The Bronfman Fellowship
Location | |
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Executive Director | Rebecca Voorwinde |
Website | Bronfman.org |
The Bronfman Fellowship is a non-profit educational program for young Jews in Israel and North America.[1]
It was founded in 1987 by philanthropist Edgar M. Bronfman, and is partially funded through his foundation, The Samuel Bronfman Foundation. It was formerly known as The Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel (BYFI).
The Bronfman Fellowship selects 26 outstanding North American teenagers and 20 Israeli teenagers for a rigorous academic year of seminars including a free, five-week trip to Israel for North American Fellows ("Bronfmanim") between the summer of Fellows’ junior and senior years of high school, and a free trip to the United States for Israeli Fellows ("Amitim") during their final year of high school. The program educates and inspires exceptional young Jews from diverse backgrounds to grow into leaders grounded in their Jewish identity and committed to pluralism.[2]
The Bronfman Fellowship's network of over 1,400 alumni include 8 Rhodes Scholars, 2 Schwarzman Scholars, 4 Supreme Court clerks, 18 Fulbright Scholars, 35 Wexner Fellows and 27 Dorot Fellows.
Their 2011 applicant to Fellow ratio was 12:1, whereas Yale’s was 14:1 and Harvard’s 16:1.[3] The Bronfman Fellowship has been listed by Chuck Hughes, former Senior Admissions Officer at Harvard, in his book, "What it Really Takes to Get Into the Ivy League and other Highly Selective Colleges" as one of the programs which "act as filters for admissions officers to validate candidates who have been similarly identified by other organizations for talent and promise."[4]
History
The Bronfman Fellowship was founded in 1987 by Edgar M. Bronfman, in response to what he perceived as a lack of dialogue among the various Jewish denominations in North America. Edgar also dreamed of a "renaissance of Torah study,[5]" in which all Jews would not only be welcomed into the dialogue but would also be equipped with the thoughtfulness and Jewish literacy to engage in serious study of Jewish texts. In 1998, the organization launched Amitei Bronfman, its program for young Israelis. Today, the Bronfman Fellowship is one of the most well-respected youth programs in the Jewish nonprofit space.
Educational Philosophy
The Bronfman Fellowship's "Bronfmanim Impact Framework" outlines four core developmental goals for Fellows: Community Builders, Deep Thinkers, Moral Voices, and Cultural Creators. Their methodology for achieving these goals is grounded both in experiential learning and in Jewish text study, facilitated by professional rabbis and Jewish educators who share the Fellowship's philosophical commitments. The Fellowship places particular emphasis on the intellectual autonomy of the young Fellows, rather than on any one particular worldview or mode of Jewish practice.
The Fellowship's approach to Jewish text study is both rigorous and creative. A broad variety of works serve as jumping-off points for conversation, including canonical texts such as the Tanakh and the Talmud, philosophy, literature, poetry, and visual art.
The Bronfman Fellowship's pedagogy is also relational, with knowledge emerging not from one rabbi or text but from ongoing conversations among Fellows and faculty. One of the first traditional texts which each Fellowship cohort studies is a famous line of Pirkei Avot which translates to “make for yourself a teacher, acquire for yourself a friend.” This text is used to introduce one of the core tenets of the program: that connecting with others on a deep, personal level, and engaging in challenging dialogue with them, allows friends to become teachers, and teachers to become friends. Nuance and disagreement are embraced, and the Fellowship intentionally selects as religiously and politically diverse a cohort as possible. Every single Fellow serves both as a friend and as a teacher for their peers.
Program Description
The Bronfman Fellowship program consists of three dedicated group experiences, regular video conferences throughout the year, and a culminating project.
The first of these experiences is the Immersive Summer Experience, which takes place in Israel (with the exception of the 2020 cohort, whose program was fully remote, and the 2021 cohort, whose program is being held in the United States). Fellows spend five weeks in Israel, engaging in deep learning and forming lifelong bonds while traveling the country. They also have the opportunity to live in a homestay with an Israeli Fellow ("Amit") during part of the trip.
In December, the Israeli Amitim come to the United States for their own immersive travel experience, as well as a weekend retreat and a homestay with the American Fellows.
In the Spring, Fellows embark on a five-day exploration of American-Jewish identity in a Northeastern city, typically New York City or Washington, D.C.
Throughout the Fellowship Year, Fellows work on their Beyond Bronfman project, a process of deep exploration of a question or idea, which culminates in an artifact which Fellows then share with their peers.
Following the Fellowship Year, many Bronfmanim stay involved with the community through the Bronfman Fellowship's extraordinarily active alumni community. Alumni programs have included collegiate gatherings, regular lectures and classes, and mentoring programs. Alumni are able to take advantage of a vast network of professionals and Jewish leaders.
Notable Alumni
Authors
Journalists
- Matti Friedman
- Adam Davidson, NPR business correspondent and NYT Magazine Columnist
- Jonathan Tepperman, Managing Editor of Foreign Affairs
- Anya Kamenetz, lead education blogger at NPR and author of The Art of Screen Time
- Lior Soroka, editor at Ha'aretz
Filmmakers
- Yair Agmon, writer, filmmaker, and creator of the popular Israeli series Generation Y
- Amir Bar Lev, documentary film director
Creatives
- Jon Bresman, creative consultant who has worked with DC Comics, Hasbro, and LucasFilm
- Aliza Gans, writer, editor, and artist
- David Mahfouda, founder of numerous projects including the Fixers’ Collective, Movement Match, and the transportation company Bandwagon
- Alex Riff, poet and co-founder of the Cultural Brigade for Russian-Jewish Israeli Heritage
Education
- Talia Milgrom-Elcott, Founder and Executive Director of 100Kin10, which seeks to add 100,000 more excellent STEM teachers to America’s classrooms by 2021
- Matthew Rascoff, Associate Vice Provost for Digital Education and Innovation at Duke University
Law
- Jonathan Zion Mozes, Senior Law Clerk to the President of the Supreme Court of Israel
Academia
- Leah Mundell, applied anthropologist at Northern Arizona University & director of civic engagement track
Military
- Efrayt Kaykov, first female Battalion commander in the Artillery Corps of the Israeli Defense Forces
Climate
- Raphael Rosen, co-founder and President of Carbon Lighthouse
Jewish Leaders
- Idit Klein, Executive Director of Keshet
- Angela Warnick Buchdahl, senior rabbi at Manhattan's Central Synagogue
- Rabbi Dan Smokler, of the NYU Bronfman Center and Hillel International
- Rabbi Rachel Nussbaum, from The Kavanah Cooperative
- Eli Batalion, co-creator of YidLife Crisis
- Joshua Foer and Brett Lockspeiser, co-creators of Sefaria
- Judith Rosenbaum, Executive Director of the Jewish Women’s Archive
- Savion Medaleion, Chief of Staff for the Chairman of Keren Hayesod - United Israel Appeal
- Yehuda Kurtzer, President of the Shalom Hartman Institute of North America
See also
External links
References
- ^ "The Jewish Week". Retrieved 19 December 2013.
- ^ Jacobson, Judie (2013-11-13). "The Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel". The Jewish Ledger. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
- ^ "eJewish Philanthropy". Retrieved 2013-12-19.
- ^ Hughes, Chuck (2003). What it Really Takes to Get Into the Ivy League and other Highly Selective Colleges. Mc Graw Hill. p. 45. ISBN 007141259X.
- ^ "Our Founder | The Bronfman Fellowship". 2020-07-01. Retrieved 2021-01-31.