JFNA sets ambitious goal: Let’s change the world
By DAVID BREAKSTONE
11/13/2012 03:36
GA Journal: General Assembly of Jewish Federations of North America opens in Baltimore with an ambitious theme.
Jewish leaders meet at 2012 GA Photo: Robert A. Cumins/JFNA
BALTIMORE – How many Jews does it take to change the world? At last count,
somewhere in the vicinity of 3,000.
That’s more or less the number of
participants taking part in this year’s General Assembly of the Jewish
Federations of North America (JFNA), the annual premier communal event of
Diaspora Jewry which opened this week in Baltimore with a plenary dedicated to
no less ambitious a theme than “Changing the World.” Keynote speaker and GA
scholar-in-residence, Rabbi Rick Jacobs, enthusiastically embraced the daunting
challenge, referring to “tikkun olam as no less a religious practice than
prayer.”
The same sentiment was expressed by Jacqueline Levine, a veteran
leader of the Jewish Federation of MetroWest, New Jersey. She animated those
assembled with her inspiring reminiscence of half a century of social activism,
which included marching alongside Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in
1965.
She recalled Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel remarking at the time
that “when I marched in Selma [Alabama] my feet were praying.” The message,
according to Jacobs, is that this “hunger for righteousness” is still very much
present among the younger generation and can serve as a means of engaging them
in Jewish life. He called upon all the streams of Judaism to seek new ways to
involve their congregants in such efforts.
“It is the broadest door
through which to invite Jews to participate in Jewish life,” he
asserted.
“Our world is badly fractured and in need of repair,” he
concluded, challenging the audience with a declaration and a question: “God is
counting on us. What are we waiting for?” Listening to other speakers at the
session, one could easily surmise that the answer is “nothing.” In addition to
Levine’s long litany of a “life lived in pursuit of peace, justice, equality and
freedom,” the outgoing chairwoman of the JFNA board, spoke personally and
emotionally of her pride in being part of a collective effort through which “we
don’t just do good work, we change lives.”
Speaking of JFNA’s impact on
Jews of the former Soviet Union, Ethiopian immigrants and the children of
Israel’s periphery, she said she has learned from her tenure that “while one
can’t predict where there will be Jews facing trouble at any given moment, one
can be assured that wherever it might be, the Federation system will be there to
provide assistance.”
The chairwoman went on to argue that because of our
ability to act together, “what we do matters, to the Jewish people and to the
world.” A case in point is the response of JFNA in general, and of the UJANew
York Federation in particular, to the ongoing havoc wreaked by superstorm Sandy
two weeks ago.
The personal stories of loss and devastation that I have
heard from the storm’s victims since arriving in the States several days ago
reveal a saga of suffering and destruction far worse than that suggested even by
the sensational headlines appearing in the Israeli press. And Jerry Levin,
president of UJA-NY Federation, spoke with a mixture of sorrow and pride in
describing the efforts of his organization, in concert with its partners around
the country, in meeting the immediate needs of so many who so abruptly found
themselves “drowning, starving and freezing to death.”
Without any
bureaucratic delay, no less than $10,000,000 was all at once allocated to
“rescuing, feeding, and clothing those in need of assistance, no questions
asked.”
Jerry Silverman, president and CEO of JFNA would have expected
nothing less.
“The challenge of Hurricane Sandy has galvanized the North
American community coming together for the General Assembly as a collective who
takes responsibility for those in need around the world, and at home, in a
continuing testament to the Jewish Federations,” he observed. It should be noted
that the complex of JFNA offices, located in lower Manhattan, was closed in its
entirety for more than a week after Sandy hit, meaning that he and his staff had
to complete the preparation for this mega-event without access to their files,
computers, lists and papers.
Lest these opening speeches be dismissed as
the self-congratulatory rhetoric of interested parties, let the record show that
the JFNA network of 155 Jewish Federations and 400 associated communities
continues to collectively raise more than $1 billion annually for social
welfare, social services and the educational needs of the community, advancing
and enhancing the well-being of Jews at home and abroad.
I do not work
for JFNA. I have no particular interest in advocating on its behalf.
And
I know that there are legitimate concerns to be raised about its efficacy,
sustainability and priorities – as there surely are in regard to any
organization.
But as an outsider looking in, as an Israeli naturally
skeptical about the vitality of Diaspora Jewish life, and as vice chairman of
the World Zionist Organization who would like to see many more North American
Jews joining their fate to ours inside the Jewish state, I nevertheless cannot
help but be impressed by the degree of commitment to Jewish continuity expressed
by the organization’s leadership and constituency, who have convened “to think
together about the best new ways to overcome the challenges facing today’s
Jewish community.”
Whether or not these 3,000 Jews whom JFNA brings
together each year will indeed change the world, I will leave to others to
ponder. I will attest only to the commitment that is there.
The writer is
attending the General Assembly of The Jewish Federations of North America in his
capacity as vice chairman of the World Zionist Organization. He will be sharing
his personal reflections on the gathering throughout its three-day duration.