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International Jewish education organization From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Limmud FSU (Former Soviet Union) is an international Jewish education organization that focuses on educating young Jewish adults that have roots in the Former Soviet Union about their Jewish identity and culture.[1] It was developed in 2006 by Chaim Chesler, founder (Israel); Sandra F. Cahn, co-founder (United States). Limmud (from the Hebrew word meaning "to learn")[2] was originally a British-Jewish educational charity, which produces a large annual winter conference at Warwick University and several other events around the year in the UK on the theme of Jewish learning.[3]
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Founders | Chaim Chesler, founder (Israel); Sandra F. Cahn, co-founder (United States) |
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Type | 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization |
Focus | Education |
Key people | Matthew Bronfman, chair of the Limmud FSU International Steering Committee; Aaron Frenkel (Monaco), President; Natasha Chechik, Executive Director |
Website | www |
Limmud FSU holds educational conferences in Ukraine, Moldova, Israel, Europe, Australia, Canada, Azerbaijan and the United States.[4][5] Limmud FSU engages with young Jewish adults of Former Soviet Union backgrounds, offering them the tools to gain a better understanding of their Jewish identity and if they wish, to assume leadership roles in their local communities.[6]
Limmud FSU events present Jewish learning and culture in its broadest sense through pluralistic, egalitarian volunteer-run conferences covering traditional subjects like the Bible and Talmud, to history, politics, Israel, the Middle-East conflict, theater, music and dance, the arts, literature and poetry, to Jewish cuisine, humor and folklore and much more.[7]
Limmud ("study" in Hebrew), the volunteer-driven Jewish learning experience, started in the United Kingdom in 1980[8] and since then has spread to over 80 Jewish communities across the world, awakening inspiration in tens of thousands of participants. In the words of The Jerusalem Post, "Every place that has Jews should have its own Limmud."
In adapting the Limmud model to the special requirements of Jewish audiences from the Former Soviet Union world-wide, Limmud FSU has developed a unique approach to cultural and educational activities, through lectures, presentations and workshops specially designed for the needs of young Jewish adults who were deprived of the opportunity to learn about their culture during 70 years of Communist rule in the Soviet Union.[9]
Limmud FSU is governed by an International Steering Committee (ISC), which approves its programs and budgets. The ISC has representatives from supporting organizations, donor foundations and sponsors, as well as individuals who actively promote Limmud FSU’s educational and cultural work.[10]
An Executive Committee sets operational policy for Limmud FSU, authorizes budgetary adjustments between ISC sessions and sets guidelines for the preparation of the annual work plan. Currently, its members include: Matthew Bronfman, Chairman, International Steering Committee; Aaron Frenkel, President; Sandra Cahn, Co-Founder and Chair of the FRD Committee, and Chaim Chesler, Founder, Limmud FSU, and Chair of the Executive Committee.[11][12][13]
A professional project manager in each country reports to the Executive Director, Natasha Chechik.[14][15]
Limmud FSU International Foundation is registered in the United States as a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization,[16] recognized by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).[17] Limmud FSU follows a policy of gradual incremental rises in the level of participation fees to ensure appropriate payment for a quality program. The aim is to bring each community to a level of 80 percent of the direct costs of their conferences. Currently, a global network of private individuals and partner organizations funds annual Limmud FSU conferences and volunteer training sessions.[18]
Limmud FSU Labs is a joint project of Limmud FSU and the Ministry of Diaspora Affairs of the State of Israel, established in 2019.[19] The goal is to create a meaningful and ongoing platform for varying forms of Jewish expression among different communities of young Russian-speaking Jews around the world, in order to promote a sense of national, collective and personal identity with the Jewish people and with the State of Israel.
Through the project, regional "Laboratories" are being created to provide comprehensive support, both professional and financial, for the development of educational and community initiatives among young Jews with roots in the FSU. It operates in the 11 centers where Limmud FSU annual conferences currently take place, with an aim to provide an ongoing Jewish experience between the main Limmud FSU events.[20] However, initiatives can be realized not only in the cities where Limmud FSU events have already occurred, but also in any other city in the following countries and centers: Ukraine, Moldova, Australia, Canada, United States and Western Europe.
