Edlavitch Jewish Community Center of Washington, D.C.

Coordinates: 38°54′39″N 77°02′10″W / 38.910833°N 77.036111°W / 38.910833; -77.036111
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Edlavitch Jewish Community Center of Washington, DC
Chief Executive Officer
Jennifer Zwilling[3]
Daniel O. Hirsch
Revenue (2013)
$7,305,944[2]
Expenses (2013)$8,029,014[2]
Endowment$2,913,684[2]
Employees (2012)
215[2]
Volunteers (2012)
9,156[2]
Websiteedcjcc.org

The Edlavitch Jewish Community Center of Washington, D.C. (formerly the Washington DCJCC) is an American

Dupont Circle. It serves the Washington, D.C. area through religious, cultural, educational, social, and sport center programs open to the public, although many programs are strongly linked to Jewish culture, both in the United States and in Israel. It is part of the JCC Association (JCCA), the umbrella organization for the Jewish Community Center movement, which includes more than 350 JCCs, YM-YWHAs, and camp sites in the U.S. and Canada, in addition to 180 local JCCs in the Former Soviet Union, 70 in Latin America, 50 in Europe, and close to 500 smaller centers in Israel
.

Among the many notable programs sponsored by the EDCJCC are

embassies
representing nations that produced the films.

The EDCJCC also houses the Hyman S. and Freda Bernstein Library, which includes a Jewish Heritage Video Collection, a children's reading collection, and a collection of genealogy books and materials. It is a constituent organization of the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Washington, serving Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia.

History

415 M Street, NW, the original home of the YMHA (1913–1914), precursor to the DCJCC. From 1914–1923, the building would house the Hebrew Home for the Aged.
U.S. President Calvin Coolidge delivers a speech during the DCJCC cornerstone ceremony, May 3, 1925.
Cornerstone ceremony, May 3, 1925.

Although the first recorded Jew settled in Washington, DC, in 1795, the first large immigration of Jews to the nation's capital took place with the arrival of a number of German Jews, in the 1840s.

Young Men's Hebrew Association (YMHA), in 1913.[5]
The YMHA, which moved from 415 M St, NW, to 11th and Pennsylvania Ave, NW, in 1918, which would serve as the first center to support the cultural, recreational, and some spiritual needs of the Jewish population.

Later, with the outbreak of

Woodley Park in 1955. Among the many activities was even an annual "Queen Esther Beauty Contest," with pictures of the finalists featured in the pages of The Washington Post.[8]

In 1939, thanks to a gift from Washington Post owners

Sabbath, similar to Jewish practice.[8]

Special events were held for military veterans, and no veteran was charged to participate in any center activity during or immediately after

USO lounge was dedicated, open to both Jewish and non-Jewish veterans. Additionally, the Center hosted numerous programs in support of the U.S. war effort, including the 1943–44 "Program for Victory" that promoted the purchase of war bonds and war stamps.[8]

As many Jews in the city moved to the suburbs, the DCJCC closed and a new JCC was established in Rockville, Maryland, opening on May 8, 1969. It still exists as a thriving JCC, known as the "JCC of Greater Washington", and is located on a "campus" that now also houses the Hebrew Home of Greater Washington, the Jewish Social Service Agency (JSSA), The Jewish Federation of Greater Washington, and a number of Jewish senior citizen residences. There is also a Jewish Community Center between Annandale and Fairfax, Virginia.

The JCC building was sold to the city, which turned it over to Federal City College, the forerunner of the University of the District of Columbia. The Jewish community Center became Building T-5. However, within the next 15 years, the college made the decision it no longer needed the building. The city considered using it as a site for a prison, or as a shelter for the homeless. However, "Then a strange thing happened. The District's single Jewish population soared."[8]

With this resurgence of Jews in the District, the Rockville JCC opened a downtown D.C. branch in 1979, and that branch "declared its independence in 1985.[8] As the Jewish population in the District continued to grow, the Jewish community repurchased the original building in 1990.[9] After extensive restoration, the JCC opened for the second time on January 12, 1997,[4] with a display of photographs and artifacts that document the demise and rebirth of urban Jewish spaces in America, such as the JCC itself.[9]

In 2014, the JCC cancelled an invitation for The Shondes, a Brooklyn-based Jewish feminist punk rock band, after a band member questioned whether the State of Israel had a right to exist. In the same year, the JCC withdrew an invitation to David Harris-Gershon, who planned to speak about his wife's serious injury from a Palestinian terrorist's bomb in Jerusalem, following the discovery that Harris-Gershon had written blog posts supportive of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.[10]

