Goldring / Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life

The Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life, formerly the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience, is a non-profit Jewish organization based in Jackson, Mississippi that provides a variety of educational, cultural and religious services to underserved Jewish communities throughout the South.

Goldring / Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life
Official logo
States served by the Goldring / Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life.
Formation1986
TypeNon-profit organization
Headquarters4915 I-55 North
Location
Coordinates32°23′40″N 90°8′37″W
President
Macy B. Hart
Websitewww.isjl.org

Overview

Founded in 1986 as the Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience, the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life provides educational and rabbinic services to isolated Jewish communities, documents and preserves the rich history of the Southern Jewish experience, and promotes a Jewish cultural presence. It is named after Stephen Goldring and Malcolm Woldenberg, both New Orleans-based businessmen and philanthropists.[1] Macy B. Hart, a longtime director of the Henry S. Jacobs Camp in Utica, Mississippi, established the museum in an effort to preserve the artifacts and history of small Jewish communities across the South in risk of extinction.

In 2000, Hart expanded the museum into the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life. Incorporating the research and historic preservation work of the museum, the institute opened in Jackson and created new departments of Rabbinic Services, Education, and Cultural Programs.[2]

Funded by both large foundations and individual patrons, the institute serves the spiritual, educational, and cultural needs of isolated and underserved Jewish communities in the South. Many of communities have neither a full-time rabbi nor a full-time Jewish educator. In turn, the institute supports these communities through providing the services of an itinerant rabbi, a non-denominational religious school curriculum written and implemented by a team of educators, and a variety of cultural programs. The institute serves a thirteen-state region:

Educational services

The Education Department aims to raise the level of Jewish education in small cities and towns of the region. Over the past few years, the institute has developed a complete and detailed non-denominational religious school curriculum. The curriculum is distributed to partner congregations and is supplemented by community visits by the institute's ten Education Fellows. Now in its tenth year, 70 congregations in 13 states have implement the curriculum in their religious schools.

Rabbinical services

The Rabbinical Services Department nurtures religious life in small communities and to ensure that southern Jews have access to rabbinic services regardless of location. Travelling to congregations without a full-time rabbi, the institute's itinerant rabbi leads Shabbat and Holiday services, addresses school groups and community organizations, teaches Torah, and ministers at life cycle events.

Museum and historical research

The Museum of the Southern Jewish Experience and the documentation of the history of Southern Jews continue to be integral parts of the institute. The museum completed its first building in 1989 on the grounds of Jacobs Camp in Utica. In 1992, the museum entered into a preservation agreement with the local congregation in Natchez, Mississippi, which deeded their historic synagogue to the museum. The museum has created several award-winning exhibits, including "From Alsace to America: Discovering a Southern Jewish Heritage" and "Bagels and Grits: Images of Southern Jewish Life."

Working in tandem with the museum is the history department, which actively works to gather information about every Jewish community that ever existed in the South. This research manifests itself in scholarly historical publications as well as through the institute's Encyclopedia of Southern Jewish Communities, an online compendium of short histories of significant Jewish communities and congregations.

Cultural programming

The institute works to bring leading Jewish cultural programs to small communities in the South. Projects include Jewish Cinema South, the Southern States Jewish Literary Series, and other events and exhibitions.

In Fall 2007, Jewish Cinema South presented Jewish film festivals in the following cities:

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See also

References

  1. "ISJL - Stephen Goldring and Malcolm Woldenberg". Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
  2. "ISJL - About". Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
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