
Before a congregational lay leader, such as a board president or committee/project chair, delegates to others, an appropriate structure, clear goals and satisfactory lines of communication need to be in place in the congregation. This session will explore these key elements along with the importance of engaging people with the right skills and talents for appropriate positions and cultivating them as potential new leaders for the congregation. The basics of what to delegate, to whom, when and how to follow up successfully will also be addressed.
The audio recording of the call can be found here: http://jrf.org/node/2779
Do you wonder how many different types of prayer services your congregation can effectively offer given your particular rabbinic and/or lay leadership, the physical space in which your community holds services, or the number of people who attend any or all of your services? Does your congregation struggle to balance the needs of “regular davenners” and “b’nai mitzvah guests?” Is there a Shabbat school that you try to integrate into the main congregational Shabbat service? Are there ongoing efforts to offer family services, children's services or a "junior congregation?"
Most congregations face the challenge of members with varied communal prayer service priorities. This class will explore several models that JRF congregations have adopted to balance different communal prayer needs and interests. We will delineate the challenges each service structure addresses and the values they reflect. Participants will be able to explore how different prayer service configurations might respond to challenges their congregation seeks to address.
You can download the audio recording of this call here: http://jrf.org/node/2765
Rabbi Erin Hirsh is the JRF Director of Education. A 2000 graduate of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, Rabbi Erin spent over a decade directing two Reconstructionist congregational schools (first the Shul School of Kehilat Hanar, in New Hope, PA, and then the Congregational School of Mishkan Shalom, in Philadelphia, PA.) For the last three years, Rabbi Erin has served as a consultant to Reconstructionist congregations wrestling with all aspects of educational programming and programming involving children.
Rabbi Jodie Siff directs the synagogue school at the Reconstructionist Congregation of the North Shore and is active in every part of the community. Rabbi Jodie leads the Rosh Hodesh groups for women and one for girls post Bat Mitzva. Her work with the synagogue’s children begins in our nursery school and includes many intergenerational programs. Rabbi Jodie is a mentor in the Leadership Institute of Congregational Educators and is an active member of the Port Washington/Manhasset Clergy Association. An alumna of Lehigh University, Jodie began her Hebrew studies at the Jewish Theological Seminary and graduated from the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College in 2001. Jodie and her husband Peter are the proud parents of four children.
Kim Bodemer, a graduate of Hofstra University with a degree in Elementary Education and Psychology, is a member of Congregation Agudas Achim in Attleboro, MA., and the former Education Director. While in that role, Kim helped to create spiritual and educational experiences for the entire community in the context of Shabbat morning and holiday observance.
Steve Lewin, the Vice President of Worship and Adult Education at Shir Hadash in Northbrook, Illinois. He has been a member of Shir Hadash since its inception in 1995. Has served on the Worship & Ritual Committee for that entire period participating in the development of Shir Hadash's creative approach to services for Shabbat, High Holiday, Festivals and special occasions. This includes developing and leading the Adult Bar/Bat Mitzvah program and creating "Read-along" services for Shabbat Evening and the Passover Seder. Steve is a technically-oriented management consultant who utilizes this background to support his congregation's unique approach to services.
Lynne Whitman is the Religious School chair at Congregation Beth Hatikvah in Summit, New Jersey, and a member of the Board of Directors. Professionally, Lynne is a management consultant, focusing on business strategy, operations and marketing strategy and effectiveness.
Rabbi Arnold Rachlis is the rabbi of University Synagogue in Irvine, California. He is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, Temple University's Graduate Department of Religion and the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College. Rabbi Rachlis has served as Chair of Mazon, A Jewish Response To Hunger, and a Past President of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association. He has served as a board member of the National B'nai Brith Hillel Commission and the New Israel Fund and as President of the Chicago Board of Rabbis.
What role do executive directors play in Reconstructionist congregations, and how do you know when your congregation is ready to explore the idea of hiring one? Join executive director/lay leader teams from two JRF affiliates: Chapel Hill Kehillah (Chapel Hill, NC) and Congregation Beth Evergreen (Evergreen, Colorado) to hear the process by which these two congregations developed a position, interviewed, hired and maintain an executive director position. Also learn about the newly formed group, CEDAR (Congregational Executive Directors and Administrators in Reconstructionism), which provides informal professional networking for JRF executive directors and senior administrators.
