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Cohan, Jeffrey, mugshot - reversed - Jeffrey Cohan
April 16, 2018

Jeffrey Cohan

Kenissa 2018 Cohort, Jeffrey Cohan

If a common thread unites the four propositions in Rabbi Schwarz’s important essay, it is this: Judaism must demonstrate its relevancy to contemporary Jews if our religion and our community are to thrive in the 21st Century. This thread is a part of the fabric of Jewish Veg, an organization that is addressing through a […]

Rabbi Shelly Barnathan
April 9, 2018

Rabbi Shelly Barnathan

Kenissa 2018 Cohort Rabbi Shelly Barnathan

Or Zarua, an emerging community of meaning located in the western suburbs of Philadelphia, focuses on the spiritual needs of empty nesters/baby boomers who are engaged, socially responsible Jews searching for alternatives to the “traditional” synagogue model. Our name, Or Zarua, comes from Psalm 97:11, or zarua latzadik, “light is sown for the righteous,” exemplifies […]

AvedonCandidHeadshot_vert - Joshua Avedon
April 2, 2018

Joshua Avedon

Kenissa 2018 Cohort Joshua Avedon

First as one of Ikar’s founders, then at Synagogue 3000, and currently at Jumpstart, I’ve had the privilege to work in the U.S., Europe, and Israel with leaders of new organizations and communities of all types and persuasions. I came to this work as someone who grew up disaffected from Jewish life, but who came […]

Guy Austrian - Guy Austrian
March 26, 2018

Rabbi Guy Austrian

Kenissa 2018 Cohort Rabbi Guy Austrian

“We’re like an 80-year-old startup.” That’s an apt description of the Fort Tryon Jewish Center (FTJC), an independent traditional egalitarian community-based in Washington Heights and Inwood, Manhattan. Founded in 1938 by refugees from Nazi Germany, an aging and dwindling congregation nearly shut its doors in the early 2000’s, then lost the use of its building […]

Rabbi Katy Allen
March 19, 2018

Rabbi Katy Z. Allen

Kenissa 2018 Cohort Rabbi Katy Z. Allen

In the face of the climate crisis, the human species faces an unparalleled existential crisis – will we survive, or will we follow the path of the dodo bird and other species now extinct? Can we both acknowledge the reality of anthropocentric climate change and respond with the speed and vigor required to reverse its […]

Judi Wisch
December 18, 2017

Judi Wisch

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Judi Wisch

In my position of Director of Community Engagement for PJ Library I continue to fulfill my lifelong passion of creating Jewish community, especially among those who live outside the organized Jewish community. PJ Library is much more than a free program that sends books to families raising Jewish children. PJ is a tool that helps […]

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December 11, 2017

Rabbi Michael Wasserman

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Michael Wasserman

I think of Rabbi Sid Schwarz’s four prescriptions for the revitalization of American Judaism as four aspects of a single broad prescription. Revitalizing learning (chochma), interpersonal responsibility (tzedek), community (kehillah), and a sense of purpose (kedusha) are not separate projects, but four sides of one large project. None can truly happen without the others happening […]

Aharon Varady
December 4, 2017

Aharon Varady

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Aharon Varady

The work of the Open Siddur Project is directly aligned with proposition 4. When I founded this project, the initial negative responses I received was that for an “innovation” project, siddurim were not sexy, their liturgical content obscure, their management tedious and that denominational interests and private publishers were fiercely protective of their proprietary intellectual […]

Naomi Tucker
November 27, 2017

Naomi Tucker

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Naomi Tucker

When considering how Jews find meaning in Jewish community, one significant area of disconnect has been the lack of organizations and opportunities that directly speak to women’s experience. For much of the 20th century, Jewish women found themselves gravitating towards social and support roles in synagogues, or found meaning in “professional volunteer” roles where they […]

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November 20, 2017

Rabbi Joshua M. Z. Stanton

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Rabbi Joshua M. Z. Stanton

Reading the chapter from Jewish Megatrends made me feel as though I had independently begun the process of creating the wheel. What would my life (and work) have been like if I had read it earlier? Probably not much different, but I could have missed some early mistakes and more readily honed the core concept […]