Programs and services

Morris Cafritz Center for the Arts

The JCC's Morris Cafritz Center for the Arts is named in honor of the DC real estate developer Morris Cafritz. JCC programs for the Arts include live theater, films, and music, along with the occasional literary event. Theater J provides theater productions, plus play readings, and discussions on the themes of their theater series, often including the playwright, director, or actors. In addition to the annual Washington Jewish Film Festival, one of the largest in North America, "The Screening Room" is a year-round program of full-length features, documentaries, and short films from the around the world, almost always accompanied by discussions led by film makers and film scholars. The music festival features music from the international "Jewish scene," from klezmer to jazz, and from classical to hip-hop and fusion. The literary series, "Authors Out Loud," brings in authors to sign and discuss their latest works, and many other special events, including prose and poetry readings and special lectures, often co-sponsored with other area organizations, provide opportunities to explore and learn about developments in Jewish magazines, the internet, and writing in Hebrew and Yiddish. Special art exhibitions are displayed at the Ann Loeb Bronfman Gallery, and are always free to the public. Past exhibits have featured artists such as Ben Shahn, Andy Warhol, Jules Feiffer, Leonard Baskin, Godfrey Frankel, Helen Levitt, Yefim Ladyzhensky, Siona Benjamin and Mindy Weisel.

Jewish living

Throughout the year, a series of retreats and special events focus on Jewish thoughts, ideas, and experiences, such as "Faces of Israel," an exploration of religion and state seeking ways different Israelis understand their lives in a nation that is both a "Jewish State" and a democracy. The Center's "Open University" offers both one-time special events, including speakers and films, and ongoing classes and study groups. Programs have included "Dialogues and Public Affairs," an ongoing series of dialogues and discussions on Jewish issues including Mid-East affairs, and "J on Demand," social programs to bring together young professionals in the D.C. area.

In addition to special and ongoing activities at the Center, the EDCJCC also sponsors trips to destinations in the United States and around the world, under the heading of "JCC Travel." One example is the June 2010 trip, "Rome Judaica," which includes visits to the Great Synagogue of Rome, the Jewish Museum, and the Via del Portico d'Ottavia, the old Jewish ghetto now transformed into a setting for Jewish shops and kosher restaurants.

Jewish worship and interfaith understanding

Members of the DC Minyan light candles in celebration of the Festival of Hanukkah.

The EDCJCC is the home for two Jewish community congregations, the DC Minyan, a lay-led congregation that leads "traditional egalitarian" worship services and joins together for study as part of a movement following the model of a growing group of communities in the United States and overseas, such as Bet Mishpachah, "a congregation for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Jews and all who wish to participate in an inclusive, egalitarian, and mutually supportive community."

In addition to these Jewish religious resources, "Interfaith Connections" is a program that welcomes interfaith couples, in an attempt to explore the "heritage, tradition and spirituality of both partners." Special presentations, courses, workshops for interfaith couples, and a series of interfaith couples Shabbat dinners are among the programs offered.

Tikkun olam

In the Jewish spirit of tikkun olam, repairing, mending, and transforming the world, the Center sponsors many programs where both members and non-members can volunteer their time and energy to help others. "Camp Yad B'Yad" (Hand in Hand) trains students from grades 6 through 12 in ways "one person can make a difference" to the community in the areas of cooking, feeding, playing, organizing, and building. "Everything but the Turkey" is a Thanksgiving Day of service and outreach to the homeless and the hungry. "December 25th Day of Service" involves more than 1000 men and women of all ages and all religious backgrounds, working together to serve meals to the homeless, to entertain seniors and children, to renovate and paint shelters, and even to donate blood. Similar efforts are undertaken on other holidays, including Martin Luther King Day, and special dates are set to work on community projects, such as cleaning areas along the river and planting new flowers, trees, and plants, to help the environment.[11]

Sports and fitness

The Center's sports and fitness programs include individual and group classes and training, including exercises and disciplines such as "Kung Fu-Qigong-Tai Chi Fusion Class," "Zumba, "Cardio Funk," and "Butts and Guts."

United States Olympic Committee
.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Washington District of Columbia Jewish Community Center, Inc". Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs. Government of the District of Columbia. Accessed on December 28, 2015.
  2. ^
    Guidestar
    . June 30, 2013.
  3. ^ "Contact Us". Washington D.C. Jewish Community Center. Accessed on February 11, 2021.
  4. ^ a b "Washington, D.C. Jewish History". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved Dec 27, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c Jewish Washington: Scrapbook of an American Community, Laura Cohen Apelbaum and Wendy Turman, editors, Jewish Historical Society of Greater Washington, 2007.
  6. ^ a b Dr. Martin Garfinkle, The Jewish Community of Washington, D.C., Images of America series, Arcadia Publishing, 2005.
  7. ^ "Google". Retrieved Dec 27, 2022 – via www.google.com.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Eugene L. Meyer, "The Center of Their Lives: In the District's Jewish Meeting Place, Echoes of the Past and Plans for the Future," The Washington Post, January 20, 1992.
  9. ^ a b Walden Siew, "Jewish Community Center moves to historic building: Exhibit opens Dupont Circle facility," The Washington Times, Jan. 12, 1997.
  10. ^ "For Jewish groups, a stand-off between open debate and support of Israel". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2023-04-01.
  11. ^ "Temporarily Disabled". washingtondcjcc.org. Retrieved Dec 27, 2022.
  12. ^ "Temporarily Disabled". washingtondcjcc.org. Retrieved Dec 27, 2022.

External links