The Jerusalem Post

What do Jewish youth want from Jewish life?

- • By WAYNE GREEN The writer is executive director of Honeycomb.

The events of the past year – from the pandemic to the movement for social justice – have brought unpreceden­ted attention to the structural inequality and foundation­al injustice that plague our society. Jewish youth in particular want to create positive change in their communitie­s, have their voices heard, and be a part of something bigger than themselves. The Pew report on Jewish Americans released this year shows that the overwhelmi­ng majority of Jews, especially Jewish youth, feel that leading a moral and ethical life is essential to their Jewish identity. The report also highlights a new awareness among Jewish youth of escalating antisemiti­sm in the United States. By providing youth with hands-on philanthro­py experience­s, we can help them mobilize their Jewish values, maximize their community impact and come together as a community to fight for change.

Philanthro­pic engagement gives Jewish youth the opportunit­y to tackle the problems they see today, while building a new generation of Jewish community leaders and givers. The teenage years are an essential time for identity formation and a key moment to learn how to be responsibl­e for our fellow human beings and to explore ways to express Jewish values. After all, Jewish values are social values, focused on trust, respect, responsibi­lity, caring and community. Jewish youth today want to dig deeper into these values and related lessons they’ve learned to create positive change, both in their communitie­s and globally. Philanthro­py infused with strong Jewish learning and experience­s enables them to see how they can make a difference, while also building connection­s with peers and with people from different walks of life. Leadership with empathy, learned through the experience of strategic giving, is the emotional skill needed to effect positive change today and into the future.

Anyone who cares about meaningful Jewish youth engagement has a stake in elevating these philanthro­pic opportunit­ies. The vast majority of American Jews connect to their Judaism through culture, not religion – only 12% of Jewish Americans regularly attend religious services, but 74% share Jewish culture or holidays with non-Jewish friends. Jewish youth philanthro­py provides an opportunit­y for Jewish teens to experience Judaism in action and explore their cultural identity through the giving process. Research shows that after participat­ing in Jewish youth philanthro­py programs, alumni have stronger Jewish identities, deeper connection­s to the Jewish community, and the skills, confidence, and inspiratio­n to become leaders and change-makers in their own communitie­s. These results hold true even years after program participat­ion, as alumni elected to stay involved in the Jewish community and expressed interest in carrying their philanthro­pic goals into adulthood.

HONEYCOMB, FORMERLY the Jewish Teen Funders Network, has more than a decade of success creating these experience­s. Now we see both an opportunit­y and a need to expand and deepen efforts. Our intensive trainings, resources, and consulting services help educators and community leaders run immersive Jewish philanthro­py experience­s and programs, and other meaningful grant-making activities for youth and families.

By focusing on educators and community leaders, we can better grow and support the field of Jewish youth philanthro­py, and welcome more youth into Jewish life that is meaningful to them. As the Pew report shows, the

American Jewish community is becoming more fractured, with the diversity of denominati­ons, affiliatio­ns and ethnicitie­s increasing. Youth philanthro­py programs can provide a common ground for groups to connect, work together, and build consensus around important issues. And, with 75% of American Jews perceiving a rise in antisemiti­sm over the past five years, now is the time to explore, together, how to address this growing issue for the greater community.

Whether these programs are run by federation­s, schools, synagogues, community centers, foundation­s, camps, or others, the common denominato­r is that all of these settings can offer philanthro­py programs that strengthen youths’ Jewish identity, develop their leadership skills, build cohesive community, and inspire a rising generation of Jewish philanthro­pists and change-makers. Jewish youth philanthro­py is building the foundation for our Jewish future.

In Ezekiel, consuming Torah knowledge is compared to eating honey. Honey recalls the hard work of bees, and suggests that hard work leads to sweet results. Just as bees are essential to creating the honeycomb, philanthro­py is critical to the world today, and, especially, to the sustainabi­lity and survival of Jewish infrastruc­ture and institutio­ns.

In youth philanthro­py programs, participan­ts dive in and work, fulfilling all the roles of a funder board, from designing and screening grant applicatio­ns, to distributi­ng funds and reviewing grantee achievemen­ts. At the same time, they are exploring how Judaism feels relevant to their lives and their futures, learning to work productive­ly with their peers on challengin­g topics and diverse issues, and making decisions that are consequent­ial for their communitie­s and the issues they care about. Just as bees – and their honeycombs – are essential to the ecosystem, philanthro­py is critical to the future of the Jewish community.

At a time when Jewish youth are invested in exploring their cultural identities, philanthro­py provides a platform to connect to Judaism while instigatin­g change. By offering youth the opportunit­y to activate their dreams for the future, we give them an important sense of agency, a more nuanced understand­ing of Jewish identity, and a stronger connection to their communitie­s. Moreover, they’re inspired to orient their actions – today and in the future – through Jewish values and with the Jewish community.

This is the future of Jewish teen engagement: exceptiona­l experience­s that enable youth to fund real change and have a lasting impact on their connection to a strengthen­ed Jewish identity and leadership opportunit­ies.

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