You can listen to the audio recording of this call at http://jrf.org/node/2680
Melissa Segal has served as Executive Director for the Chapel Hill Kehillah since 2006. From 2000-2006, she was the Education Director at the Kehillah, during which she co-founded and then served as Chair of RENA, the Reconstructionist Educators of North America. She recently co-founded and now co-chairs CEDAR, Congregational Executive Directors and Administrators in Reconstructionism. Melissa has a Master’s degree in Social Work and a certificate in nonprofit management from Duke University.
Neshama Mousseau has served as Executive Director for Congregation Beth Evergreen (CBE) since 2004. With more than 26 years in nonprofit management positions, her Jewish communal professional and lay service has included: founding member of the liberal Chevra Kaddisha in Boulder, CO in 1986; board member of the Jewish Renewal Community of Boulder; and Executive Director of the Jewish Senior Recreation Network in Denver. She has a Master’s degree in Social Work and is a graduate of the Colorado Nonprofit Leadership and Management Program. She recently co-founded and now co-chairs CEDAR, Congregational Executive Directors and Administrators in Reconstructionism.
Howard Glicksman has served on the Executive Committee and Board of the Kehillah for the past 10 years. For the last 4 years, and during the time the Kehillah made the transition to having an Executive Director, he served as co-president and then president of the Kehillah. He also serves as treasurer of NC Hillel and regional president on the JRF Board.
Rich Levine has been a member of Congregation Beth Evergreen (CBE) since moving to Colorado in 1995. He has served the Congregation in numerous roles, including Past President, during a term when the CBE was in transition into its first building, hired its first full-time rabbi via the JRF hiring process(Rabbi Jamie Arnold), and the community's decision to discard its entirely unaffiliated status maintained for some 30 years and to affiliate with JRF. The combination of these decisions necessitated a careful balance of capital fundraising, revisiting the dues structure, re-alignment of debt, and the production of income for the synagogue internally and through third-party relationships. Rich currently serves the community as a religious school instructor (7th grade). Rich is a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley (law) and the University of California, Santa Barbara (Sociology, and Law and Society). He currently practices law in Evergreen, Colorado, and has maintained positions as an Adjunct Professor teaching law at the Colorado School of Mines and the University of Denver Women’s College.
Creative “branding” and marketing of Reconstructionist Judaism is crucial to the growth of individual Reconstructionist congregations and havurot and to the movement-as-a-whole. The work of the new JRF Marketing Advisory Group, which consists primarily of five professionals in marketing or related fields, all of whom are members of JRF congregations and generously donating their time to this project, is focusing on this important goal. This interactive conference call will share some of the wealth that is being developed by this committee.
The audio recording of this call can be found here: http://jrf.org/node/2778
Aaron Ahuvia, Ph.D., is a Professor of Marketing at the University of Michigan-Dearborn School of Management, and teaches Social Marketing at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business. Professor Ahuvia is an expert in social marketing, which is the use of marketing techniques to solve social problems and influence public opinion. He lends his expertise to many non-profits, particularly around the issues resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, international economic development, and helping people lead happier lives by reducing materialism. He is a member of the National Board and Executive Committee, as well as a designated National Spokesperson for Brit Tzedek v’Shalom. With over 45,000 supporters and 38 chapters across the country, Brit Tzedek is America’s largest grass roots Jewish organization dedicated to a viable negotiated two-state resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Joel Blechman has worked at Frankel & Company , Visa, USA , GM R*Works, and Beach Communications. His extensive knowledge of database marketing and contact management programs helped him to succeed. From 2004 - 2006 he participated in starting up a consortium of 7 companies created to market GM Zero Emission Vehicles in 5 states. Within 6 months we grew from 7 people to 200 located in 5 states, and conducted a program that saved GM several hundreds of millions of dollars, and which was reported to be the most cost effective marketing program in GM’s history. Joel joined Trisect in May of 2007 and has contributed on Kawasaki as well as Alberto Culver, while helping to enhance agency processes and financial systems.
Dan Cedarbaum became the JRF’s Director of Movement Growth Initiatives and Special Projects in September 2008, having previously served for almost 20 years as a member of JRF’s Board of Directors. From 2002-2006, Dan was the President of the JRF. In addition, Dan has served as a member of the Board of Governors of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College and as a member of the Executive Committee and the Board of Trustees of the United Jewish Communities. Dan is also a member of the Board of Directors of the National Council of Synagogues, which is perhaps the leading national Jewish organization working in the area of interfaith dialogue and programming.
