Jay Sanderson: Producing a Post-Pandemic Jewish Future
Episode 12 of What Gives? The Jewish Philanthropy podcast from Jewish Funders Network.
Guest: Jay Sanderson, President and CEO of The Jewish Federation of Greater Los Angeles
Jay Sanderson talks about what he's learned so far from the Covid pandemic, what he's cooking, the time he met David Ben-Gurion â and much more!
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Read moreNavigating the Post-Pandemic Future in North America and Israel
Last Rosh Hashanah, when you heard the familiar Unetaneh Tokef liturgy about who will live and who will die, especially the part of âwho by plague,â did it occur to you that in the coming year a pandemic might kill hundreds of thousands of people and turn our entire world upside down?
Read moreNew Report on Israel's Post-Covid Social Landscape
In the aftermath of the corona crisis, what forces and trends are shaping the new social landscape in Israel? Which global processes has the crisis accelerated, and how might these affect the social fields in Israel where philanthropy plays a role? What are the long-term changes we can expect?
These large and ongoing questions continue to accompany day-to-day philanthropic work and influence our ability to make decisions about both the âhere and nowâ and the long-term.
Read moreJune 2020 National Affinity Group on Jewish Poverty Newsletter
JUNE 2020Â
Dear Friend,
Itâs been a year since we launched this affinity group, but it feels like a lifetime ago! It is fortunate that we began organizing when we did, because the events of the past year, particularly the Covid-19 pandemic, have highlighted how essential and desperately needed our work is.
Weâve broken down our work into working groups and briefing series to focus on specific issue areas, such as older adults and mental health. So far, weâve held three briefings (see below) and will host several more in the coming months. Please stay tuned for details! All of this is helping us move forward on a long-term national agenda, as well as a midterm one focused on Covid-related needs.
Learn more about the working groups and briefings below, and be inspired by the rapid expansion of Philadelphiaâs Call-A-Friend program, which demonstrates that sometimes even a simple, low-tech solution can improve the lives of hundreds of people. This month we also have details on a new relief fund for Jews of color impacted by the pandemic, along with some ideas for how we can more easily share information with one another and the larger Jewish community.
I hope you are staying healthy and safe. Please feel free to email me anytime with feedback and suggestions â and donât forget to share your âbright spotsâ and other news.
Warmly,
Deena K. Fuchs
Executive Vice President
Jewish Funders Network
[email protected]
âSave the Dateâ
JFN Webinars of Interest
The National Affinity Group's briefing series (see more about this below) will be continuing next month, so please stay tuned for details. In the meantime, we encourage you to participate in these upcoming JFN webinars:
- Funding with an Inclusion Mindset: A Strategic Conversation in the Wake of Covid-19 (Thursday, June 18, 1 p.m. Eastern) RSVP and more details here.
- The Jewish Communal Professional Workforce and Covid-19 (Thursday, June 25, 1 p.m. Eastern) RSVP and more details here.
Learn about more JFN webinars here.
âOur Workâ
Update on Working Groups
Soon after our inaugural meeting last June, we established five working groups to focus on key issue areas in addressing Jewish poverty: Older Adults, Housing, Food Insecurity, Mental Health, Jobs, and Systems. Together we began working on developing a national agenda on Jewish poverty.
So much has changed in the past year, but a national agenda is more important than ever. Now, though, we need a near-to-midterm Covid-19 national agenda, and our working groups have been developing funder briefings with assessments of need, overviews of communal response with a bright spot showcase, as well as a section focused on investment opportunities â to demonstrate where philanthropic investment can make a difference. We have asked the working groups to consider the following:
⢠What are the top 2-3 overall messages that funders should know about your field, given what youâve experienced?
⢠What promising initiatives are you seeing underway? What initiatives do you think the field needs to see? Are any initiatives addressing both short-term needs as well as addressing longer-term structural issues?
⢠What do you see as the top 2-3 immediate needs? For the second half of 2020?
⢠What information can you share about Emergency Funds, Pivots, Innovation & Technology, and Partnerships and sustainability in your field?
Whether you are a member of a working group or not, we encourage you to share your ideas and information. And we look forward to sharing the information weâve gathered. Now that Covid-19 has magnified the issues of Jewish poverty, putting it high on our communityâs agenda, we have the incredible opportunity to help shape the response and the investment.
Catch Up on Our Covid-19 Briefing Series
The National Affinity Group on Jewish Poverty has been hosting a series of webinars and virtual meetups to discuss the many difficulties the coronavirus pandemic has created for Jews facing poverty and the agencies that serve them. We have been hearing the needs from the service providers on the ground supporting our front lines, share best practices and information, and strategize on ways to respond collectively. Each webinar features key leaders and focuses on particular needs, aligned to our working groups.
