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Hannah Kapnik Ahsar
April 3, 2017

Hannah Kapnik Ashar

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Hannah Kapnik Ashar 2017 Cohort

“Jews are in fact seekers of wisdom (dorshei chochma), seekers of social justice (dorshei tzedek), seekers of community (dorshei kehillah), and seekers of lives of sacred purpose (dorshei kedusha).” What if we want to treat Jews not as consumers of these four domains, but as co-creators? What balance do we want organizations to strive for […]

Wendy Aronson
March 27, 2017

Wendy Aronson and Rabbi Brian Field

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Wendy Aronson and Rabbi Brian Field 2017 Cohort

On page 13 of his essay in Jewish Megatrends, Rabbi Schwarz describes a twenty-year-old, non-Orthodox Jew named Bill. Bill is engaged to a person of another faith and when he places a call to his childhood rabbi to see if he will officiate their wedding, he receives a response that makes Bill feel rejected. It […]

Rachel_Gildiner
March 20, 2017

Rachel Gildiner

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Rachel Gildiner 2017 Cohort

My work as an educator and Jewish leader has always been about (1) fostering kehillah, and (2) deepening kehillot with kedusha. I believe wisdom, learning, confidence, further involvement, Jewish risk-taking, asking questions, engaged Jewish life, emerges from positive experiences of community first and foremost. And it has been my experience that as we grow older, […]

Shawn Zevit
March 14, 2017

Rabbi Shawn Zevit

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Rabbi Shawn Zevit 2017 Cohort

Chochmah (Wisdom), Tzedek (Justice), Kehillah (Community) and Kedushah (Sacredness), the four propositions Rabbi Sid Schwarz outlines in his opening essay for Jewish Megatrends, are core Jewish values that are a winding thread throughout the millennia of the Jewish People’s journey. I have found all these areas resonant in my decades of avodah– work in sacred […]

zahara zahav
March 6, 2017

Zahara Zahav

Kenissa 2017 Cohort, Zahara Zahav 2017 Cohort

The four propositions that Sid suggests will shape and inspire meaningful, relevant Jewish communities today contain strong echoes of central themes found in the traditional wisdom of the Torah. Chochma, kedusha, tzedek and kehillah are rooted in the famous mishnah of Pirkei Avot 1:14: Shimon the Righteous who said, “On three things the world stands: […]

larry-yermack
February 27, 2017

Lawrence Yermack

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Lawrence Yermack 2016 Cohort

It’s probably best to preface these remarks with a brief statement of how I came to Jewish Spirituality because that will help to explain why I agree that the four concepts presented in the book quite accurately depict the aspirational side of today’s Jewish community. We will only succeed if we meet those aspirations with […]

rob-weinberg
February 21, 2017

Rob Weinberg

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Rob Weinberg 2016 Cohort

The work of the Experiment in Congregational Education (ECE), the nation’s first and longest lasting synagogue transformation project, aligns—to a greater or lesser extent— with all four propositions. How? ECE operates on multiple levels. At the p’shat level, our work is about transforming Jewish education including changing the Jewish learning goals, process, context, structures, and […]

karla-van-praag
February 13, 2017

Karla Van Praag

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Karla Van Praag 2016 Cohort

I believe that our work aligns with all four propositions. Wisdom/Chochmah There is a middle ground between giving people what they want and giving people what they need. Organizers, like rabbis and educators, need to meet people where they are if we want them to be responsive, but we can’t just encourage them to sit […]

rachel-timoner
February 6, 2017

Rabbi Rachel Timoner

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Rabbi Rachel Timoner 2016 Cohort

When I was hired as the new senior rabbi of CBE in Brooklyn, I was asked by my board of trustees to write up my vision for the congregation. All four of the propositions in Rabbi Sid’s book, JewishMegatrends appeared in my vision. In order to accomplish any of them, however, our first work must be to […]

ilana-sumka
January 30, 2017

Ilana Sumka

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Ilana Sumka 2016 Cohort

In Rabbi Sid’s four propositions, I recognized many key elements of my own personal Jewish identity: a Dorot fellowship in Jerusalem & studies at Pardes (1/Chochmah), my work with American Jewish World Service (2/Tzedek), the Hadar minyan (3/Kehilah), a summer internship at Elat Chayyim (4/Kedusha) are just a few examples.   I name these to ground […]

kayabyfredrikreiz6
January 23, 2017

Rabba Kaya Stern-Kaufman

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Rabba Kaya Stern-Kaufman 2016 Cohort

