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Jewish Farm School

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Jewish Farm School (JFS) is an environmental education non-profit founded by Nati Passow, Simcha Schwartz, Robert Friedman, Rachel Tali Kaplan and Shemariah Blum-Evitts in 2005. The organization's mission is to "practice and promote sustainable agriculture and to support food systems rooted in justice and Jewish traditions."[1] The school educates participants through farm-based service learning experiences, practical skills trainings, Jewish text study, and outreach and consulting. JFS runs a variety of sustainability-themed and farm-based programs with the help of Rabbi and Director of Programs Jacob Fine. It also oversees the Farm at Eden Village Camp in Putnam Valley, New York.

Background

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Since its formation in 2005, Jewish Farm School has run over fifty different programs, reaching over 4,800 children, college students and adults. JFS runs Alternative Break (AB) trips with college students on farms around the country, urban sustainability workshops in Philadelphia, and oversees the Farm at Eden Village, a two-acre educational farm on the grounds of Eden Village Camp, a new Jewish summer camp outside of New York City. Through JFS Cooperative Design, JFS consults with synagogues, JCCs and private landowners on educational and public interest Jewish farming and gardening projects.

Programs

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Jewish Farm School runs a variety of year-round events and workshops. Past programs at the Farm at Eden Village include Bee Keeping 101, Herbal Medicine, Natural Building, and Maple Sugaring. Urban Eden takes place at urban community farms in Brooklyn and Manhattan.

Other initiatives include Anafim: Sustainable Food and Farming Internship for High School Seniors, JFS Seminar in Organic Agriculture and Educational Gardening and Organic Farming Alternative Break service learning trips for college students.[2]

Curriculum

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Alumot: A Jewish Gardening Project is a resource manual for educators to start their own garden program.[3]

Jewish Food Rules: Principles of a Contemporary Food Ethic provides a contemporary perspective on what it means to "eat Jewish". The curriculum explores Jewish texts and traditions that explain laws and values on workers rights, animal rights, and agricultural practices.[4]

Staff

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Nati Passow, Co-founder & Executive Director, is a writer, carpenter and educator living in Philadelphia.

Simcha Schwartz, Co-founder & Associate Director, is originally from Chicago and graduated with a degree in Sociology from the University of Kansas. In 2004, working for Hazon, Simcha coordinated the NY Jewish Enviro

Rabbi Jacob Fine, Rabbi and Director of Programs, a graduate of Vassar College, was ordained by the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies. .[5]

Partners

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Hazon, a New York-based Jewish environmental organization, is Jewish Farm School's fiscal sponsor. JFS operates autonomously but maintains nonprofit status under the umbrella of Hazon.

In June 2010, Nati Passow was selected to the Joshua Venture Group Fellowship for Jewish Social Entrepreneurs for his work with the Jewish Farm School. In 2010, JFS was listed in the Slingshot guide as one of the 50 most innovative Jewish organizations in North America.

JFS is supported by several foundations and organizations, including Hazon, Repair the World, UJA-Federation of New York, Bikkurim, the Joshua Venture Group, the Natan Fund, the Joyce and Irving Goldman Foundation, and the Lisa and Maury Friedman Foundation.

Eden Village Camp partners with JFS to run year-round farm-based, Jewish educational programs for both children and adults.

JFS has been a resident of Bikkurim: An Incubator of New Jewish Ideas since July 2009, which provides office space and professional guidance to pioneering Jewish organizations.

JFS runs a track on organic farming and gardening for the annual Teva Seminar for Jewish Environmental Education.

References

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  1. ^ "Jewish Farm School Home". Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
  2. ^ "Jewish Farm School Programs". Archived from the original on 30 August 2011. Retrieved 6 July 2011.
  3. ^ "Alumot Curriculum".[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ "Jewish Food Rules Curriculum". Archived from the original on 2011-11-26. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  5. ^ "Staff". Archived from the original on 2008-09-07. Retrieved 2011-07-06.

Additional References

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