Thank you to all of you who have participated in our first three webinars:
- Food Insecurity and Housing (May 14)
- Older Adults and Mental Health (May 26 )
- Systemic Change (June 9)
Catch up on any you missed by watching them at the links above, on JFNâs Covid-19 Response site, and on the National Affinity Group for Jewish Poverty section of the JFN site; we will be adding future webinars as videos become available.
You can find more videos and other key resources on the Resource Hub and the Human Services North America Needs & Responses sections of the Covid-19 Response site. Please reach out to Julie Wiener, JFNâs communications director, with any updates or other feedback about the videos and other materials on the website.
Covid Relief Fund for Jews of Color
The Jews of Color Field Building Initiative has launched a COVID-19 Emergency Relief Fund for people of color in the Jewish community who are experiencing financial hardships as a result of the Covid-19 crisis and economic fallout.
âSystemic racism is amplifying the impact of COVID-19 on Jews of color and all people of color in the U.S,â said Ilana Kaufman, executive director of the Jews of Color Field Building Initiative, in an article in eJewish Philanthropy. âWe need to get funds into the hands of the most vulnerable, many of whom struggle daily to pay bills and put food on the table. And we are committed to both inviting applications and disbursing funds in ways that are transparent and reflect a welcoming environment for Jews of color.â
Individuals in need can apply for help ranging from $250-$2,500 â to be spent on basic necessities such as rent or mortgage payments, food, medical bills â at jewsofcolorinitiative.org/resources. The relief fund requires minimal documentation concerning finances, and awards are being made on a rolling basis rather than first-come, first-serve.
Eligible applicants are people of color in the Jewish community living in the U.S., including those who self-identify as Jewish, those who work or have worked for a Jewish communal organization, and those affiliated with organizations in the Jewish community.
âBright Spotâ
Reaching Out to Isolated Seniors
While many people have come to rely on technology, especially Zoom, to cope with the isolation of social distancing, thatâs not an option for the clients of Northeast NORC, a Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia program serving 1,700 seniors across six ZIP codes of the city. Northeast NORCâs mostly Jewish clients, whose incomes are below 250 percent of the federal poverty line, tend to live alone in aging homes and âare not tablet- or Zoom-savvy to say the least,â says Brian Gralnick, the Federationâs director of social responsibility.
Thatâs why when social distancing measures went into place and in-person activities became impossible, Northeast NORC quickly ramped up a decidedly low-tech program: Phone-a-Friend. The program mobilizes and trains (training video available here) volunteers to have phone conversations with Northeast NORC clients one to three times a week. Before the quarantine, the program had about a dozen volunteers and 15 clients. As of June 1, it had grown tenfold, and volunteers, who generally make 20-30-minute calls twice a week, have collectively logged more than 300 hours on the phone. After each phone call, volunteers record their interaction and share emergency needs or other concerns that came up in the conversation, so that Northeast NORC staff can identify and provide other social services to clients as needed.
According to Gralnick, many of the volunteers and older adults are eager to meet in person once the pandemic is over, and the older adults say they are grateful not to be forgotten amid the pandemic. âUnfortunately, for some of our members this is the only interaction theyâre going to have with another person that day,â Gralnick says.
- Read about one volunteerâs experience with Phone-A-Friend.
- To learn more about Phone-a-Friend, including its training and recruitment strategies, contact Brian Gralnick at [email protected].
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âSpecial Requestâ
Help Us Get the Word Out
Public relations and communications can seem like a luxury for human service groups at times like these. However, to ensure that we secure much-needed resources, it is vitally important that all of us keep getting the word out about our work. To that end, we are hoping to create a more active social media presence, and you can help us amplify each other's work by sharing your organizationâs Twitter and Facebook handles with the Affinity Group. We are also building a Twitter list to help follow each otherâs news. You can also help by making sure that you, or whoever manages social media for your organization, follow Jewish Funders Network (@jfunders) and the Harry and Jeannette Weinberg Foundation (@hjweinbergfdn) on Twitter and Facebook. And donât forget to email us your news, especially âbright spotsâ so we can feature them in this newsletter and elsewhere.
