Nigun and Nehama (Song & Comfort)

As we navigate this difficult time, we invite you to sit together in wordless song and in silence. Join Hebrew College Rosh Tefilla and Artist-in-Residence Rabbi Jessica Kate Meyer `14, rabbinical student Sam Tygiel, and rav-hazzan student Julia Sabra for nigunim and community healing.

Jessica Kate MeyerJessica Kate Meyer is a prayer leader, storyteller, vocalist, and rabbi, who served as rabbi-hazzan at Romemu in NYC, and most recently, at The Kitchen in San Francisco. She has studied sacred Jewish music with masters from Ashkenazi and Mizrahi traditions and has performed as a vocalist with ensembles in the United States and Israel. In a previous life, Jessica appeared in film, theater, and television projects in Europe and the United States: most notably, as a principal role in the Oscar-winning film, The Pianist.

 

Adult Learning GROW Series: December 2023

For the second program in Hebrew College Adult Learning’s free, monthly GROW series, we examine Hanukkah and Christmas from the inside. We hope you will spend an hour with us for this and future programs in our series, to gather, reflect, observe, and wrestle with topics that will deepen your Jewish learning.


December Program

candlesProgram: Illuminating Christmas and Hanukkah from the Inside
Date: December 13, 2024 | 12-1 PM/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Instructors: Rabbi Dr. Michael Shire & Reverend Tom Reid
Join us: Register now

The Rev. Tom Reid and Rabbi Michael Shire will discuss Christmas and Hanukkah from their respective religious and spiritual experiences. What are the underlying spiritual assumptions and foundations that are experienced during these times of joy and celebration? What is significant from an insider’s point of view and what is problematic or challenging about our celebrations and spiritual work during this period of the year.

Our Instructors

Rabbi Michael ShireRabbi Dr. Michael Shire is the Academic Director for Hebrew College’s Master’s in Jewish Education program. He grew up in Birmingham England and completed his B.A. Hons in Hebrew Literature and Jewish History at University College, London. He continued his studies at Hebrew Union College both in New York and Los Angeles completing a M.A. and Ph.D. in Jewish Education. His research work, later to be published, proposed a curriculum orientation for spiritual enhancement in Jewish educational settings. He concurrently served as director of education at Temple Beth Hillel, a large Reform synagogue in North Hollywood, California. On returning to Great Britain in 1988, he took up the post as the national director of the Centre of Jewish Education developing the infrastructure, day schools and professional and academic learning of Jewish education in the UK. Following further study, he was ordained as rabbi at Leo Baeck College in 1996.

In 2001, he merged the Centre of Jewish Education with the rabbinic training school, Leo Baeck College, and became its vice-principal for an additional eleven years. He became the professor and dean of the Shoolman Graduate School of Jewish Education in 2011 and subsequently was appointed as chief academic officer of Hebrew College from 2015-2020. He is founder of the Torah Godly Play pedagogic methodology and serves as trustee of the Pursuit of History, the Association of Institutions of Graduate Jewish Education.

Tom ReidReverend Tom Reid (he/him) is Director of the Building Interfaith Leadership Initiative (BILI) Launchpad Fellowship with the Miller Center for Interreligious Learning & Leadership of Hebrew College. He is an ordained minister in the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and serves as pastor of Newton Presbyterian Church in Newton Corner, Massachusetts. Tom also represents the PC (USA) a member of the Interreligious Relations Convening Table of the National Council of Churches. Before changing careers to ministry and interreligious engagement, Tom spent over ten years working in a variety of fields including: clean energy and innovation in Boston, environmental and green building consulting in Boston and Dubai, and business education in Madrid, Spain.

Originally from Kansas, Tom is a proud alumnus of the University of Kansas, holding a BA in Environmental Studies, Latin American Studies, and Spanish. He also holds an MA in Contemporary European Politics, Policy, and Society granted by the Euromasters Consortium and funded by a Fulbright grant to the European Union and an MDiv from Boston University School of Theology with a certificate in Religion and Conflict Transformation. Tom is passionate about the environment, social justice and anti-racism work, learning as many languages as possible, and exploring restaurants wherever he may find himself. He lives in Cambridge, MA with his husband, David.


save the dates

Future Free, Monthly GROW Programs

Dr.-Susie-TanchelDate: January 10, 2024 | 12-1 PM EST/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Program: Unexpected Encounters
Instructors: Dr. Susie Tanchel
Join us: Learn moreRegister now