Below is a timeline of Limmud FSU's key conferences:
Year | City | |
---|---|---|
2006 | Moscow (Russia) | |
2007 | Moscow (Russia) | |
2008 | Moscow (Russia) Leadership Training | |
Ashqelon (Israel) | ||
Yalta (Ukraine) | ||
2009 | Moscow (Russia) | |
Jerusalem (Israel) | ||
Hamptons (New York)[21] | ||
Birobidzhan (Far East Russia)[22] | ||
2010 | Jerusalem (Israel) | |
Hamptons (New York) | ||
Moscow (Russia) | ||
Truskavets (Ukraine) | ||
Odesa (Ukraine) | ||
New Orleans – 5th Anniversary | ||
2011 | Moscow (Russia) | |
Beersheba (Israel) | ||
Vinnytsia (Ukraine) | ||
St Petersburg (Russia)[23] | ||
Odesa (Ukraine) | ||
Global Leadership Summit (Jerusalem, Israel) | ||
2012 | Moscow (Russia) | |
Princeton (US) | ||
Chișinău (Moldova) | ||
St Petersburg (Russia) | ||
Uzhhorod (Ukraine) | ||
Nazareth Illit (Israel) | ||
2013 | Princeton (US) | |
Moscow (Russia) | ||
Vitebsk (Belarus) | ||
Odesa (Ukraine) | ||
St Petersburg (Russia) | ||
Jerusalem (Israel) | ||
New York – 7th Anniversary | ||
2014 | Parsippany New Jersey (US) | |
Moscow (Russia) | ||
Toronto, Ontario (Canada) - Deerhurst | ||
Chișinău (Moldova) | ||
Global Leadership Summit (Jerusalem, Israel) | ||
2015 | Toronto, Ontario (Canada) - Blue Mountain Resort | |
Melbourne (Australia) | ||
Moscow (Russia) | ||
Lviv (Ukraine) | ||
Kibbutz Ginossar (Israel) | ||
New York | ||
Chișinău (Moldova) | ||
Sydney (Australia) | ||
Kazan | ||
2016 | Toronto, Ontario (Canada) - Schwartz/Reisman Centre | |
Sydney (Australia) | ||
Moscow (Russia) | ||
New York | ||
Minsk (Belarus) | ||
Eilat (Israel) | ||
Los Angeles [24] | ||
Lviv (Ukraine) | ||
Saint Petersburg (Russia) | ||
2017 | Windsor, Berkshire (United Kingdom)[25] | |
Toronto, Ontario (Canada) | ||
Moscow (Russia) | ||
New York | ||
San Francisco | ||
Odesa (Ukraine) | ||
Saint Petersburg (Russia) | ||
Chișinău (Moldova) | ||
Eilat (Israel) | ||
2018 | Sydney (Australia) | |
Toronto, Ontario (Canada) | ||
Moscow (Russia) | ||
Warsaw, Poland - Global Leadership Summit | ||
New York - Columbia University [26] | ||
Lviv (Ukraine) | ||
Jerusalem (Israel) | ||
2019 | Saint Petersburg (Russia) | |
Moscow (Russia) | ||
Minsk (Belarus) | ||
New York | ||
Chișinău (Moldova) [27] | ||
Odesa (Ukraine) [28] | ||
Ashdod (Israel) | ||
2020 | Vienna (Austria)[29] | |
2021 | Moscow | |
New York | ||
Palo Alto | ||
Kazan (Russia) | ||
Lviv (Ukraine) | ||
Kibbutz Shefayim (Israel) | ||
2022 | New York | |
Toronto | ||
Baku (Azerbaijan) | ||
Boston | ||
Sydney | ||
Melbourne | ||
Tiberias (Israel) | ||
Warsaw | ||
2023 | Berlin | |
Baku | ||
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