âFrom the Fieldâ
Life on Welfare Isnât What Most People Think It Is (The Conversation, June 11)
A Gates-Led Donor Collaborative Awards $2.8 Million to Change Attitudes on Poverty (Chronicle of Philanthropy, June 10)
Some Realistic Solutions for Income Inequality (The Hill, June 10)
Met Council Unveils New App to Report Domestic Abuse (New York Jewish Week, June 9)
Food Banks and Other Key Programs Have Received a Fraction of Allotted Coronavirus Money, Angering Some Lawmakers (The Washington Post, June 8)
In Los Angeles, Big Donors and Public Schools Team up on Food Insecurity (Inside Philanthropy, June 5)
As COVID-19 Escalates the Housing Crisis, Funds Flow to Help Low-Income Renters (Inside Philanthropy, June 2)
Hunger Programâs Slow Start Leaves Millions of Children Waiting (New York Times, May 26)
Food Banks Get the Love, But SNAP Does More to Fight Hunger (NPR, May 22)
Dancing between Light and Shadow â Increasing Awareness of the Impact of Covid 19 Disparities on Jews of Color (eJewish Philanthropy, May 21)
In Boston, a Jewish Agency Tackles âShockingâ Poverty and Homelessness (The Forward, May 15)
Podcast: How the Covid-19 Pandemic May Affect Poverty Reduction Efforts (Chronicle of Philanthropy, May 12)
Cutbacks at Social-Service Groups on the Rise, Poll Finds
(Chronicle of Philanthropy, May 11)
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Founded in 2019, the National Affinity Group on Jewish Poverty is a collaborative of funders, Jewish Federations, direct service providers, researchers, media outlets, and advocates dedicated to fighting poverty in the American Jewish community. Learn more here. Â |
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What Would Moses Say? Of Nietzsche, Hitler and the Freedom to Hurt Others (Shavuot 5780)
Nietzsche is probably one of the most misunderstood and manipulated philosophers in history. The most pernicious manipulation of him was done, of course, by the Nazis, who turned his inversion of the traditional concept of ânatural lawâ into a justification for genocide.
Read moreUpdated Resources for Israeli Nonprofits
A few weeks ago, we shared information about the Israeli governmentâs efforts to help nonprofits and social service organizations overcome the many economic challenges the coronavirus pandemic has created.
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At that time, we provided a guide outlining the different types of aid available.
Read moreNational Affinity Group on Jewish Poverty Newsletter: May 2020
MAY 2020Â
Dear Friend,
I hope you and your loved ones are staying healthy. As the pandemic has wreaked havoc on our world, no one has been harder hit by its health and economic effects than the families and individuals already living in poverty. We are also aware that COVID-19 has increased those among us who are struggling, with more than 33 million Americans filing for unemployment since mid-March.
I am grateful, at least, that we entered this challenging time having already begun the hard and important work of coordinating our efforts to fight Jewish poverty. In this monthâs newsletter, we report on the critical work affinity group members are doing to respond to Covid-19 and its ripple effects, ranging from unemployment to food insecurity to increased domestic violence. We also share news about an important webinar series that starts this Thursday, and a new JFN resource we hope you will find useful.
Letâs continue to stay in close contact in the coming months, as our work is more urgently needed than ever. And please continue to share your feedback and ideas.
Warmly,
Deena K. Fuchs
Executive Vice President
Jewish Funders Network
[email protected]
âSave the Dateâ
A Series of Briefings on Poverty and the Impact of Covid-19
Over the coming months, the National Affinity Group on Jewish Poverty will be hosting a series of webinars and virtual meetups (the first one, focused on food insecurity and housing, is this Thursday, May 14, from 1-2 p.m. Eastern) to discuss the many difficulties the coronavirus pandemic has created for Jews facing poverty and the agencies that serve them. We will hear the needs from the service providers on the ground supporting our front lines, share best practices and information, and strategize on ways to respond collectively.
Each webinar will feature key leaders and focus on particular needs, aligned to the affinity groupâs sub-groups. The first one one Thursday, May 14 from 1-2pm ET will focus on food insecurity and housing. The following two webinars will be take place on Tuesday, May 26th from 12-1pm ET and Tuesday, June 9th from 12-1pm ET â please hold the dates. This Thursdayâs session on food insecurity and housing will include JFN Board Member Jeffrey Schoenfeld, Jessica Chait, Managing Director of Food Programs at Met Council on Jewish Poverty, and Lisa Budlow, CEO of CHAI Baltimore. RSVP for this Thursday.
If you register for the webinar this Thursday, we will ensure you get reminders for the next briefings. And if you missed our March webinar on âSupporting Vulnerable Populations During Covid-19,â you can watch a recording of it here.
âResponding to Covid-19â
Affinity Group Members Respond to Covid-19
As the coronavirus disrupts the lives of our most vulnerable populations, dramatically increases unemployment and makes it more challenging to provide many of the direct in-person services, agencies and federations are stepping up to the plate to ease the situation. Just a few examples:
- UJA-Federation of New York is investing more than $45 million in grants to expand food distribution, offer virtual programming for homebound seniors and Holocaust survivors, support the operational capacity of key human service agencies, and offer wide range of services for Jews in poverty in both Israel and New York;
- Chicagoâs Jewish United Fund created a $26 million coronavirus initiative to be used for emergency financial aid, including cash grants for housing, food, medical care and other essentials for individuals and families.
