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Krakow Jewish conference
aims to empower volunteers in Europe
JTA, 23 Decembre 2004
By: Carolyn Slutsky
After the dual destructions wrought
by the Holocaust and communism, Eastern European Jewish
communal life was little more than a memory 15 years
ago.
But last week in Krakow, Poland,
the region's Jewish community got a shot in the arm
as Jewish volunteers and professionals gathered for
the first pan-European conference for Jewish community
volunteers.
The conference brought together
70 participants from 11 countries in astern and Western
Europe, the United States and Israel.
Co-sponsored by the American Jewish
Joint Distribution Committee, the European Council of
Jewish Communities and the Polish Social Welfare Cmmission,
the conference, known as the Volunteer International
Program, is the first of its kind, uniting community
members from developed and developing countries to share
ideas for Jewish communal service.
"Everyone will learn best
practices and learn how different volunteer programs
work in different communities," said Daniel Sherman,
who works for the JDC in New York
The mid-December conference offered
professionals and volunteers from each country the opportunity
to present information about their own volunteer programs,
which include work with the elderly, poor and children.
It included workshops on innovative
volunteer programs, training and ideas for strengthening
youth participation in volunteerism.
For many Eastern European Jews,
the conference was the first opportunity to share ideas
with others in similar situations who have more developed
programs.
"After communism, people
are still searching for their identities, thinking,
'What does it mean to be a Jew?' " said Zoltan
Haberman, director of social services for the Hungarian
Jewish Social Support
Foundation. "Helping is a Jewish value," and
through volunteerism "they can define themselves
by doing something."
Hungary today has approximately
100,000 Jews, but few are affiliated with the official
Jewish community.
About 80 percent of Hungary's
Jewish community lives in the capital, Budapest. The
community has 22 synagogues, a mikvah, cemeteries, kosher
kitchens and a Jewish hospital.
"In Eastern Europe, there
are Jewish people but not really a strong community,"
Taly Shaul, Haberman's colleague, told JTA. "The
main challenge today is to bring as many people as possible
back to Jewish life. People should learn community isn't
only a place to get, but to contribute as well."
Jessica Chait is an American Jew
living in Poland and working as a volunteer. The recipient
of the Rosalyn Z. Wolf Fellowship, a grant from the
Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland, she helped
coordinate the conference from Warsaw.
She said some participants had
very developed volunteer corps in their communities,
while others were just getting started.
"This was a real exchange.
All the members learned from each other," she said.
Among the American participants
in the conference was Dorot, a New York-based organization
working to enhance the lives of Jewish and other elderly
through home visits, "university without walls,"
an educational program for homebound seniors and other
volunteer programs.
Dorot, which has been operating
for 29 years, has a volunteer base of some 10,000 people.
Vivian Fenster Ehrlich, Dorot's
executive director, said the organization serves everyone
from non-Jews to secular Jews to the Orthodox, but that
plenty of unaffiliated Jews volunteer in order to do
a good deed.
"The interaction with the
European communities has been fabulous," Fenster
Ehrlich said. "I've seen everything here from grassroots"
programs to programs "that are 100 years old. Everyone
struggles with how to involve young people."
Kasia Zarnecka, volunteer program
coordinator for the Warsaw-based Jewish Welfare Commission
and one of the organizers of the conference, said Jewish
communal work both in emerging and well-established
communities is challenging but rewarding.
"We all have common goals
and share the same motivations," Zarnecka said.
"It's always best to have a dialogue."
Sent by Lucyna Artymiuk
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