Noteworthy

Responding to the Coronavirus Outbreak: Resources to Help Nonprofits

“Whether you are guiding staff about travel or remote work arrangements, wondering what other groups are doing in response to Covid-19, fielding donors’ questions about your nonprofit’s response or the impact on planned events, or worrying that the virus will dampen your fundraising, it’s a lot to handle.

To help you cope, here are a few online resources we’ve collected…”

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An Open Message to Grantees from the Funder Community

“As COVID-19 drastically affects the world, our country and our community, we know that many of our grantee partners and other organizations face unprecedented challenges and concerns. We want you to know that we, your philanthropic partners, are in this together with you.”

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What do a Child, AIPAC & Coronavirus Have in Common? by Suri Drucker

“I returned from the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) conference in Washington, D.C., and as a result, I’ve had to cancel two weeks of meetings, am carb loading, working in my pajamas and missing fresh air desperately. Was it worth it?

It was life changing.”

Related Grantee: Film and Media Collaborative - Gesher Multicultural Film Fund

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A New Paradigm of Jewish Literacy, by Jon Levisohn

“But what do we actually mean by Jewish literacy and illiteracy in Jewish communal discourse? Unless we are clear about the problem that we are trying to solve, it seems hard to imagine that we will succeed in solving it.”

Related Grantee: Applied Research Collective for American Jewry at NYU

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Nechama Leibowitz on the Goal of Text Study

“The central aim of text study is to learn how to read a text, that is, that the text must induce the student to think, to make comparisons with the associations that occur to him, to ask and question. The point is that it is not the teacher but rather the text itself that stimulates the student; the text itself should bring the student to pose questions and to seek the answers.”

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Hammers & Nails 

“Great advice is always a hammer: an organizing principle that works across many domains. To get the most mileage out of a single hammer, don’t stop at using it to tackle your current pet problem. Use it everywhere. Ideas don’t get worn down from use.”

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The Case For Term Limits In Jewish Life

“Jewish communal service is a privilege and being CEO is a remarkable opportunity. But it’s not a right. While we should respect seniority, institutions function better as meritocracies. Our community deserves nothing less.”

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Welcoming the Jewsraelis 

“Never before was there a civil, secular Jewish state. This is the first time we have had such a thing. One would expect that special circumstances such as these would result in a different type of Jewishness.”

Related Grantee: 929

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Peer to Peer: At the Heart of Influencing More Effective Philanthropy 

“When staff and board members at foundations need trusted information about philanthropic practice, there’s one source that tops their list: their peers.”

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How To Leave a Mark on People 

“A thick institution is not one that people use instrumentally, to get a degree or to earn a salary. A thick institution becomes part of a person’s identity and engages the whole person: head, hands, heart and soul.”

Related Grantee: Moishe House

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“If a picture is worth a thousand words, it can tell just as many lies. (Or many more in the age of AI.)

This is why the context of the Shani Louk photograph is so important. Its meaning 100 years from now will depend on the narrative in which it is placed, and who is telling the story. Much like Vespasian’s commemorative coin, the photograph is as evocative to those who celebrate her suffering and murder as it is to those who grieve it.”

Related Grantee: SAPIR: IDEAS FOR A THRIVING JEWISH FUTURE

“The pain of this Tisha B’Av comes not only from the horrific events of October 7, but from the burden of our former Covenant of Fate. Here in Israel, our first non-Diaspora destination, the last stop on our exilic journey, the catastrophe of Black Shabbat forced us from the Covenant of Destiny — the clash of the east and west winds — back into the Covenant of Fate.

Now we carry both covenants, and this year, as in the past, we will get up from the ground, daven mincha, and march to the remnant of our temple, the Western Wall, and stand there to end the fast with a promise and hope that we will do everything in our power to be worthy of this house.”

Related Grantee: SAPIR: IDEAS FOR A THRIVING JEWISH FUTURE

“Maimonides Fund announced that Rabbi David Wolpe and Dr. Mijal Bitton will become its inaugural Scholars in Residence, commencing in September 2024. Both Scholars are expanding their previous roles with Maimonides Fund – Rabbi Wolpe as Senior Advisor on Viewpoint Diversity Initiatives and Dr. Bitton as a Maimonides Fund Fellow – and will be undertaking major research and development projects to understand and meet this unique moment in Jewish life.”

“Maimonides Fund, in partnership with the Constructive Dialogue Institute (CDI), is pleased to announce the launch of a new suite of programming to support viewpoint diversity and dialogue across differences within Jewish organizational settings.

Perspectives is an evidence-based learning program that distills rigorous behavioral science research into easily digestible concepts to foster openness to diverse perspectives and equip learners with the skills to engage in conversations across lines of difference.”

Related Grantee: Constructive Dialogue Institute

“Since Oct. 7, it hasn’t been easy to be an author with ties to Israel. Book awards ceremonies turned into platforms for anti-Israel activists. Protests raged through conferences. Jewish authors had appearances canceled.

“Since Oct. 7, it hasn’t been easy to be an author with ties to Israel. Book awards ceremonies turned into platforms for anti-Israel activists. Protests raged through conferences. Jewish authors had appearances canceled.

Related Grantee: Jewish Book Council

“Each year, I sit in Yom Kippur services and consider how my Jewish values affect my work, and I reflect on whether I conduct myself and my work in a way that honors the humility and responsibility that each of us must hold. What do I regret? What can I do better? To what goals must I commit myself in the year ahead? It seems that each year, there are new sets of ‘Al Chet’ and/or Viddui confessionals offered for contemplation.

To that end, I offer one more to that mix. What can we, in the Jewish philanthropic ecosystem, commit to doing better in the year to come?”

“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

“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

“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

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

“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

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