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November 13, 2017

Rabbi Ruth H. Sohn

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Rabbi Ruth H. Sohn

The work of the Yedidya Center for Jewish Spiritual Direction is most closely aligned with Proposition 4, that today’s Jews are seeking communities and experiences of kedusha, experiences that provide holiness, transcendent meaning, and a sense of purpose to their lives. The Yedidya Center is dedicated to the development and support of the emerging practice […]

Garth Silberstein
November 6, 2017

Rabbi Garth Silberstein

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Rabbi Garth Silberstein

The idea for Organic Yeshiva originally came to me when I was studying full-time at the Pardes Institute of Jewish Studies in Jerusalem, the “open and pluralistic yeshiva” mentioned in R. Schwarz’s essay, which serves as a mecca for young Jews looking to deepen their understanding of the Jewish tradition. Each year, Pardes would take […]

Jeremy Sher
October 30, 2017

Rabbi Jeremy Sher

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Rabbi Jeremy Sher

My approach at Ha-Emek is very simple: everyone is welcome. I’m a rabbi and I lead a Jewish congregation, and anyone who wishes to be in a Jewish congregation is altogether welcome at Ha-Emek. It doesn’t matter if they’re Jewish or if they’re just exploring. It certainly doesn’t matter who their parents are or who […]

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October 23, 2017

Jane Shapiro

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Jane Shapiro

When you are in the business of teaching Torah there are moments when you wonder if you are the last person sitting in the Bes Medrash, like the Matmid of Bialik’s poem. But then the world shifts in subtle or not-so-subtle ways, and students come searching for the Torah’s wisdom so they can make sense […]

Rami Schwartzer
October 16, 2017

Rabbi Rami Schwartzer

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, R. Rami Schwartzer

Rabbi Sid suggested that at the foundation of American spiritual malaise lies the technological revolution that has propelled our culture in the new century, mentioning as support Robert Putnam’s Bowling Alone, and “other students of American culture [who] followed [his] analysis.” But while Putnam was among the most widely read theorists on the subject, he […]

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October 10, 2017

Sammy Rosenbaum

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Sammy Rosenbaum

“Come with spirit. Leave with soul.” This is the tagline of The Well-Atlanta, a once-a-month musical Shabbat service for young professionals. About 90 people come each month. We just celebrated the third birthday of the project in January. The goal at the outset was to create a gathering of people who wanted something a little […]

kendell Pinkney
September 18, 2017

Kendell Pinkney

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Kendell Pinkney

The work of Kaleidoscope seems most aligned with the propositions of chochmah and kedusha. For the value of chochmah, Kaleidoscope’s mission to bring well-crafted, personal monologues by Jews-of-color and Jews of diverse ethnic backgrounds to the public aligns well with the essential characteristic of authenticity expressed in the article. The monologues of our various cast-members […]

YOppenheim
September 10, 2017

Yoni Oppenheim

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Yoni Oppenheim

I connect deeply to Rabbi Sid Schwarz’s fourth proposition: Kedusha: Lives of Sacred Purpose. His proposition is: “In an age when we better understand the shortcomings of capitalism and the culture of consumerism, the Jewish community must offer a glimpse of kedusha, experiences that provide holiness, transcendent meaning, and a sense of purpose.” Most theater artists catch […]

Rabbi Miriam Margles
September 5, 2017

Rabbi Miriam Margles

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Rabbi Miriam Margles

Alongside any conversation about new paradigms and frameworks for vibrant Jewish life, alongside discussions of innovative projects and core strategies, I find it essential to develop an understanding and mindful engagement with Jewish scars and the process of collective healing.  In an analysis of the factors that are contributing to a weakening of Jewish identity […]

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August 28, 2017

Patricia Eszter Margit

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Patricia Eszter Margit

Art Kibbutz is one of the first Jewish arts organizations that has succeeded in bringing the Jewish perspective through high quality art projects into important 21st century public discourses in the broader cultural sphere. Our team believes that our tradition has something meaningful to say and arts can be a vehicle to help Jews experience […]

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book cover Rabbi Sid Schwarz's Jewish Megatrends: Charting the Course of the American Jewish Future (Jewish Lights)

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