Dan and and his family have been members of the Jewish Reconstructionist Congregation (JRC) in Evanston, Illinois, since 1987, and Dan is also a member of Ezra Habonim NTJC in Skokie, Illinois. Dan is a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School.
New, exciting, and innovative experiential learning programs are cropping up across the Jewish world; some are happening within our own Reconstructionist movement. This class will focus on exciting experiential youth education programs that combine the best of camp experiential learning and non-traditional congregational schools.
You can download the audio recording of this call by clicking here: http://jrf.org/node/2704
Rabbi Jeffrey Eisenstat is a 1976 graduate of RRC, and holds a bachelor of arts from Pennsylvania State University and a master's in education from Temple University. He has served as a congregational rabbi in State College, PA; Philadelphia; and Plantation, FL; and as Hillel director at Penn State, where he taught in the religion department. In the early 1990s, Eisenstat was congregational services director at the Jewish Reconstructionist Federation and also was an instructor in education at RRC. Over the past 30 years, he has been involved in directing numerous schools and camps. He helped create the first North American family camp, Israel family education trips and youth programs for the Reconstructionist movement. He is a recipient of the Rabbi Ira Eisenstein Lifetime Achievement Award and is the Founding Director of youth and camping for Noar Hadash and Camp JRF. His publications include Reconstructing Jewish Education: A Process Guide, The Reconstructionist Teaching Model and Family Davening, as well as several musical albums. Currently, he serves the Reconstructionist Movement as the Director of Special Initiatives and continues to work with JRF congregations directing its “Camp to Shule” program.
Rabbi Carrie Vogel is the Experiential Educator at Kehillat Israel (Pacific Palisades, CA). She runs the “Jewish Experience,” which is a full day of experiential Jewish learning each month at a local camp.
Rabbi James Greene is a 2008 Reconstructionist Rabbinical College (RRC) graduate. During his time at RRC, Rabbi James worked as a student rabbi and youth director for several communities and was the Director of Education and the Director of Music for Camp JRFduring the summer of 2007. Rabbi James currently serves as Rabbi and Educational Director at Temple Beth Sholom in Salem, Oregon and is the Secretary of RENA, the Reconstructionist Educators of North America.
In this preparatory session for Shavuot, we will look at the spiritual practice of studying sacred text, with emphasis on the traditional themes of revelation (both of the earth's bounty and of Torah from a Reconstructionist perspective), of faith (The Book of Ruth) and how we come "down from the mountain" of peak experiences to live ethical and spiritually conscious lives in connection with our faith communities and the world-at-large.
You can listen to the audio recording of this call here: http://jrf.org/node/2686
Rabbi Leila Gal Berner, Ph.D. Is a 1989 graduate of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College and recently received a second rabbinical ordination from Reb Zalman Schachter Shalomi, founder of the Jewish Renewal movement. She is spiritual leader of Kol Ami: the Northern Virginia Reconstructionist Community and ongoing Scholar-in-Residence at The American University in Washington, D.C. She is developing a Jewish adaptation of a Christian practice of contemplative Bible Study and is has a book in progress entitled Reading the Sacred in Silence: A Contemplative Entry into Torah.
Shifrah Tobacman is a student in the Aleph Rabbinic Program and a recent graduate of the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley. She has written a thesis on the Counting of the Omer, its history and contemporary practices related to it. She has also written a series of poetic meditations based on the practice that can be used for others’ personal journeys, or be used as examples upon which people can build (or write) their own meditations. She is particularly interested in sharing old and new traditions with others to enrich our collective and individual spiritual lives, and enhance endeavors for Tikkun Olam, repair and transformation of our world and society. Her experience as a long time group facilitator, trainer and Compassionate Listening facilitator lends itself well to this endeavor, as do her many decades of work in the fields of public health, health education and integrated health care. Shifrah is also the writer, producer and performer of Rooftop Poems, a series of poetic vignettes based on her meetings with Israelis and Palestinians in Israel and the West Bank in 2001-2002.
