Good for the World

Good for the World

The Background: Since 2015 the JLIC Downtown Community, under the leadership of Rabbi Joe Wolfson, has engaged Jewish students and young professionals in an extraordinary range of social chesed programming and mobilized this community to provide high-impact financial support to a diverse array of recipients.

Since 2021, with the creation of a new position of Director of Chesed Development for Rabbi Wolfson, this work has been formally scaled across the JLIC network in the US, Israel and Canada.

Ingredients Of Success:

    • A population of students and young professionals, numbering several hundred in New York and several thousand across the JLIC network, who are motivated to give of their time and their charitable giving to those who are in need.
    • A language of Jewish and Torah values  that inspires and frames the particular projects, ensuring that benefit is received not only by the recipient but also that participation takes on a wider sense of meaning for the volunteer or donor.
    • A focus on local need – creating meaningful connections to the neighborhood – combined with responding to crises across the globe
    • A nimble approach that is able to powerfully respond to crises be they terror attacks, pandemics, or conflicts, spotting opportunities to make a meaningful difference whilst larger slower-moving organisations are still struggling to formulate a response.
    • The fast-paced local and global approach is facilitated through partnerships with a wide array of organizations – be it inner-city schools and homeless shelters in New York, Jewish communities in Ukraine or local municipalities in Israel – who provide the ‘demand’ whilst we provide the ‘supply’. We think of this as a shadchan or matchmaker model, locating the demand / need and pairing it with the giving supply.
    • A philosophy of financial assistance which focuses on small-scale particular stories which make a world of difference to the recipients – a fridge or a sofa for an impoverished elderly woman living alone, a minibus to transport a group of special needs children across the Ukrainian border, security guards for the Kyiv JCC in the first ten days of the conflict, a vacation for the family of victims of anti-semitic attacks in New Jersey, and regular Shabbat and chagim food for those experiencing food poverty on the Lower East Side.

Volunteer mobilization projects have included:

    • 180,000 free kosher meals distributed during the pandemic.
    • 2,000 breakfasts brought to first responders each year on 9/11.
    • 13 reading groups in NYC public schools helping children from low-income backgrounds overcome the impact of the pandemic upon literacy.
    • 100s of care packages assembled and distributed each Purim to victims of domestic violence and homelessness in NYC.
    • 100s of young people paired with Jewish seniors bridging the generational gap, combating isolation and providing regular food support.
    • 600+ appointments secured for elderly and vulnerable New Yorkers through a vaccine registration program at a time when appointments were exceedingly difficult to come by.

Financial support initiatives have included:

    • $25,000 in the summer of 2021 to help 300 families escape from war in the south of Israel, providing transportation, accommodation and food in the north of Israel.
    • $35,000 in the spring of 2022 to Ukrainian Jewry which included covering the costs of individuals seeking to escape Ukraine including a minivan of Jewish children with special needs
    •  Ongoing support in the way of rent payments, vacations and children’s toys for the families of the Jewish and non-Jewish victims of the 2019 Jersey City anti-semitic terror attack
    • Thousands of dollars of debt of needy Jewish families on the Lower East Side forgiven each Purim and small-scale support in the way of Shabbat food, furniture and medicines to needy Jewish individuals in NYC.

    Support these projects and get involved. 

Thank you to the Jewish Federation of Broward County for their generous support in partnering with Abraham’s House impactful mission.

headshot of 9/11 First Responder Breakfasts
9/11 First Responder Breakfasts
9/11 First Responder Breakfasts
X

What started in downtown Manhattan in 2015 has now become a feature across East Coast campuses. On the morning of 9/11 students, alumni and young professionals get up early to deliver hundreds of breakfasts to fire stations, police precincts and homeless shelters. A smile and gratitude served alongside coffee, donuts and bagels.

headshot of Making A Bat Mitzva
Making A Bat Mitzva
Making A Bat Mitzva
X

The new JLIC TLV Young Professionals community raised the funds to put on a beautiful bat mitzvah for a young woman whose family have been living in a domestic violence shelter in south Tel Aviv. Shortly after the bat mitzvah, the family were able to leave the shelter and the JLIC TLV community rallied together to help furnish their new apartment.

headshot of Reading Tutors in the Bronx
Reading Tutors in the Bronx
Reading Tutors in the Bronx
X

The pandemic had an enormous negative impact on the literacy levels of school kids, especialy those from minorities and lower socio-economic backgrounds. Working in partnership with a wonderful school in the south Bronx, JLIC students, young professionals and alumni purchased hundreds of books for kids at the school and then ran 13 online reading groups. Today the relationship continues with students from Columbia and alumni across Manhattan serving as in person 1 on 1 in person tutors.

headshot of Baby Food Drive
Baby Food Drive
Baby Food Drive
X

Responding to the acute shortage of baby formula across the United States, Shira Boshnack, co-director of Brooklyn OU-JLIC utilized their extensive alumni network so that mothers with spare baby formula could provide it to those in need.

headshot of Chanukah Lightings with Shoah Survivors
Chanukah Lightings with Shoah Survivors
Chanukah Lightings with Shoah Survivors
X

Thirty young professionals from the new JLIC TLV community lit candles in the homes of Shoah survivors living in Tel Aviv. The partnerships were made with the assistance of the Tel Aviv municipality. Each participant brought them with a gift of a beautiful Chanukiah handmade by members of Susan’s Home, a Jerusalem center for young people at risk.

headshot of Cannukah with Overthrow
Cannukah with Overthrow
Cannukah with Overthrow
X

In partnership with Overthrow Boxing and their community fridge, NYU students built a Chanukiah to feed 2,000 people. Hundreds of cans of food were donated out of which an enormous Chanukiah was built which was then to donated to those experiencing food poverty in Manhattan.

headshot of Matanot L'Evyonim
Matanot L'Evyonim
Matanot L'Evyonim
X

Matanot L’Evyonim downtown has become the stuff of legend. Every year hundreds of students, alumni and young professionals raise money that goes towards the purchasing and assemblage of hundreds of care packages that are personally delivered to homeless shelters and domestic violence shelters in Manhattan. In addition thousands of dollars are raised to forgive debts of needy Jewish families on the Lower East Side.

headshot of Leket Food Packaging and Distribution
Leket Food Packaging and Distribution
Leket Food Packaging and Distribution
X

Once a month JLIC-Mizrachi students and community members in Herzliya visit the Leket Israel Logistics Center in Ra’anana. They sort produce and organize it to be sent to organizations that will distribute the food to families and kitchens across the country.