Noteworthy

Don’t overlook the denominator in the Jewish talent pipeline crisis, by Doron Kenter (eJP)

"Every fraction includes both a numerator and a denominator. If we only focus on the numerator (i.e., the number of professionals entering and staying in those roles) we are leaving out half of the equation. When viewed from this perspective, we can look at the pipeline crisis as what it is: a serious assessment of, and reflection on, the human capital needs of the Jewish community — where those needs are most acute, and where supply, demand and market efficiencies can be leveraged to more suitably meet these human capital needs, making those resources go further to achieve maximum impact."

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‘Tatami’ Review: A Bitter Fight, Both On and Off the Mat, by Beatrice Loayza (The New York Times)

“Directed by Guy Nattiv and Zar Amir (a rare collaboration between an Israeli and an Iranian filmmaker), ‘Tatami’ draws inspiration from the real-life experiences of Iranian athletes who were punished or forced to seek asylum abroad after refusing to wear a hijab during their international sporting events. We see Leila defiantly release her black mane of hair on several occasions — as in flashbacks to her life in Tehran in which she’s in bed with her husband or partying at an underground club.

But it’s not Leila’s hijab that’s the problem: Midway through the tournament, Leila’s coach, Maryam (Amir, an Iranian exile herself), gets a call from the Iranian authorities demanding that Leila fake an injury and drop out immediately to avoid competing against an Israeli athlete. (Iran doesn’t recognize Israel, and forbids its athletes from competition with Israeli athletes.)”

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Israel’s science teams conclude olympiad season with record 26 medals (Jerusalem Post)

“Israel’s national science teams have concluded the international Olympiad season with an unprecedented haul of 26 medals, including 8 gold, 13 silver, and 5 bronze, along with one honorable mention…. The Education Ministry and the Maimonides Fund’s Future Scientists Center, which lead the training of these national teams, proudly announced the final tally as the last three teams of the season returned.”

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Prayer for the Government, by Mark Charendoff (eJewish Philanthropy)

“As Jews throughout history prayed for their government, they did so with full understanding that their government was never going to get things quite right. While they had confidence that one day a redeemer would come to Zion, this was not that day. This was another stop along the way to redemption. So we pray that the imperfect leaders we have, in Washington and in Jerusalem, succeed in efforts to make us more secure, and that the King of Kings will ‘put into their hearts… compassion to do good.'”

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Applications Open for Expanded Jewish Writers’ Initiative: Screenwriters and Digital Storytellers

Maimonides Fund has announced its call for applications for the third cohorts of the Jewish Writers’ Initiative Screenwriters and Digital Storytellers Labs. These year-long fellowships offer substantial support for US-based creative talent developing Jewish-themed projects. Applications are open through May 23, 2025.

Related Grantee: Jewish Writers' Initiative

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The Black-Jewish Convergence, by Darius Jones (SAPIR)

“In almost any discussion on black-Jewish relations today, the elephant in the room is diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI). For years, DEI served as a lifeline for black professionals, opening doors in elite institutions and corporate spaces that had long been shut. Yet even black people are beginning to argue that DEI has outlived its utility — not because its goals were unworthy, but because the framework has been hijacked by ideologues who wield it as a weapon of division rather than a tool for progress.”

Related Grantee: SAPIR: Ideas for a Thriving Jewish Future

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Jewish Lore Reactions by Miriam Anzovin

There are so many fascinating characters in Jewish storytelling. They might appear first in Jewish tradition in texts like the Tanach and Talmud. But their adventures continue through Midrash, legends, folklore, ritual objects, art, and song. Jewish Lore Reactions follows these characters through space and time, tracing the sprawling evolution of their stories across the Jewish diaspora in an incredible, extended chain of imagination: The collective narrative world-building of the Jewish people. Jewish Lore Reactions was developed by Miriam Anzovin in the Jewish Writers’ Initiative 2024 Digital Storytellers Lab.