The philosophy, activities and offerings of Rimon: A Collaborative Community for Jewish Spirituality utilizes all of the four propositions described in Jewish Megatrends. Since our initial launch in 2012, we have offered an ongoing variety of programs and classes that explore the wisdom of Jewish spiritual teachings. We have consistently offered classes in Jewish mysticism, Torah […]

rebecca_sirbu_pro180
January 17, 2017

Rabbi Rebecca Sirbu

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Rabbi Rebecca Sirbu 2016 Cohort

RWB Vision Statement Rabbis Without Borders envisions a world where Jewish wisdom is a source for wellbeing for anyone anywhere. The rabbis in the RWB Network, are committed to pushing the borders of what it means to be a rabbi today. We seek to share our Torah in pluralistic, innovative ways grounded by a sense […]

ysk_sara_shalva_9001
January 9, 2017

Sara Shalva

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Sara Shalva 2016 Cohort

My work in building alternative Jewish community exists both inside and outside the trends laid out in Sid’s book. In any attempt to seek meaning by superimposing structure, the structure limits the opportunities to see creativity in the cracks between. The Lev B’Lev community I helped create exists outside traditional Jewish institutions, but was created […]

beth-sandweiss
January 3, 2017

Beth Sandweiss

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Beth Sandweiss 2016 Cohort

I have had many opportunities to experience spiritual community: at summer camp, at Buddhist and Jewish retreat centers, in my twenty year old women’s ritual group, and among the close circle of family friends with whom we celebrate Jewish Holidays and life cycle events. What these communities have in common for me is a visceral […]

shamu-sadeh
December 27, 2016

Shamu Sadeh

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Shamu Sadeh 2016 Cohort

My work at Adamah is well aligned with your four propositions. Chochmah: When I teach Jewish creation stories I pair Rashi’s commentary on Genesis 2:7 with secular philosophical writings. I teach the Book of Job together with Aldo Leopold. The majority of my students feel very engaged in this approach to Jewish learning. (How to […]

scott-perlo
December 19, 2016

Rabbi Scott Perlo

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Rabbi Scott Perlo 2016 Cohort

This is from the tail end of a Boston Globe article: “I definitely like the spiritual aspect of pushing yourself further than you ever thought you could go,” Huberlie said. “I don’t think I can put my beliefs behind any particular religion right now. . . but something I missed [about church] is if you really need […]

eden-pearlstein
December 12, 2016

Eden Pearlstein

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Eden Pearlstein 2016 Cohort

In Jewish Megatrends, Rabbi Sid Schwarz, makes the point that the American Jewish community is in the process of massive ideological and demographical transition. This transition is affecting individual Jews as well as many institutional pillars of the community such as synagogues and federations, both of which appear to be losing numbers in the form […]

nati-passow
December 5, 2016

Nati Passow

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Nati Passow 2016 Cohort

I enjoyed reading Rabbi Sid Schwarz’s opening essay to his book, Jewish Megatrends. Much of what I encountered reflects my own experience growing up in the Jewish community, and working in it for over fifteen years as an informal educator and non-profit director. While I agreed with the concept of the tribal and covenantal Jew, […]

blair-nosan
November 28, 2016

Blair Nosan

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Blair Nosan 2016 Cohort

I really enjoyed reading this essay.  I see my work aligned with chochma, kehillah, and kedusha, and I found these to be helpful frames for explaining some of the phenomena that I’ve observed while creating Jewish community on the fringes of the Jewish world.  I have thought deeply about chochma, first as it once characterized […]

lee-moore
November 21, 2016

Rabbi Lee Moore

Kenissa 2016 Cohort, Rabbi Lee Moore 2016 Cohort

What are the most useful mental models that can help us understand the shifting patterns of current and future generations of Jews (of which I am one), given the decline in their (our) participation in traditional institutions? Sid Schwarz offers a paradigm that couches us as consumers and to some degree encourages thinking about us […]

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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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