Jewish Week Article

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http://www.thejewishweek.com/news/newscontent.php3?artid=12664

What do you think? Those who would like to see the outside evaluations of BabagaNewz, which is in 3,500 classrooms across the country, or of Jskyway courses, training educators or other evaluations, please let us know. (The Jewish Week never asked us for them) We don’t have 11 million hits, but 11 million page views, which is more significant. The Jewish values based approach is developed by a world class team of educators and a great staff. And the teen keynote for 20 minutes was exactly what it was supposed to be; the rest of the session was supposed to be deeply informal.

Ahh. The paradox of being on the other side of the news print…  I should be grateful for the good parts and the nod to legitimizing my desire to spend more time with my family.  And Michael’s quotes:-)

Who is going to take Steinhardt up on the invitation to host a debate about the Jewish future?

Off to Israel; will be back July 4th.

The Paradox Of Yossi Abramowitz
As he steps back from his mini-empire, questions linger about what he’s selling to Jewish youth.
Debra Nussbaum Cohen - Staff Writer

Yosef Abramowitz had the floor at the closing session of the first national Jewish Youth Philanthropy Conference in Denver last April. Striding around the hotel conference room among about 100 teenagers, microphone in hand like a latter-day Phil Donohue, he exhorted them to see themselves as powerful agents of change, as prophets and leaders. He talked about great visions of a Jewish future, quoting philosophers from Zionist thinker Achad Ha’Am to “Star Wars� wise man Yoda.

He held their attention for about 20 minutes.

Problem was that the session lasted three hours, and Abramowitz seemed oblivious to the fact that the teens had tuned him out. Some quietly chatted with friends, others looked glazed, and still others walked right in front of him to leave the room.

But Abramowitz viewed the talk as a triumph, trumpeting his imitation of Yoda as a powerful example of how to reach Jewish young people. In the talk he described himself as a Yoda-like keeper of wisdom, the owner of Jewish secrets that he was prepared to share but that conference organizers and their parents didn’t want them to know.

It was classic Abramowitz — passionate, quirky and motivated by love for the Jewish people — but also peppered with references to his own activism (in what must seem like the Jurassic Age to these teens) that came across as less than humble. In speaking about his own agenda rather than the teens’, he failed to connect with them.

Abramowitz, 42, is the founder and CEO of Jewish Family & Life media, a Newton, Mass.-based, multimillion-dollar mini-empire of Jewish publications and projects ranging from a colorful magazine and Web site for middle schoolers, BabagaNewz, to the Koret Book Awards. It also runs the intellectual journal Sh’ma and has created a distance learning website for Jewish educators, Jskyway.com.

He’s won a bunch of awards for his writing in Jewish newspapers and magazines (the plaques are stacked up over a foot high on a table in his office), and in 2004 he was awarded a prestigious Covenant Foundation Award for Excellence in Jewish Education. For the past decade has also served as president of the Union of Councils for Jews from the Former Soviet Union.

Abramowitz continues to be a quixotic combination of gadfly and innovator, visionary, and to some, snake-oil salesman. Some people find him irritating, others inspiring. He is a relentless self-promoter and also a sweetly humble guy struggling to be a better husband and father.

Abramowitz recently announced a dramatic step down from the day-to-day operations of the company he founded a decade ago in order to spend more time with his family and write a book, an almost unheard-of step for a man.

In August they are moving to a kibbutz in the Negev desert, where they plan to stay nearly two years. Abramowitz will still be involved in JF&L, but in a reduced and long-distance capacity. The company is now searching for a new CEO.

Even as he takes a step back, Abramowitz still seems uniquely positioned to answer the central issue driving so many recent efforts of the organized Jewish community, one the establishment doesn’t seem to have the tools or language to master: how to reach young Jews with a values-driven message that makes Judaism fun and meaningful.

Or in Abramowitz’s marketing-driven lingo: how to rebrand Judaism as a must-have pop culture commodity.

Yet questions linger over whether Abramowitz’s approach is effective, or whether it is too much flash and not enough substance.