Related Grantee: Jewish Writers' Initiative

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Turning Critical Theory on Its Head, by Shaul Kelner (SAPIR)

“Our failure as faculty to challenge our protesting students, opting instead to shrink the complicated history of youth activism to a single, unrepresentative (but well-soundtracked) moment of it several decades ago, is symptomatic of a profound intellectual failure on our part. Put in academic terms, we, faculty particularly in the humanities and social sciences, have failed to apply critical theory, the predominant method of analysis in our fields, to our present situation and our own participation in it.”

Related Grantee: SAPIR: Ideas for a Thriving Jewish Future

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Productivity Is a Drag. Work Is Divine. By Sara Tillinger Wolkenfeld (The Atlantic)

“As a scholar of Jewish texts, I have spent the past 12 years working with a team of engineers who use machine-learning tools to digitize and expand access to the Jewish canon. Jewish tradition says nothing of ChatGPT, but it is adamant about work. According to the ancient rabbis, meaningful, creative labor is how humans channel the divine. It’s an idea that can help us all, regardless of our faith, be discerning adopters of new applications and devices in a time of great technological change. If you have ever felt the joy of untangling a seemingly intractable problem or the adrenaline rush that comes from applying creative energy to shape the world, then you know that worthwhile labor helps us channel our best selves. And we cannot afford to cede it to the robots.”

Related Grantee: Sefaria

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SAPIR High Holidays Reader 2024

“The High Holidays are an opportunity to refresh our minds, spirits, and relationships; to spend time in community; to pray for a rewarding personal and collective future…. As we enter 5785, let us all recommit to the principles above. In that spirit, we are pleased to offer this selection of readings from previous issues, selected for their relevance to the themes of this powerful and inspiring time of the year.”

Related Grantee: SAPIR: IDEAS FOR A THRIVING JEWISH FUTURE

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“How many people should I give to? How much should I give? To whom should I give? Discover answers to your questions about Tzedakah.”

Related Grantee: Hadar Institute

“We each try to do our own investigation of not-for-profits before we part with our hard-earned money. Usually the more we give, the more we investigate. But before you write that next check, or consider volunteering or serving on a board, there is one more question you should add to your check list: Rich or King?”

“Israel education is as much about shaping character, personality, mind, and social connectedness as it is about “furnishing an empty room with facts.” It’s actually a part of what our tradition, thousands of years ago, asked us to love “with all your heart, soul, and might!”

Related Grantee: The ICenter

“Israel was never meant to be a state of (only) its citizens, but a state that is, at its core, devoted to the entire Jewish people. That has been true from the very beginning.”

“[The University] will be based on the illimitable freedom of the human mind. For here we are not afraid to follow truth wherever it may lead, nor to tolerate any error so long as reason is left free to combat it.”

“It used to be that most ultra-Orthodox, or haredi, men in Israel studied the Bible full time through adulthood. But that’s changing.”

“At a time when the word “alumni” is often reduced to banal jargon, what really is its value, and what is the purpose of the deep relationships between institutions, individual participants and visions that last?”

“Jewish tradition encourages Jews to think of themselves as an extended family; by reaching into the most extreme and insular corner of the Jewish world to find universal themes, Shtisel sends the message that, despite everything, they still are.”

Related Grantee: The Film and Media Collaborative

“If nonprofits committed to understanding their true cost of operations and funders shifted to paying grantees what it takes to get the job done, the starvation cycle would end.”

“’To be Jewish’ is not black or white but actually shades of grey and that Judaism is for us to fall in love with, again and again.”

Related Grantee: Ein Prat

“We need a word for that feeling one experiences when you either a) reply all in error or b) send a sensitive (or worse) email to the wrong person … I suggest we call it a kishkor – a mash-up of kishke and error because, at least in my experience, that is where the feeling hits.”

“Although not every application of behavioral economics will make the world a better place, I believe that giving economics a more human dimension and creating theories that apply to humans, not just econs, will make our discipline stronger, more useful, and undoubtedly more accurate.”