Praying with My Feet?

by Julie Aronowitz

Do I believe that with God’s strength I can do all things? How powerful would that be?

For the months of October and November, I spent every Saturday morning – every Shabbat – at the supermarket. Different supermarkets each Saturday, and not inside, but outside, almost in the parking lot. I knew which ones were which – Market Basket was easy. Stop and Shop was really hard. Approaching strangers, “Hi, we’re collecting signatures to raise the state’s Minimum Wage – will you sign?”, coaching Haitian teenagers – “Move faster! Don’t wait ‘til they pass! Get them before they’re mentally in the store – you can do it! Like that, yes! Good work!” Telling kindly Unitarian retirees “Be more chutzpadik! Umm, I mean, bold. Be out there – you’re not asking a favor! You’re offering them to act on their values, to make this world more just – and all they have to do is sign! That’s easy!” It felt like the closest thing to kiruv (outreach) I’ve ever done. No, we weren’t peddling in Shabbat candles, but we were peddling in Jewish values. Or I was, at least.

For the past year and some I’ve been working for Brockton Interfaith Community, a congregation-based community-organizing group. BIC partners with our 15+ member congregations to do grassroots organizing and advocacy work in the post-industrial, low income, majority immigrant “Gateway” city of Brockton, MA, a local affiliate of a national congregation-based organizing group called PICO. Founded by local clergy who, 20 years ago, decided to step out into the streets instead of rolling up the welcome mat, BIC has organized for everything from street outreach workers to devastating statewide foreclosures and afterschool programs. Currently we’re joining with other affiliates, community groups and unions across the Commonwealth to pass ballot initiatives to raise the state’s minimum wage and ensure earned sick time for all workers.

Before this, I wouldn’t have considered signature collection to be “praying”. Prayer happened in shul, a more common Saturday morning destination in my life. However, I’ve always known that my commitment to do justice work has been motivated by a deep sense of what it means to me to be Jewish, to be called by the universe and God to build a just world, to be a part of something bigger than myself.

I’ve worked in the Jewish community, a Jewish specific space, doing social justice work. But it wasn’t about God. My current leaders, almost exclusively Christian, are all about God. Explicitly. Verbally. Soulfully. And the social justice work we do together is one hundred percent an expression of their faith in God, and their response to the call of what they know with certainty God is calling them to do.

When Kathy, an African-American Baptist woman got up in front of the State House to share her and her daughter’s stories of struggling to survive on low wages, she spoke about the power and dignity that being empowered to collect 388 ballot initiative signatures with her church gave her. We’d practiced the speech, tweaked it, but when she was up in front of the crowd waiting for her turn, I saw her scanning her cell phone. At the end of her testimony, she offered a Scripture: Philippians 4:13. “This campaign has called me to witness to others, to step out on faith, and so I’d like to share scripture that has encouraged my spirit,” she said. “I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength.” I didn’t know she was going to share this scripture. I had never even heard of Philippians. But Kathy’s faith, her relationship with God, called her to share His word. I definitely don’t believe in Jesus Christ, but that day I left, challenged. Do I believe that with God’s strength I can do all things? How powerful would that be?

These leaders and others have challenged me to step out on faith, to really deeply ask what it means to feel called to do this work. I know that for them, our days outside of Market Basket collecting signatures are unquestionably about spreading the Word of God. And I think increasingly, I’m ready to name that they are for me, too.

Julie Aronowitz is an alumna of the JOIN for Justice organizing fellowship, the Pardes Institute of Jewish Studies, the Hornstein Jewish Professional Leadership Program at Brandeis University, and a Wexner Graduate Fellow. In her spare time she runs Moishe Kavod Social Justice House Board Meetings, does yoga, and wonders about God.

Posted in Alumni At Large, From the Field, Success Stories, Thinking Out Loud | Comments Off on Praying with My Feet?

Dylan Kaufman-Obstler’s 5th Graders Get Locked Out of Burger King

We’re proud of current JOIN Fellow, Dylan Kaufman-Obstler, and the 5th grade class at the Boston Workmen’s Circle Center for Jewish Culture and Social Justice! On Sunday, January 12th, Workmen’s Circle fifth-grade students became the newest champions in the fight for better wages and a voice on the job for fast-food workers at a rally they organized outside of Burger King.

Read about the protest on the MASSUNITING website. MASSUNITING is a coalition of neighbors, community groups, faith organizations and labor united in the fight for good jobs, corporate accountability, and stronger communities.