In our time together, we will explore select biblical texts in which a person receives an unexpected revelation from God. Through our study, we will glean possible ways in which these ancient texts are relevant for our lives in the present time. No knowledge of Hebrew is required. Please bring an open mind and heart.

hebrew in a bookDate: February 14, 2024 | 12-1 PM EST/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Program: What can the New Testament teach us about first century Judaism?
Instructors: Alan Avery Peck
Join us: Register now

Jesus, the Christian messiah and son of God, was also a first century Galilean Jew who stood firmly within the Judaism of his day. Jesus’ message responded to and resonated within his people’s—the Jews’—distinctive theological, cultural, and political circumstances. As much as the New Testament tells the story of Christian origins, it thus reflects deeply on first century Judaism. Christians who ignore Jesus’ Jewish context cannot fully understand what was at stake in, or the urgency of, Jesus’ message. And Jews who ignore the New Testament miss the opportunity fully to grasp Jewish belief in the period that yielded the Judaism we still practice today. Thus our focus today: What can the New Testament teach us about first century Judaism?

passover-seder-plateDate: March 13, 2024 | 12-1 PM EST/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Program: Building Resilience for Stories
Instructors: Margie Bogdanow
Join us: Register now

Research shows that learning and knowing about family history helps build resilience in children of all ages. Judaism is a religion of stories. We tell the same Torah stories over and over and each time they have new meaning with the Passover Seder being the most famous example. As grandparents, sharing our stories is one of the most important things we can do for our grandchildren. Today our stories can be told in many ways, from sitting on a lap to sitting at computers across the world. They can be shared in words, in music and in pictures. Join other grandparents to reflect on our stories, explore the Jewish wisdom around the value of storytelling, and share practical approaches to becoming impactful stewards of our family narrative.

Rabbi Sharon Cohen AnisfeldDate: April 10, 2024 | 12-1 PM EST/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Program: TBD
Instructors: Rabbi Sharon Cohen Anisfeld
Join us: Register Now

** Watch for details and instructors for our programs on May 8 and June 5, 2024.

 

Adult Learning GROW Series: November 2023

With Israel on our minds, Hebrew College Adult Learning is launching our new free, monthly GROW series with a discussion about Israel and Jewish Peoplehood. We hope you will spend an hour with us for this and future programs in our series, to gather, reflect, observe, and wrestle with topics that will deepen your Jewish learning.


israeli-flagNovember Program

The Imperative, Challenge, and Hope of Jewish Interconnectedness
Instructor: Rabbi Neal Gold

A discussion, with classic Jewish texts, about the state of Jewish peoplehood today: how the spiritual wisdom of our tradition informs our feelings of longing, loss, and pain as war unfolds in Israel.

About Our Instructor

Neal_GoldRabbi Neal Gold teaches and writes about Jewish texts, Israel, and the intersections between Jewish spiritual life and the contemporary world. In 2020, he created a rapidly expanding online platform for adult Jewish learning called “A Tree with Roots.” He is adjunct faculty Hebrew College in Newton, MA, and in 2023 became the spiritual leader of Am HaYam—Cape Cod Havurah.

Neal is the Immediate Past President of the Massachusetts Board of Rabbis. In 2021, he became an inaugural JJGI [J.J. Greenberg Institute for Advancement of Jewish Life] Fellow at Hadar Institute in New York.

Neal received smicha (rabbinic ordination) from Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, where he also received a Doctor of Divinity honoris causa degree in 2022. In 2018 he earned a second Master’s Degree in Near Eastern and Judaic Studies from Brandeis University. He is the author of many academic and popular writings about Judaism and Israel, and he is the editor of Radiance: The Collected Prose and Poetry of Danny Siegel, published by the Jewish Publication Society in 2020.


save the dates

Future Free, Monthly GROW Programs

candlesDate: December 13, 2024 | 12-1 PM EST/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Program: Illuminating Christmas and Hanukkah from the Inside
Instructors: Rabbi Dr. Michael Shire & Reverend Tom Reid
Join us: Learn moreRegister now

Dr.-Susie-TanchelDate: January 10, 2024 | 12-1 PM EST/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Program: Unexpected Encounters
Instructors: Dr. Susie Tanchel
Join us: Learn moreRegister now