Rabbi Shawn Israel Zevit, (www.rabbizevit.com) is the Director of Outreach & Tikkun Olam, and a congregational consultant and resource developer for the Jewish Reconstructionist Federation. He is a founding member of Shabbat Unplugged and the Davenning Leaders’ Training Institute, and a spiritual director for numerous clergy and communities. He has written and developed resources and delivered workshops in the areas of community building, leadership, prayer, interactive midrash, contemporary views of GOD, prayer and spiritual leadership skills, money and Jewish values, social justice issues, Jewish environmental concerns and Jewish men's issues. He is the author of "Offerings of the Heart: Money and Values in Faith Community (Alban, 2005), co-editor of "Brother Keepers: New Essays in Jewiush Masculinities" (Men's Studies Press, 2010) and the Recon Press publications on "Money and Jewish Values" and "Manual for Effective Boards and Committees".
Spiritual Development, the arch of the Soul, is a lifelong journey. How we learn across the lifecycle and how we make connections to developing greater mindfulness, educate ourselves and teach others in a spiritually dynamic way whether our constituency is children, teens, young adults, middle-age adults or elders is the focus of this call.
You can listen to the audio recording of this call by clicking here: http://jrf.org/node/2681
Deborah Schein is an experienced and passionate early childhood educator who envisions young children as competent and capable. She has worked as a preschool teacher, a college instructor, an early childhood education director, and is presently working as a family educator for a synagogue preschool as she pursues a doctorate in spiritual development of children from birth to five. Deb is also the co-author of What’s Jewish about Butterflies.
Sarah Chandler is the Director of Jewish Family Life & Learning (JoyFuLL) at West End Synagogue, A Reconstructionist Congregation in Manhattan. The newly launched JoyFuLL program integrates classroom learning, bringing it alive with through family dinners, inclusive shabbat worship, spirited holiday celebrations and monthly service learning projects. She has her M.A. in Jewish Education and Hebrew Bible from Jewish Theological Seminary. An educator and curriculum consultant for the Teva Learning Center since 2003, is also a senior editor of http://jewschool.com/ and Director of Programming for Zeek: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture.
Rabbi Jeffrey Eisenstat is a 1976 graduate of RRC, and holds a bachelor of arts from Pennsylvania State University and a master's in education from Temple University. He has served as a congregational rabbi in State College, PA; Philadelphia; and Plantation, FL; and as Hillel director at Penn State, where he taught in the religion department. In the early 1990s, Eisenstat was congregational services director at the Jewish Reconstructionist Federation and also was an instructor in education at RRC. Over the past 30 years, he has been involved in directing numerous schools and camps. He helped create the first North American family camp, Israel family education trips and youth programs for the Reconstructionist movement. He is a recipient of the Rabbi Ira Eisenstein Lifetime Achievement Award and is the Founding Director of youth and camping for Noar Hadash and Camp JRF. His publications include Reconstructing Jewish Education: A Process Guide, The Reconstructionist Teaching Model and Family Davening, as well as several musical albums. Currently, he serves the Reconstructionist Movement as the Director of Special Initiatives and continues to work with JRF congregations directing its “Camp to Shule” program.
Lynne P. Iser, MPH, Founder, The Center for Growing Older in Community; is a advocate, teacher and consultant dedicated to empowering those in the second half of life to use their resources and wisdom to create a world that is sustainable, just and fulfilling. She facilitates Awakening the Dreamer Symposium, is a faculty member of the ALEPH Sage-ing Project, and, teaches conscious aging and community building both locally and nationally. She was the founding Executive Director of the Spiritual Eldering Institute where she learned about the opportunities and blessings of becoming an elder in her work with Rabbi Zalman Schachter Shalomi.
We must pass through a gate of transformation to move From Age-ing to Sage-ing®. This enables us to use our life experience to enrich our elder years, face mortality, repair relationships, develop a regenerative spirit and transmit our wisdom to future generations. This process not only seeds the future, but crowns an Elder's life with worth and nobility. —Zalman Schachter-Shalomi"Each civilization produces its own form of art, which expresses most articulately the way that reality is structured in that culture. Over the thousands of years of the evolution of Jewish civilization, artists have written poetry and music, desigend synagogues and ritual objects, crafted clothing and stories, composed folk dance, and illuminated manuscripts. Jewish art plays an important role in the spiritual lives of Reconstructionists in several different ways." (exploring Judaism, p.86, http://stores.jrfbookstore.org/-strse-30/Exploring-Judaism-cln--A-Reconstructionist/Detail.bok)
This session will explore the various ways art and Jewish life are being expressed and developed by individuals and communities with a Reconstructionist perspective.