The ‘Vision Thing’

As befits his outsize personality, Abramowitz presents himself as an expert on a wide range of things: education, Jewish peoplehood, new media, entrepreneurship and Jewish philanthropy.

“I’m the love child of Achad Ha’Am and Jim Collins, and need to bring together the two worlds for the benefit of the Jewish people,� he says.

Ha’Am was a great Zionist thinker and writer. Collins is a management guru and author of influential business books including “Good to Great: Why Some Companies Make the Leap… and Others Don’t.�

“How can we go from a lot of the mediocrity of today and break through, in terms of strategy?� said Abramowitz, referring to the impact of the Jewish establishment on the unaffiliated and disengaged.

Some see the wild-eyed naivete that characterized his early years at JF&L changing.

“He is a guy who I think has matured a lot,� said mega-philanthropist Michael Steinhardt. “There was a period where he’d say things that were too optimistic and reflective of a lack of mature judgment, and I think he’s over that and has come a long way.�

About a year ago, at one of the conferences where Abramowitz regularly runs into Steinhardt, he challenged him to a public debate.

Then Abramowitz had his office put together an ersatz prizefight poster, with two boxing gloves hitting each other with a cartoonish “POW!� The copy reads: “Fight of the Century! Gadfly Michael Steinhardt, Messianic Pessimist v. Upstart Yossi Abramowitz, Activist Optimist. The Battle is ‘The Future of Jewish Life.’ �

Steinhardt demurred, saying that he doesn’t have a big plan, but rather tries different projects and sees what works, Abramowitz recalled.

Like few others would have the chutzpah to do, Abramowitz then said to the father of birthright israel that Steinhardt’s “mission return on philanthropic investment is probably a lot lower than mine because he doesn’t have a comprehensive vision. I do, and I deliver results.�

But while Abramowitz is quick to criticize the $2 billion that he says the Jewish establishment has spent on outreach since 1990, with nothing to show for it except a tiny bump in non-Orthodox Jewish day school enrollment, the question remains:

What are his results? Do the 11 million-plus hits he claims for his Web sites count as success?

“That’s a very good question,� says Abramowitz as he muses on it. And there is little by way of hard evidence.

His company’s high school magazine, JVibe, just completed an evaluation survey, completed both by readers online and Jewish youth educators, he says. Both the print and online versions of JVibe are focused on celebrity and pop culture but weave in social justice and other basic Jewish values messages. Sixty-one percent of Jewish teen readers say that reading JVibe strengthens their Jewish identity, Abramowitz says, and 47 percent of youth educators integrate the magazine into their informal education programs.

But even one of his biggest fans questions whether Abramowitz’s products reach their ultimate target.

“I know kids read it,� said Kvod Wieder, of JVibe. Wieder is director of the B’nai Tzedek Teen Philanthropy Program of the Harold Grinspoon Foundation, and he invited Abramowitz to present at the teen philanthropy conference that he organized.

“My guess is that the ones who read it are already connected in some way. I don’t have a reason to believe that they’ve been able to penetrate kids who aren’t affiliated and that it has provided them with a way in.�

Abramowitz is quick to confess to not having perfectly built his company.

“While we have probably launched more media ventures than anybody else in Jewish life, we’ve also closed more,� he says, including kaddish.com, ShabbatShalom.com and Jewishhealth.com

And, he admits, the company might be further along if he had earlier stepped back from some of the chief executive responsibilities where his skills are weak.

Yossi “is a visionary, he’s a believer. He does not do details,� says the chief operating officer of JF&L, Amir Cohen. “He is almost oblivious to bad news. His half glass is always completely full.

“If he believes in Jewish peoplehood he cannot imagine why this is not the thing everyone is fully committed to. There’s almost blindness about him. To those who don’t know him well that can come across at times as self-centered,� said Cohen. “I don’t think it is. I think it’s vision and mission-driven.�

Jewish Family Life

In retreating to Kibbutz Ketura — chosen because it’s in the Negev, remote from the major urban centers — Abramowitz aims to commit to paper the book he says that he’s been writing in his head for the past several years (working title, “Peoplehood with Purpose,� a nod to Evangelical preacher Rick Warren’s wildly successful book “The Purpose-Driven Life�).

