HomeMay 2017Widen the Tent 

Widen the Tent 

Weinberger_May

SINCE 1993, the  Jewish Agency has been running a network of summer camps in the Former Soviet Union (FSU).  The Agency describes these camps as “a cultural lifeline to Jewish identity.” These summer camps are supported by several Russian Jewish philanthropists, and by Jewish Federations in such cities as Atlanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland, and St. Louis. The summer camps are free and (according to the Jewish Agency’s website) are  designed “to provide children and youth ages 7-17 with a compelling and fun introduction to Jewish heritage through an up-close and personal experience, including exciting Israel-centered programs and interaction with young, creative counselors from the Former Soviet Union and Israel.”

Now here’s where this story gets interesting: Many (and perhaps a majority) of the children attending the summer camps have neither Jewish parents, nor Jewish grandparents; these campers receive their free summer camping experience because they were fortunate enough to have had a single Jewish great-grandparent. Why?  Because a little-known rule of Israel’s Law of Return states that a minor may make aliyah if they immigrate with one parent who has at least one Jewish grandparent.  Yes, to a significant extent in the FSU, the American Jewish community is supporting Jewish camping for non-Jews. The Jewish Agency’s philosophy for this is as follows: Judaism was persecuted for 70 years in the FSU.  The great assimilation that took place, therefore, was a kind of forced assimilation, and so it’s only fitting to try to redress this situation by reaching out to non-Jewish families who have some affinity to Judaism.

I’m fine with all of this. However, I’m just wondering if the time has come for American Jews to target their own young families who, though not Jewish, would be eligible to make aliyah under the Law of Return.  You see, it turns out that there is literally a generation gap  between the families who are targeted for Jewish outreach in the former Soviet Union, and the families who are targeted for outreach in the United States. In America, outreach generally targets intermarried couples and their children; in the Former Soviet Union outreach extends another generation to target not only the children of intermarried couples but their grandchildren as well.

Were American Jews to start supporting programs for this extra generation, the Jewish community’s target audience would jump significantly.  I contacted the well-respected sociologist, Professor Steven M. Cohen, to get approximate numbers. He wrote to me to say that if Jewish outreach extended forward one generation—as it does in the FSU—we would be talking about moving from a target audience of 6 million-plus to an audience of almost 9 million.

What if, this coming spring, Americans would read in advertisements in their local newspapers that any parent with at least one Jewish grandparent could send their children to a free summer camp sponsored by the local Jewish community? My hunch is that thousands of families whom heretofore had had absolutely no contact with the organized Jewish community, would come out of the woodwork to take advantage of this opportunity. And if the campers came back clamoring for more of what they experienced during the summer (more Hebrew songs, more Jewish food, more Shabbat services), encouraging their parents to explore a neighborhood synagogue or Jewish Community Center, that would be wonderful.  But even if this does not happen, the camping experience in and of itself, with its emphasis on Jewish ethics and values, would make the children better Americans—to the benefit of us all.

 

Teddy Weinberger, Ph.D., is Director of Development for a consulting company called Meaningful. He made aliyah with his family in 1997 from Miami, where he was an assistant professor of religious studies. Teddy and his wife, Sarah Jane Ross, have five children. 

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