The audio recording of this call can be found here: http://jrf.org/node/2670
Rabbi Margot Stein (www.RabbiMargotStein.com) is an award-winning singer/liturgical composer with 6 albums of original Jewish music to her credit. Margot has been recognized by Shalshelet: the International Festival of New Jewish Liturgical Music, and published in Siddur Sha'ar Zahav, A Night of Questions: A Passover Seder, the Tu B'Shevat Anthology, and numerous supplemental liturgies and Jewish camp recordings. She teaches Ethics and Jewish Mindfulness Practices to adults and helps children with special needs and their families create meaningful bar/bat mitzvah ceremonies.
Cindy Rivka Marshall (http://www.cindymarshall.com/) is an award-winning professional storyteller whose dynamic theatrical style weaves words with movement and music. In her repertoire of Jewish folktales, legends, Hasidic stories and midrashim, she creates vivid characters and images. Her performances for children and adults resonate with her sense of wonder and her value of respect for all. runs the Dancing Tree Storytelling Studio at Gorse Mill Artists’ Studios in Needham, MA where she offers workshops in storytelling skills to educators, clergy and parents. Her audio recordings, "Challah and Latkes: Stories for Shabbat and Hanukkah" and "By the River: Women's Voices in Jewish Stories" won awards from National Parenting Publications, Storytelling World and Parents' Choice. A former filmmaker, some of her documentaries are still in distribution nationally, including “A Life of Song” a portrait of Yiddish folksinger Ruth Rubin. . SheCindy is currently the co-chair of the Jewish Storytelling Coalition www.jewishstorytelling.org and is a Board member and chair of the Ritual committee at Congregation Dorshei Tzedek in Newton, MA.
Rabbi Shawn Israel Zevit, is the Director of Outreach & Tikkun Olam, and a congregational consultant and resource developer for the Jewish Reconstructionist Federation. He is a founding member of Shabbat Unplugged and the Davenning Leaders’ Training Institute, and a spiritual director for numerous clergy and communities. He has written and developed resources and delivered workshops in the areas of community building, leadership, prayer, interactive midrash, contemporary views of GOD, prayer and spiritual leadership skills, money and Jewish values, social justice issues, Jewish environmental concerns and Jewish men's issues. He is the author of "Offerings of the Heart: Money and Values in Faith Community (Alban, 2005), co-editor of "Brother Keepers: New Essays in Jewish Masculinities" (Men's Studies Press, 2010) and the Recon Press publications on "Money and Jewish Values" and "Manual for Effective Boards and Committees". Rabbi Zevit has also recorded five CD's of origianl music as well as the Reconstructionist Press Pesach CD with Shabbat Unplugged. (www.rabbizevit.com)
"When we worship in public we know our life is part of a larger life, a wave of an ocean of being- the first-hand experience of that larger life which is God." Mordecai Kaplan
This session will explore the dynamics of worship and the human impulse to pray (l'hitpalel, daven) in and of itself, some of the deep structures of Jewish prayer services (esp. the morning service, Shacharit), as well as the liturgy that has evolved in the Reconstructionist movement, from the revolutionary 1945 Shabbat Prayerbook to the expansive Kol Haneshamah prayer bookseries developed by the Reconstructionist movement Prayer Book Commission in the 1990's, chaired by Dr. David Teutsch.
You can listen to the audio recording of this session by clicking here: http://jrf.org/node/2663
Dr. Rabbi David Teutsch has been a builder of religious community since becoming a congregational rabbi over thirty years ago. He is the Wiener Professor of Contemporary Jewish Civilization and director of the Levin-Lieber Program in Jewish Ethics at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, where he served as president for nearly a decade. He previously served as executive director of the JRF. The editor in chief of the groundbreaking Kol Haneshamah prayer book series published by JRF’s Reconstructionist Press, he has also authored several other books including Imagining the Jewish Future and five volumes in the series A Guide to Jewish Practice published by RRC Press. A renowned consultant and trainer, he pioneered values-based decision making.
