Posted by laura on August 2, 2010 at 11:14 AM
JOFA is pleased to announce the launch of its new JOFA Campus Fellowship for academic year 2010-2011. This program will give eight undergraduate Orthodox women across North America the opportunity to become leaders in their campus communities. JOFA Fellows will participate in a cutting-edge leadership seminar in New York City where they will meet and learn from JOFA leaders. The Fellows will work together with JOFA to plan and execute relevant and exciting programming for their campuses.
Women do not have sufficient opportunities for leadership roles within the Modern Orthodox community. This program is JOFA’s newest expression of our commitment to advancing women’s leadership. We are confident that the JOFA Fellows will contribute to strengthening the Jewish community.
The leadership seminar will focus on program development, as well as negotiation of the challenges of being a feminist in the Orthodox community and an Orthodox Jew on a progressive campus. Each Fellow will be provided with a stipend and funds and organizational support for programming on her campus. Fellows will also be paired with mentors from the JOFA Board. The cohort of JOFA Fellows will form a supportive network, empowering them to effect change on their campus and beyond.
The program also reaches beyond the Fellows themselves, as other students on their campuses will be engaged in programs where they seriously discuss ways to create a Modern Orthodoxy that offers more opportunities for women within the framework of halakha and shows sensitivity to issues of gender.
For PDF, JOFA Campus Fellowship Press Release 7 30 10
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Posted by laura on July 30, 2010 at 3:07 PM
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Posted by laura on January 21, 2010 at 9:26 AM
As I look ahead to the conference, the topic that most intrigues me is social justice. In the early years of JOFA’s existence, we never talked about the relationship between Orthodox feminism and social justice. As a student of feminist theory and a historian-in-training, I know that feminist organizations and movements often see themselves as agents of larger social change. More than pursuing merely their own particularized mission, they see themselves as part of a larger mission of transforming the world into a kinder place for women and other traditionally oppressed groups. Up until this point, when I contemplated the role that social justice should play in JOFA’s agenda, I believed that JOFA had too much work to do just within the parameters of Orthodox Judaism. We would have no time, energy or resources to pursue or support the greater social change advocated by other feminist organizations.
But now I wonder. Have we “made it” enough to begin to see beyond the struggles we have within Orthodox Judaism? Are we too particularist if we restrict our social justice agenda to agunot? Or is it the agunah problem so horrible and intractable that we must give it every ounce of our energy until it is solved? Should JOFA try to see itself as more of a part of a family of feminist organizations? Should we have on our agenda the fact that women are a tiny minority of the leadership in Jewish organizations, and that Jewish organizations are notoriously uncommitted to family-friendly work policies such as paid family leave, breastfeeding support, and on-site child care? How should we chart our course going forward? I think it might be a time for a broadening of our vision.
What do you think?
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Tags: Social Justice