In our time together, we will explore select biblical texts in which a person receives an unexpected revelation from God. Through our study, we will glean possible ways in which these ancient texts are relevant for our lives in the present time. No knowledge of Hebrew is required. Please bring an open mind and heart.

hebrew in a bookDate: February 14, 2024 | 12-1 PM EST/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Program:What can the New Testament teach us about first century Judaism?
Instructors: Alan Avery Peck
Join us: Register now

Jesus, the Christian messiah and son of God, was also a first century Galilean Jew who stood firmly within the Judaism of his day. Jesus’ message responded to and resonated within his people’s—the Jews’—distinctive theological, cultural, and political circumstances. As much as the New Testament tells the story of Christian origins, it thus reflects deeply on first century Judaism. Christians who ignore Jesus’ Jewish context cannot fully understand what was at stake in, or the urgency of, Jesus’ message. And Jews who ignore the New Testament miss the opportunity fully to grasp Jewish belief in the period that yielded the Judaism we still practice today. Thus our focus today: What can the New Testament teach us about first century Judaism?

passover-seder-plateDate: March 13, 2024 | 12-1 PM EST/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Program: Building Resilience for Stories
Instructors: Margie Bogdanow
Join us: Register now

Research shows that learning and knowing about family history helps build resilience in children of all ages. Judaism is a religion of stories. We tell the same Torah stories over and over and each time they have new meaning with the Passover Seder being the most famous example. As grandparents, sharing our stories is one of the most important things we can do for our grandchildren. Today our stories can be told in many ways, from sitting on a lap to sitting at computers across the world. They can be shared in words, in music and in pictures. Join other grandparents to reflect on our stories, explore the Jewish wisdom around the value of storytelling, and share practical approaches to becoming impactful stewards of our family narrative.

Rabbi Sharon Cohen AnisfeldDate: April 10, 2024 | 12-1 PM EST/9-10 AM PST | Zoom
Program: TBD
Instructors: Rabbi Sharon Cohen Anisfeld
Join us: Register now

** Watch for details and instructors for our programs on May 8 and June 5, 2024.

 

Building Resilience through Stories: A Special Session for Grandparents

 

grandparents with grandchild

Join Hebrew College Open Circle Jewish Learning for Building Resilience through Stories: A Special Session for Grandparents, to reflect on our stories, explore Jewish wisdom around the value of storytelling, and share practical approaches to becoming impactful stewards of our family narrative. The session will be led by Margie Bogdanow LICSW , longtime facilitator and co-creator of the Grandparenting Through a Jewish Lens program at Hebrew College.

Research has shown that the simple act of sharing your story with your grandchildren can have a powerful impact in helping children weather adversity at much higher rates. We invite you to explore the role you can play at this challenging moment for our families and the Jewish people.

An Evening of Yiddish Drinking Songs

Jessica Kate Keyer

Gather in Community with Hebrew College Partner Lehrhaus

With a drink in hand and a melody in heart, we’ll visit some of the greatest Yiddish drinking songs: odes to wine, cider, vodka, and of course…beer. “Tomorrow isn’t here yet. All we have is today, So why ruin it by worrying? Grab a drink While you’re still among the living. Because in the afterlife, If God so wills, they may not give you any!”

Taught by Rabbi Jessica Kate Meyer, Rosh Tefillah and Artist-in-Residence at Hebrew College in Newton.

This class is part of the Lehrhaus Oktoberfest celebrations and is generously sponsored by the Consulate General of the Federal Republic of Germany Boston.

Community Gathering of Connection, Learning & Support Around Israel for Teens & Parents (Zoom)

Hebrew College is pleased to share information about an online community gathering of connection, learning and support around Israel.

Tuesday, October 24, 7:30-9 pm on Zoom

These conversations will be facilitated by Dr. Jonathan Golden, director of Wellspring Initiatives at the Shalom Hartman Institute, along with members of the Jewish Teen Initiative at CJP and Gann Academy faculty.

Representatives from BaMidbarJewish Family & Children’s Service, and Gateways will also be present to share resources on how our community is supporting and promoting mental health and wellness.

This program is designed for teens (grades 8-12) and parents/guardians of teens. Teens and their parents/guardians are not required to attend together. Educators working with Jewish teens are also invited to attend.

Questions? Contact Leah Finkelman, CJP’s Engagement Manager, Teens & Camping.

Event Sponsors: