may not remember necessarily every single thing that they (your educators) taught you but you remember how  you felt in the learning process and that has stayed with you,” explains Todd Shotz. He says that our (Hebrew Helpers’) process helps to create “the feeling, that connection, that engagement which comes from showing the relevance of what our tradition has to hold for modern life.” 

Since 2005, Hebrew Helpers, a nationwide Jewish Studies program,  has been providing personalized education to families from all aspects of the Jewish community.  They work with any family looking for outside-the-box Jewish education and anyone looking for a deeper connection and comprehension of Judaism. These families may be interfaith families,  LGBTQ+ families, and may or may not belong to a synagogue.  Todd and his team of mentors have been working toward helping their students navigate their own Jewish identity through understanding  Jewish history, culture, ritual, text and prayer.  Hebrew Helpers maintains that the traditional right of passage of a Bar/Bat Mitzvah service can be a modern milestone when families and students access their spiritual place in the community. Hebrew Helpers inclusive approach helps students and families to create meaningful and experiential learning experiences. 

Their mission is to provide young people with the tools to navigate their Jewish identity through a custom-tailored understanding of Jewish history, culture, ritual, and prayers. Their vision is that no family, looking for a deeper connection and comprehension of Judaism, will fall through the cracks.

Visit  Hebrew Helpers’ website here. 

Follow Hebrew Helpers on  Facebook ,  Instagram , and Twitter.

Hebrew Helpers recently launched a video series called Zoom Mitzvah on YouTube. Check out those video here

Definitions and Clarifications

Aliyah-( lit. going up- can be spiritual or physical) 1. immigration to Israel 2. the honor of being called upon to read from the Torah

Chevrutah- (also known asaschavrusa,  chavruta or havruta literally translate to "friendship" or "companionship)", is a traditional rabbinic approach to Bible study in which a small group of students (usually 2-5) analyze, discuss, and debate a shared text.

Mishpochah- family

Neshama-is a Hebrew word which can mean "soul" or "spirit". 

Tikun Olam-(lit. 'repair of the world') is a concept in Judaism,  an aspiration to improve the world.

Torah trope-Trope (trop in Yiddish) is the tune used when Torah reading and other texts, based on a cantillation marks. Most communities use six different kinds of trope throughout the year.

Tzedakah-(lit. justice) charitable giving.

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



The Ruach19 Mar 202100:54:50

Featuring: Peter Levinson, Co-founder and Lead Guitarist

“There had to be a transformation of understanding…. that’s what the Ruach has done for me,” describes Peter,  during our discussion of the Keva and Kavana, Jewish elements of prayer. He continues to say, we really believe that giving people a real strong feeling of who they are, and a sense of confidence and they’ll do the right thing”

The Ruach is a Jewish Rock band and spiritual community in Charlotte, NC spreading the joy of Judaism through modern Jewish music! They provide a Jewish spiritual and cultural experience! They are reaching out and engaging many members of Jewish community in Charlotte, including the independent and unaffiliated ones. They strive to provide a deeper connection to Judaism through positivity and connection. 

Visit here to learn more about The Ruach.

Follow The Ruach on  Facebook ,  Instagram , Twitter and YouTube.

Tune in here to next The  Shabbat Experience by The Ruach on Friday, March 26 at 6:45 est. 

Definitions and Clarifications

Minyan- a quorum of ten Jewish adults needed to recite communal prayers

Oneg- literally means joy, used to describe a gathering on Shabbat to fulfill the mitzvah (commandment) of enjoying the Sabbath

Rock Hashanah- play on the name of the Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year

Ruach – spirit, wind or breath

Kavana  is the Hebrew word for direction, intention, or purpose. In its simplest meaning, it refers to concentrating the mind in the performance of a religious act.

Keva is the Hebrew word for fixed, stable or permanent, it refers to the framework and the details of Jewish worship.

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Caring, Cohesive, Community for Cultural Jews03 Mar 202300:41:38

Secular Synagogue 

Featuring: Rabbi Denise Handlarski, Founder 

What is Secular Synagogue?

Secular Synagogue is a digital Judaism, online community, engaged and meaningful learning and practice. Their goal is two-directional: explore how Judaism can be an enriching force in your life and, in turn, make you a more kind, just, and effective force for good in the world. 

Who is Secular Synagogue for?

Jewish, Jew-ish, Intermarried, In-married, Unmarried, Secular, Cultural, Atheist, Agnostic, Seeker, Spiritual... YOU

If you are a cultural/secular Jew, someone who is becoming a Jew, partnered with a Jew, or otherwise Jewishly engaged,  and want to connect to Jewish wisdom, ideas and community, this is the place for you! Every day you will join people just like you in Jewish-inspired challenges and learning. This is an accessible, affordable, engaged, inclusive, meaningful, and contemporary approach to Jewish learning, practice, and community. Create and foster a deep and rich Jewish life — in 5 - 10 minutes a day. They are committed to meaningful inclusivity for Queer/Trans folks, BIPOC and other racialized members, and anyone who has felt excluded in Jewish spaces. Secular Synagogue is intersectional, intergenerational, and international. 

Mission

Secular Synagogue  aspires to  create meaningful, valuable, beautiful Jewish learning, experiences, and  community for secular/cultural Jews.  A Judaism that fosters  two-directional goodness: making your life richer/better and, in  turn, it will making you better so that more goodness can be created in the  world.

Vision Statement

Secular Synagogue’s vision is a Connected Community across distance, enabled virtually, that  provides those looking for meaningful cultural Jewish learning,  experiences, and community a space where they feel true belonging. 

Values

Secular Synagogue serve anyone who wishes to be part of their group including: 

  • Jews who are secular/cultural/humanist/atheist/agnostic/questioning/skeptical
  • Those connected to Jews via family, relationship, or ancestry
  • Those exploring becoming Jewish, Jews-by-choice, new Jews, those on their own path/journey to Judaism

They do not believe in "bad Jews" or "bad Jew guilt"

They are pro-intermarriage/intercultural partnerships. There will never be  any questioning or guilt about "authenticity" for anyone at any time.

Social justice is part of our Jewish practice and expression.

They are kind, and foster goodness. Secular Synagogue turns the internet into a place of communal support and mutual love and respect. 

They are fun and funny. Sure, they tackle serious issues. But try not to take themselves too seriously.

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The Well of Detroit05 Mar 202100:41:22

Featuring: Rabbi Jeff Stombaugh

"There are so many meaningful ways to be involved Jewishly. And I believe one is not better or worse than another if it has purpose and meaning for you.” explains Rabbi Jeff Stombaugh. Rabbi Jeff experienced a defining moment during a prayer service at Hillel. He concludes that, “Judaism doesn’t need to look any one particular way. We can conscientiously push boundaries.”

Rabbi Jeff Stombaugh is the Executive Director of the Well. The Well is Metro Detroit’s inclusive Jewish community building, education and spirituality outreach initiative geared to the needs of young adults. They believe that Jewish community, ethics, values, and spirituality can and should be directly applicable to our lives and should drive us to positively impact the world around us. The Well attempts to be intentional, inclusive and innovative. The Well is here to:

  • Introduce you to the five best friends you didn't know you didn't have but always wanted.
  • Help you find an awesome group to do Jewish things with.
  • Empower you to create meaningful Jewish experiences that speak to you and your peers.
  • Be your partner in building a Jewish community that is inclusive, inspiring, and relevant.

Their mission is to create and foster an accessible, inclusive, relationship-driven community for young adults and young families that uses Jewish wisdom and ritual to help community members flourish as human beings.

Their Vision is to empower people to love being part of the Jewish community so much that they actively and wholeheartedly help cultivate community for and with others.

The Well’s Guiding Principles are:

  1. Relational: We cultivate supportive friendships that serve as the glue for community to form and evolve.
  2. Opt-In: We meet our community where they are. They choose to engage when and how they desire.
  3. Welcoming: We design entry points for those who have never connected Jewishly, re-entry points for those who have previously disengaged, and continued growth opportunities for those who have always connected.
  4. Personalized Jewish practice: We partner with our community members to co-create meaningful Jewish ritual, educational, and spiritual experiences.
  5. Continuity and evolution: We believe the continuation of the Jewish people is mission critical but we believe that Jewish practice and experience will and should change over time.

Visit here to learn more about The Well. Follow The Well on  Facebook ,  Instagram.


Definitions and Clarifications:

Davening- praying

Birkat hamazon - blessing for after meals

Frum -  (Yiddush)- observant Jew

Smicha- Rabbbinic Ordination

Talmud- the primary source of Jewish religious law, a written compilation of Mishnah and Gemara, which are rabbinic interpretations of the Torah. 

Rosh Chodesh- celebration of the new month

Hillel International is the largest Jewish student organization in the wor

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Silver Screens Studios19 Feb 202100:35:12

Featuring: Tiffany Woolf, Co-Founder

 "Always follow your blessings," says 103 year old Risa Igelfeld. 
Carl Reiner said, "Always have something to do and stay curious." 
These are two examples of the wisdom Tiffany Woolf has learned from our older generation. Tiffany’s affinity to hearing the stories of the elderly, gave her the idea to talk to capture their stories. She launched Silver Screen Studio’s and three years later. They have now produced three series of documentary shorts. You can view all the documentaries on their YouTube channel. Silver Screen’s documentary shorts inspire audiences to live a meaningful last act. They feature legendary seniors like Screenwriter Norman Lear, Actress Marion Ross, and Senator Carl Levin.  The films are presented with creativity, wisdom, wit, and candor. At any age, we can learn about the past from the people who lived it. This creates space for an intergenerational dialogue that empowers, informs and entertains. Tiffany reminds us to call our loved ones regularly and capture their stories before it’s too late. Silver Screen Studios gives amazing seniors their moment in the spotlight.

