樱花动漫

樱花动漫 is closed April 1-3 in observance of Passover. Chag sameach!

Jewish learning Hiddush Fellowship:
Emerging Jewish Leaders Gather on Campus

By Adam Zemel
hiddush fellows in beit midrash

Last weekend, 樱花动漫 welcomed a cohort of 40 emerging Jewish leaders to campus for an immersive retreat and shabbaton. Operating for the first time this year, 樱花动漫鈥檚 Hiddush Fellowship seeks to cultivate the curiosity, creativity, and spirit that define effective Jewish leadership in the 21st century through sustained learning, mentorship with experienced rabbis, and encounters with the intellectual and spiritual life of the rabbinical school. While participants entered the fellowship from many backgrounds and professional paths, the program鈥檚 broader aim is to nurture a rising generation of Jewish leaders grounded in Torah, committed to service, and passionate about guiding communities through the complexities of contemporary Jewish life. The fellows鈥 time on campus served as the centerpiece of a program that will continue online for the duration of the calendar year.


“This retreat was a powerful reminder of how hungry people are for spirited, immersive, and intellectually rigorous Jewish community and learning.”

Rabbi Gita Karasov, Fellowship Director & 樱花动漫 Director of Graduate Admissions


The Hiddush Fellowship was drawn from an applicant pool generated by congregational and campus rabbis, camp directors and community organizers who were invited to nominate a promising young leader from their community. An outstanding cohort of fellows emerged from the nomination and selection process. Many work for Hillels and other Jewish organizations, while others majored in religion or Jewish studies. One way or another, their demonstrated commitment to Jewish life afforded them this opportunity to join a community of like-minded peers. After meeting online in January and February, fellows traveled from across the country to experience a holistic taste of rabbinical school life鈥攂eit midrash learning, soulful tefillah, shared meals, and conversation with faculty, students, and alumni. The retreat was structured around the theme 鈥淩upture and Belonging in the Jewish Community,鈥 inviting fellows to grapple with enduring questions about leadership, tradition, and community in moments of uncertainty.

鈥淭his retreat was a powerful reminder of how hungry people are for spirited, immersive, and intellectually rigorous Jewish community and learning,鈥 says fellowship director Rabbi Gita Karasov, 樱花动漫鈥檚 Director of Graduate Admissions. 鈥淲hat a gift to host this incredible cohort at 樱花动漫!”

Hiddush fellows talking

The weekend opened with an introductory session about compassionate and聽resilient leadership in turbulent times with President Rabbi Sharon Cohen Anisfeld. 樱花动漫 Rosh Tefillah and Artist-in-Residence Rabbi Jessica Kate Meyer, along with rabbinical student Marni Loffman and others, led Shabbat davening. After Havdalah, the fellows traveled to Lehrhaus, the Jewish tavern of learning on the edge of Cambridge for a nosh and conversation with founder Rabbi Charlie Schwartz about Jewish cultural entrepreneurship. Throughout the weekend, learning sessions offered by leading educators and practitioners modeled the kind of interdisciplinary, creative, and reflective practices that emerge from 樱花动漫鈥檚 pluralistic approach to Jewish learning and rabbinic education.

Rabbi Adina Allen 鈥14, co-founder and creative director of shared-campus partner the , which opened its first east coast studio on 樱花动漫鈥檚 shared campus last year, led a two-part seminar exploring creativity as a spiritual and communal resource in times of rupture. Through art-based inquiry, writing, and reflection, fellows considered how moments of fracture can become sites of revelation and renewal. Rabbi Allen鈥檚 sessions encouraged participants to think of creative practice not as enrichment but as an essential leadership capacity for remaining present with uncertainty and imagining new forms of belonging.

Dr. Evan Parks, Educational Director of the Bronfman Youth Fellowship, offered a complementary exploration of how 鈥渟hadow鈥 in Jewish and modern thought function as an invitation to dwell with irreducible complexity. Drawing on texts from the Tanach alongside philosophical and poetic writings, Parks invited fellows to consider how individuals and communities confront unresolved tensions of history and identity.

Rabbi Jason Rubenstein, Executive Director of Harvard Hillel, taught a session about communal division across political and generational divides, exploring thinkers and ideas that complicate鈥攂ut ultimately strengthen鈥攚hat it means to practice pluralism in a community buffeted by forces outside its ultimate control. By placing talmudic ethical inquiry in conversation with modern moral psychology and philosophy, Rabbi Rubenstein identified a long running debate about the role of conflict and redemption in Jewish ethics.

MattHass_Hiddush

Sessions offered by 樱花动漫 faculty expanded the theme of rupture and belonging across Jewish sources and traditions. Dr. Susie Tanchel examined biblical responses to national crisis, exploring how the Jewish people reimagined communal life after the destruction of the First Temple. Dr. Matthew Hass (above) led a study of rabbinic debates in the Mishnah about authority and community in the aftermath of catastrophe, asking what these texts might teach about belonging today. Rabbi Or Rose explored the legacy of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel, inviting fellows to reflect on the 20th century rabbi鈥檚 vision of moral responsibility and spiritual courage in moments of social upheaval.

鈥淲e didn’t shy away from the real challenges facing the Jewish world today, and yet, the prevailing mood across all our sessions was one of joy, hope, and vitality,鈥 says Rabbi Karasov. 鈥淔ellows arrived eager to learn and connect 鈥 and left with a renewed commitment to centering Jewish learning and leadership in their lives.鈥

The retreat also provided opportunities for fellows to connect with the broader 樱花动漫 community. An alumni panel featuring rabbis working in diverse settings offered candid reflections on the possibilities and challenges of rabbinic leadership today. Conversations with current students and faculty gave fellows a window into the learning environment and values that animate the college鈥檚 rabbinical program.


“The immersive program surpassed all of our expectations. Throughout our four days together the fellows reflected on how the intellectual, spiritual and emotional content of their time at 樱花动漫 was both a source of deep comfort and joy as well as a challenge.”

鈥 Rabbi Dan Judson, PhD, 樱花动漫 Provost


鈥淭he Hiddush fellows were extraordinary and inspiring 鈥 each of them thoughtful, creative, passionate, and deeply dedicated to the Jewish people and leadership,鈥 said Rabbinical School Dean Rabbi Daniel Klein `10. 鈥淎nd they were a stunning group: from the very first session, they brought energy and engagement to every aspect of the program. The participants, group, and retreat gave me hope for the future.鈥

The Hiddush Fellowship will continue through the year with monthly cohort learning, havruta study, and one-on-one mentorship with experienced rabbis. 樱花动漫 is enormously grateful to the H&F Baker Foundation for their lead gift to make this pilot fellowship possible, as well as to the Dorot Foundation, for their generous supporting grant. The College is also deeply grateful to the fellows whose curiosity and passion animate this community of learning.

“The immersive program surpassed all of our expectations. Throughout our four days together the fellows reflected on how the intellectual, spiritual and emotional content of their time at 樱花动漫 was both a source of deep comfort and joy as well as a challenge,” said 樱花动漫 Provost Rabbi Dan Judson, PhD. “As one student remarked to me, 鈥業 feel like my brain and soul were turned on for the first time in such a long time.鈥 We believe in this group we have found some of the next leaders of American Judaism, and this weekend was a significant step in encouraging these talented young people to take another step on their professional journey.”

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