A Newsworthy Gathering

The Jewish world has never trumpeted its connection to the late Saul Alinsky, the father of modern community organizing. Maybe it’s because his methods — he called his signature work “Rules for Radicals” — have long been controversial. He’s still a target, drawing contempt from Newt Gingrich and Sarah Palin decades after his death.

Yet Alinsky’s legacy is coming home. On April 29 and 30, a new group, JOIN for Justice, debuted at a conference it hosted, which it called the first Jewish community organizing summit. And JOIN itself, whose acronym stands for Jewish Organizing Institute and Network, was created late last year to train Jewish groups in community organizing, or the work of supporting a group of people creating social change.

Read the full story about the Summit in the Jewish Week.

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Top 5 Things I’m Looking Foward to Learning at the Summit: A Fellow’s Perspective

5) How to “raise money with chutzpah”
I pride myself on approaching most aspects of life with a good deal of chutzpah, but my experiences with fundraising and development to date have usually left me feeling frustrated and disillusioned.  I have already learned a great deal about development-as-organizing through the JOIN fellowship, but I haven’t yet shed all of my fears or misgivings.  I am so excited to attend Marjorie Fine’s workshop and glean as many pieces of wisdom and optimism as I can!

4) Just how funny an organizer’s “blooper reel” can be 
With apologies to the iconic Emma Goldman, I do believe that if I can’t laugh, then it’s *definitely* not my revolution.  As organizers we are encouraged to learn from our mistakes, but how often do we make time and space to celebrate the inevitable moments of absurdity?  Ilana Lerman and Yavilah McCoy’s Sunday evening extravaganza of “storytelling, skits and comedy” promises to have us laughing at our “flaws and fiascoes.”  I, for one, can’t wait.

3) How different folks understand the relationship between their Jewish identities and commitment to justice work 
Participating in the JOIN for Justice fellowship has offered me my first opportunity to explore the connections between my identity as a Jew and my passion for challenging injustice.  I have loved learning the myriad ways in which the JOIN fellows, trainers, mentors and staff have contemplated and honored these connections in their own lives, and I hope to hear many more stories, perspectives and ideas that enrich my own spiritual and professional journeys.

2) How to “sustain justice activism for the long haul” 
Organizing, as a discipline, has a notoriously high rate of attrition and burnout.  I am deeply inspired by the passion and dedication my colleagues bring to their work, but I worry for the toll this toil takes on our individual and collective ability to sustain social change work.  The workshop being offered by Heather Booth, Vivian Rothstein, and Lisa Gallatin promises to feature the “motivations, strategies and advice” that “seasoned organizers” have for the “younger generation.”  O wise sages, I am ready to receive your counsel…

1) All about you! 
That’s right, you!  Because one of the most important lessons I’ve learned from my fellowship year thus far is: relationship-building truly makes the world go ’round.  When we share our stories with one another, we chip away at whatever artificial boundaries the world as it is has imposed on us, and we create the space necessary to forge deep bonds of hope, love, and commitment to action.  So, whoever you are, if you’ll be at the Summit, track me down and tell me your story.  I’ll share mine in return, and we’ll be on our way to a better world.

Anna Lifson is a proud native of Madison, Wisconsin. She has also lived in the Twin Cities of Minnesota (where she graduated from Macalester College in 2006), Oaxaca/Chiapas, Mexico, and Washington, DC; most recently, she has called the Boston area home since 2009. Anna is a Jewish Organizing Fellow this year, and she works with Boston Mobilization’s Sub/Urban Justice program to engage local teens on issues of privilege, oppression and action for social justice.

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Sowing the Seeds of Sustainability

Join the Greater Boston Jewish community for an in-depth exploration of cuisine, agriculture, labor, business, health, access, history, and spirituality. Participate in a range of hands-on activities, Jewish textual reflections, and contemporary food justice sessions.

Sunday April 22, 12:00pm-8:00pm
Hebrew College, 160 Herrick Road, Newton Centre, MA

Tickets: $36 adults; $18 for those under 18
Includes a locally sourced Kosher vegetarian dinner.

Register here! For more information contact Leora Mallach at 617-877-2036

Co-sponsored by Ganei Beantown: Beantown Jewish Gardens and Hebrew College. Supported in part by a CJP Innovation Grant.

Sessions at the conference will include:

  • Agricultural dimensions of the Jewish calendar cycle
  • Contemporary Jewish spiritual practice
  • Kosher ritual slaughter and eating ethics
  • Models of Community Supported Agriculture and Sustainable Simchas
  • Shuk (marketplace) with educational resources, local vendors of Judaica crafts, sustainable food goodies (to purchase and to taste) and community partners
  • Wool spinning, sauerkraut making & wheat threshing
  • Workers’ rights, food aid and access

See here for full list of titles, educators and detailed workshop descriptions. JOIN for Justice alumna Meira Soloff will be one of the presenters!

 

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More Than a Hollywood Story of Leadership

Why is Moses’s name barely mentioned in the Haggadah? He’s a great leader, humanity’s first recorded organizer, yet the only glory he gets is being portrayed by Charlton Heston in a cheesy Technicolor movie?

In the JOIN for Justice network—where Judaism and politics are hand-in-glove—we can talk about the organizing argument for this curious omission.

Moses makes a limited appearance in our archetypal story of liberation because he is merely one leader in a movement of thousands. The Exodus, or any other effort toward a better world, can only win through the collective action of many individuals acting on shared values. What matters most is that we act, not who leads us.

Last year, people across Phoenix elected the first-ever Latino city councilor ever for my district. Yet Daniel Valenzuela always says about his historic campaign that it wasn’t about him, the candidate. His victory was about the community, who increased their voting by almost 500% to put him in office. Those thousands of new and re-activated citizens are the ones who elected him, made history, and changed their city.

We need leaders to help inspire ordinary people to take concerted action in times of uncertainty. But when a movement is about our community, we can take action and make change right now—without another Danny Valenzuela on the ballot or another Moses in the brick pits.

This year, our community’s movement in Arizona will end the regime of fear created by Sheriff Joe Arpaio and others by registering more than 40,000 new Latino voters and turning out over 100,000 to reclaim their rights in our state. A great leader may inspire ordinary people to extraordinary things, but we only remember that leader because of us, the ordinary people who do the work.

Daria Ovide is a JOIN for Justice alumna from 2004-2005. She is currently working in Phoenix, Arizona, coordinating labor and political campaign communications for UNITE HERE and CASE.

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Making Payment Reform a Little More Accessible

JOIN for Justice Organizing Fellow Ari Fertig has done it again! Fertig, of the famed tumblr 99 Percent Have 99 Problems has meme-ified the world of health-care policy. Fertig’s new project, Payment Reform Made Meme, aims to make payment reform more accessible and interesting through images of popular stars and characters talking about complex issues. Fertig’s creation has hit the internet by storm, catching the eye of the Washington Post. Check out the Post’s feature!

Payment Reform Made Meme

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