Tiffany and I recorded this interview prior to Larry King’s death. Here is an article she wrote about the relationship between Larry King and her father, Bob Woolf.

Visit here to learn more about Silver Screens Studio.
Interested in the tools and guidance to create film memories of your loved ones? Check out Silver Screens Tool Kit.
Follow Silver Screens on  Facebook ,  Instagram , Twitter and YouTube.

Definitions and Clarifications

Ushpizan- is Aramaic for “guests,” it is a ritual of symbolically inviting in of the souls of ancestors and other special figures into your sukkah (booth) during the festival of Sukkot (7 day fall harvest festival). 

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



Reboot05 Feb 202100:54:56

Featuring David Katznelson, CEO of Reboot.

Reboot grapples with the question, “how do we take this thousands of years old thing (Judaism) and make it so we keep the core of what it is yet dress it in a way that can make people feel like they have ownership of it,” explains David.

Reboot began as a conversation with people who had the ability to connect to a wide audience through arts and culture. They started to examine the inheritance they had from their Jewish connection. Feeling inspired, they began to create programs built on their Jewish inheritance. These programs set out to make Judaism relevant for the 21st century and beyond. Their programs are dedicated to moving people to make their own lives better. Jewish teachings urge us to be a light to others. Reboot’s goals is in alignment of this responsibility. Reboot exemplifies the type of organization that Bridges 613 is proud to showcase. We feel that everyone, regardless of how their religious identity, can benefit from Reboot's programs.

From their website: “Reboot is an arts and culture nonprofit that reimagines, reinvents and reinforces Jewish thought and traditions. As a premier R&D platform for the Jewish world, we catalyze our Reboot Network of preeminent creators, artists, entrepreneurs and activists to produce experiences and products that evolve the Jewish conversation and transform society.“

Visit here to learn more about Reboot.

Find a list of Reboot's programs here.

Learn more our work Reboot’s work in the following video, created to celebrate our 18th year; 

Read about their new strategic roadmap in this blog post from David Katznelson

Partner with Reboot.

Follow Reboot on  Facebook ,  Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

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Thank you for tuning in to The Bridging Connections podcast. Please partner with us to promote this important work. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram or visit our website at www.bridges613.org for exciting news about innovation in Jewish life. This work depends on your feedback and donations. Please consider leaving feedback and or making on donation. We are grateful for all your support.



IsraelLink22 Jan 202101:00:46

Today's guests are Mina Rush, National Director IsrealLink and Matt Rissien, Midwest IsraelLink Managing Director.

Mina and Matt are passionate about the work they are doing to promote a curriculum that fits the need of today’s learners.  During a Facebook live session, Mina explains that in creating IsraelLink, the only agenda that mattered was that of each individual student. She recognized the need to create something that enabled the students to figure out their own why for Israel. She and her research team worked to create something that would support the educational needs for both Jewish day schools and supplemental schools, as well as for  informal and formal educators, and would work for all denominations, and political leanings. After much research, they developed IsraelLink. 

IsraelLINK is an ever-expanding curriculum developed by a team of innovative educators, curriculum developers and educational consultants. This curriculum introduces students to the historical ties Jews have to the Land of Israel while providing portals for students to engage with modern Israel. IsraelLINK is an adaptable, online program. Learning is student-centered, experiential and project based with an emphasis on discovery.

Each students’ identity and values inform not just the how of their personal connection to Israel, but more significantly the WHY. It is important to learn about Israel as the Biblical Homeland and the realization of the Zionist dream. Equally important is understanding Israel as the incubator of the Jewish people; an evolving people whose identity, culture, values and resilience has much to offer. This provides students with not only the opportunity to learn something new about Israel, but more importantly to begin building a relationship with Israel, one that is based on the diverse points of connection that speak to each individual learner.

This curriculum is written for middle school students (6th – 8th grade) but can be adapted and modified for younger or older students. IsraelLINK provides platforms for both group and independent learning.

The IsraelLINK curriculum is currently being implemented nation-wide across all denominations in day schools, supplementary schools, youth group programs in both classroom and virtual settings.

Visit here to learn more about IsraelLink and their programs.

Follow IsraelLink on  Facebook .

Definitions and Clarifications

Hasbara is know as a public-relations effort to disseminate positive information abroad about the State of Israel and its actions

March of the Living is an educational program, bringing individuals from around the world to Poland and Israel to study the history of the Holocaust and to examine the roots of prejudice, intolerance and hatred.Al Chait- prayer on Yom Kippur. Learn more about March of the Living here

MAJPS - Master of Arts in Jewish Professional Studies at Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership

The Aleph Bet of Israel Education-This is a set of core principles, approac

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