Hazzan Rachel Hersh Epstein has served as Adat Shalom's cantor since 1996. In addition to a life-long love of music and singing, she holds academic degrees in music, social work and Judaic studies. She is invested and commissioned by the Cantor's Assembly. Hazzan Rachel is equally at home with Jewish folk music, congregational melody, and classical hazzanut and is sought after as a guest performer and teacher. She delights in serving a spiritual community that is both lovingly devoted to Jewish tradition and open to change and innovation in our generation's Jewish Renaissance. Hazzan Rachel is a member of the Harmoniyah: Reconstructionist Music Network steering committee and was the chair of the Harmoniyah 2009 Retreat.
Rabbi Shawn Israel Zevit, (www.rabbizevit.com) is the Director of Outreach & Tikkun Olam, and a congregational consultant and resource developer for the Jewish Reconstructionist Federation. He is a founding member of Shabbat Unplugged and the Davenning Leaders’ Training Institute, and a spiritual director for numerous clergy and communities. He has written and developed resources and delivered workshops in the areas of community building, leadership, prayer, interactive midrash, contemporary views of GOD, prayer and spiritual leadership skills, money and Jewish values, social justice issues, Jewish environmental concerns and Jewish men's issues. He is the author of "Offerings of the Heart: Money and Values in Faith Community (Alban, 2005), co-editor of "Brother Keepers: New Essays in Jewiush Masculinities" (Men's Studies Press, 2010) and the Recon Press publications on "Money and Jewish Values" and "Manual for Effective Boards and Committees".
As our communities grow and explore a variety of approaches to compliment tradition-based egalitarian Jewish practice, many Reconstructionist communities have begun integrating ethical conduct agreements, spiritually centered decision making processes, meditation, mussar study, "Torah" yoga, healing services, chant and other forms of spiritual experience into our core offerings. This call we explore some of these forms and their connection to personal and communal growth.
The audio recording of this call can be found by clicking here: http://jrf.org/node/2620
Dr. Rabbi David Teutsch has been a builder of religious community since becoming a congregational rabbi over thirty years ago. He is the Wiener Professor of Contemporary Jewish Civilization and director of the Levin-Lieber Program in Jewish Ethics at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, where he served as president for nearly a decade. He previously served as executive director of the JRF. The editor in chief of the groundbreaking Kol Haneshamah prayer book series published by JRF’s Reconstructionist Press, he has also authored several other books including Imagining the Jewish Future and five volumes in the series A Guide to Jewish Practice published by RRC Press. A renowned consultant and trainer, he pioneered values-based decision making.
Beulah Trey, Ph.D- Born into a South African Jewish family, raised in an orthodox Jewish community, married into a fourth generation Reform family, student of a conservative Rabbi and a member of a Reconstructionist synagogue, finding Mussar has given Beulah a practice that incorporates the diverse paths inside and outside Judaism that have nurtured her soul. Aware of the power of Mussar to transform lives, she pioneers the applications of these practices to leadership, team and organizational transformation. Beulah is a licensed organizational psychologist. In 2007 she founded Vector Group Consulting a management consulting firm that assists leaders, teams and organizations to achieve transformation. Beulah lives in Philadelphia and teaches the Mazkeh Rabim year of Mussar in Rabbi Ira Stone’s Mussar Leadership Institute. You can learn more and sign up for a weekly mussar post at www.mussarleadership.org
Rabbi Barbara Penzner has served Temple Hillel B’nai Torah in West Roxbury, MA since 1995. Rabbi Penzner is a past president of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association and past president of the Massachusetts Board of Rabbis. She is also a founder of Mayyim Hayyim Mikveh and Education Center (http://jrf.org/Mayyim-Hayyim-Mikveh-Conference). Barbara is married to Brian Rosman, the originator and keeper of the Homer Calendar, http://homer.jvibe.com/. They are the parents of two fabulous children, Aviva and Yonah.
Carole Caplan (carolecaplan@livebychoice.com) is proud to be a past president of the Jewish Reconstructionist Congregation in Evanston, IL, and to have helped build their new building as the "greenest" house of worship in America. She is a Greenfaith Fellow, a unique multi-faith endeavor which advocates stewardship of the environment as imperative spiritual work (see Greenfaith.org), and lectures on the crossroads between spirituality and environmentalism. Carole is also a Wexner Heritage Fellow, committed to working towards sustainable Jewish life on the local and national level.
Carole's company, Live by Choice, assists clients in making empowered choices for sustainable environments including ‘green’ building processes and building products, water filters, air filters and cleaning products. A 500 RYT certified meditation and yoga instructor, Carole teaches to both children and adults in the Chicagoland area.