Posted in Fellowship, From the Field, Our News, Success Stories | Tagged , , , | Comments Off on Dylan Kaufman-Obstler’s 5th Graders Get Locked Out of Burger King

David Schwartz named one of Forbes 30 Under 30

JOIN for Justice is thrilled to see alum and Board Member, David Schwartz, named to the Forbes Top 30 Under 30 List in Social Entrepreneurship. David Schwartz and Nina Mukherji: What a powerful team of JOIN alumni leading and directing Real Food Challenge!

Read more about David, how he’s making change, and others, here.

Posted in Alumni At Large, From the Field, Our News, Success Stories | Tagged | Comments Off on David Schwartz named one of Forbes 30 Under 30

“Moving from Transactional to Transformational” with Rabbi Elan Babchuck

This piece was originally posted in the Providence Monthly.

Highlighting Rabbi Elan Babchuck, Seminary Leadership Project alum

What he does:
Rabbi, Temple Emanu-El on the East Side since 2012

Why we like him:

  • Young, dynamic clergyman reinvigorating a temple that turns 90 this year.
  • Has a background as both a community organizer and an entrepreneur.
  • Holds an MBA in nonprofit management.
  • Uses both the outreach techniques of a community organizer (“Meeting people where they are” is a favorite phrase of his) and the marketing savvy of a business professional to re-engage the congregation.

Why he’s different:
“For a long time religious organizations have asked the question, ‘How can you help us?’ The rubric has been using people to build Jewish organizations – what I’m interested in is leveraging Jewish organizations to build people.”

The results:

  • Temple Emanu-El is instituting a change in its membership model from the traditional assessed dues model to a voluntary contribution.
  • Babchuck is responsible for the marketing of this campaign, which has brought over 30 new families to the temple since June.

“If we’re asking people to come to us, pay our institutions, and then do only what we allow them and tell them to do, religion will be a bankrupt business. But if we’re meeting people where they are – geographically and existentially, getting to know what makes them tick, finding out what they desire in life, engaging them with the rich wisdom that our religions offer, and giving them space to grow within that framework, then we’ll not only survive – we’ll thrive.”

  • Babchuck created a first of its kind in RI prayer service and group for families and children with special needs; is now in talks with a national Jewish organization to use it as a pilot for other synagogues around the country.

Why this matters:
Religious organizations of all stripes around the state are losing membership and fighting to remain relevant in their communities. Babchuck represents a new way of doing that that’s more in tune with the wants and needs of a younger generation.

“Churches and synagogues used to sustain themselves simply by existing. People would knock on their doors… These days, religious communities need to work outside the boundaries of their buildings to provide value-added experiences and opportunities for folks. We need to meet people where they are, not expect them to come to us.”

Click here to continue reading this article in the Providence Monthly. 

Posted in Alumni At Large, From the Field, Our News, Seminary Project, Success Stories | Comments Off on “Moving from Transactional to Transformational” with Rabbi Elan Babchuck

Eddie Carmona, Barack Obama, and Me

By Rabbi Noah Farkas, rabbi at Valley Beth Shalom in Encino, CA and JOIN for Justice Board Member

This piece was originally posted on JewishJournal.com.

Last Thursday, I met two extraordinary gentlemen in the span three hours. I was invited, along with hundreds of other Jewish leaders from across the country, to Washington D.C. to gather in the “People’s House” to celebrate the conclusion of Chanukah. My good friend and congregant, Janice Kamenir Reznik, an inspiring leader and founder of Jewish World Watch, invited me along to experience this momentous occasion because of my work inside and out of Valley Beth Shalom pushing for social change. Standing at the entrance to Southern Gate I gazed back along the long line including rabbis, activists, scholars and philanthropists. I couldn’t help but reflect that President Obama would the second amazing leader I would meet that evening. I should start with the first.

Just an hour before I entered the White House I was sitting in a tent on the National Mall with a group of Latino activists who are fasting for many days to inspire our nation to reform immigration law. I came with Karla Van Praag, the Executive Director of JOIN for Justice, a prominent Jewish organization that trains leaders for social change. We met with the leader of the fast, an inspiring man named Eddie Carmona. He grew up in California’s Central Valley and has witnessed, time and again, his own and other families torn apart by U.S. immigration policies. He showed me a shoe found on the border between Arizona and Mexico that belonged to a man who died in the desert trying to make a better life for himself and his family. Eddie has been fasting since December 1st, and has inspired thousands of others to join him in this effort called Fasting for Families.

Click here to continue reading this article at JewishJournal.com.

Posted in From the Field, General, Thinking Out Loud | Comments Off on Eddie Carmona, Barack Obama, and Me