- The Jewish Federation of San Diego County, Jewish Community Foundation of San Diego and Leichtag Foundation partnered to establish the San Diego Jewish Community COVID-19 Emergency Fund to support those who are most vulnerable and impacted in San Diegoâs Jewish community. As of May 1, it had raised $2.1 million and deployed $537,000, with grants to organizations and rabbis working directly with those in need, as well as payroll assistance for local Jewish organizations.
Getting Much-Needed Personal Protective Equipment to Agencies
In April, the Jewish Federations of North America, JFN and the North American Volunteer Network (which includes alumni and members of the AEPI fraternity) teamed up to help procure much-needed equipment for Jewish nursing homes, hospices, home care and other social service providers. Just last week we delivered one million surgical masks, 500,000 gowns and 400,000 gloves to Jewish nursing homes and other social service providers.
Because all this equipment is far more costly now than usual, weâre raising money so that these agencies donât have to cover the difference between the normal price (which they will pay) and the current one. You can support this project in a few ways:
- JFN is acting as a fiscal aggregator, so you can donate through us by emailing Deena Fuchs at [email protected].
- From now through the end of May, JFNA is running Pledge to Protect, a crowdfunding campaign with the goal of raising $3 million through 100,000 donations. Donate through Pledge to Protect.
Please feel free to share this with your networks.
Supporting Domestic Violence Victims
In addition to pushing more individuals into poverty and disproportionately hurting those already in poverty, Covid-19 has had another pernicious effect: increased rates of domestic violence. Domestic violence, exacerbated by victims being more isolated at home with their abuser and families' increasingly high stress levels, is the leading cause of homelessness for women and children.
Many service providers are stepping up to meet the increased need as a result of the pandemic. The Berkeley, Calif.-based Shalom Bayit, for example, is offering phone-based support groups and individual counseling, safety planning for victims while they are in lockdown, and is continuing to offer many of its other services with some modifications. The Met Council on Jewish Poverty, in New York, has expanded its family violence hotline (previously mostly during weekday office hours), with social workers now on call from 8 a.m. to midnight Sunday through Thursday, and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Fridays. Met Council leaders recently told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that the number of new victims coming for help has doubled and that they expect to see an even bigger increase âwhen stay-at-home orders are lifted and victims are able to call without fear of their abusers finding out.â
Recommended Articles on This Topic:
- Domestic Violence Hotline Doubles Its Hours During Stay-At-Home Orders (JTA, April 30)
- For Domestic Violence Advocates, Calls Are Down But Need Is Going Up (Forward, April 23)
- A New Covid-19 Crisis: Domestic Abuse Rises Worldwide (New York Times, April 14)
Making the Case for Giving
The Network of Jewish Human Services Agencies, an Affinity Group member, has drafted a new document capturing the impact of COVID-19 on its member agencies and the communities they serve, and to elevate the Networkâs case for giving among the many âasksâ that are out there. Much of the content of this document is the result of an analysis of a financial impact survey administered in March, as well as from anecdotal feedback which has come forth from a series of meetings we have convened with the agencies as the pandemic continued to evolve.
The hope is that agencies can adapt the document with their own data and local details, for fundraising use locally. Download it here.
New JFN Resource Available
JFN recently launched an easy-to-navigate website that is both a resource hub and a catalog describing the many needs created by the coronavirus pandemic and tracking the philanthropic responses. The Human Services in North America section contains extensive information and resources about services for Jews in poverty, including relevant articles, webinars, news and other materials. Make sure to check it regularly, and please let us know if you have information to add to it.
âIn the Newsâ
For Jews Hit Hard by the Pandemic, a New Worry â Not Having Enough Food (Jewish Telegraphic Agency, May 11)
Nonprofit Ensures NYC Holocaust Survivors Are Fed Amid Coronavirus (New York Post, May 10)
A Bipartisan Group of Lawmakers Want to Empower FEMA to Meet Americaâs Growing Hunger Crisis (Washington Post, May 7)Â
As Hunger Swells, Food Stamps Become a Partisan Flash Point (New York Times, May 6)Â
Vulnerable Jewish Communities Are Suffering Through This Crisis. We Must Not Forget Them When Itâs Over (Jewish Telegraphic Agency, May 5)
Food Banks Canât Go On Like This (The Atlantic, May 5)Â
A Gloomy Prediction on How Much Poverty Could Rise (New York Times, April 16)Â
Founded in 2019, the National Affinity Group on Jewish Poverty is a collaborative of funders, Jewish Federations, direct service providers, researchers, media outlets, and advocates dedicated to fighting poverty in the American Jewish community. Learn more here. Â |
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On This Covid Yom Haâatzmaut, Letâs Hit the Reset Button
Many things that worried us tremendously a few months ago seem to have lost their urgency in the age of COVID19. As Bari Weiss noted in a recent New York Times column, âmany of the [culture war] battles of the past decade now seem self-indulgent and stagnant; others a waste of time...â
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