Abramowitz’s wife, Susan Silverman, is a rabbi and writer and stay-at-home mom who has juggled most of the running of their busy household. (Her sister is comedian Sarah Silverman, who has talked about the Abramowitz-Silverman family on The Tonight Show).

Their three daughters – Aliza, 13, Hallel, 11, and Ashira, 3 – are their biological children.

Their sons were both adopted from Ethiopian orphanages. Adar is 7 and the newest addition is Zamir, age 4. He came home with Susan in March. His adoption and citizenship were finalized as they stood before a judge this Tuesday.

After starting out as a student activist on behalf of Soviet Jewry two decades ago, as president of the World Union of Jewish Students while at Boston University, Abramowitz attended Columbia University’s journalism school and became an activist-journalist before starting a magazine, Jewish Family & Life. It lasted only one issue in print but turned into the Web site and a book that he co-wrote with his wife.

JF&L the company began with three employees and a $150,000 annual budget. Since then it has grown into a company that raises nearly $4 million a year from major Jewish foundations. The company claims to have more reach into the Jewish population of 10 to 30 year olds than any other vehicle.

At the end of the day, maybe Abramowitz is neither a snake-oil salesman nor the Jewish community’s next Moses.

A better metaphor, perhaps, is a religious revival preacher, the kind still found setting up tents this time of year in neighborhoods where people are hungry to hear The Word from a charismatic preacher offering listeners a vision of a world to come that they can be part of.

But rather than asking people to act on faith, as Pentecostal preachers do, Abramowitz wants them to act on his vision of what the Jewish community could one day be.

In the meantime, Abramowitz still has the Steinhardt v. Abramowitz boxing poster hanging on the wall behind his desk.

Perhaps a debate is in the offing for his first visit back to the states from Israel. Because today, said Steinhardt, “I’d happily debate him now.�

“He’s one of the more original and creative people in the Jewish world,� Steinhardt said. “He is a valuable asset to the Jewish world and will become increasingly more so over time.� n

Categories

JFL Role Transition, Teens, Jewish Education, In The News

Comments

yosefa said:

Dear Friends,

Earlier this evening a piece appeared in the on-line Jewish Week on Yossi Abramowitz. It really saddened me in a way that I’ve never felt in reading an article.

I am very conscious of not burdening CEJP’s e-mail list with more then one communiqué every few months…so I apologize for doing do tonight, but I felt that the situation warranted it. Please feel free to share this e-mail with anyone you feel should read it. I have submitted it to the Jewish Week as an OP ED piece with the hope that they will run it.

Warmest regards,

Joseph Hyman

The Center for Entrepreneurial Jewish Philanthropy

CEJP@optonline.net

Yossi’s Dream

By Joseph Hyman

President the Center for Entrepreneurial Jewish Philanthropy

For the better part of eighteen months I have traveled the country to engage a new generation of Jewish philanthropists. During that time, I have met with hundreds of dedicated and caring people, including philanthropists, advocates, volunteers and professionals. It has been a remarkable experience that has reaffirmed my belief in the power of the human spirit.

These are extraordinarily complex times for the Jewish people. Never before have we known such influence, affluence and acceptance; and ironically it threatens to destroy us as a people. Intermarriage continues to abound and for far too many apathy silently extinguishes any last remnants of a connection to the Jewish people.

Internationally, a dramatic rise in Muslim extremism has blurred the lines between rampant anti-Israelism and anti-semitism. We have experienced a level of rhetoric that grotesquely questions the sacrifices made by six million Jews…that question the basic right of a Jewish state to exist.

Yet I am filled with hope because I have also witnessed the transformation of 100,000 birthright alumni, the empowerment of an entire movement of Jewish day schools and the emergence of Jewish camping as the crown jewel of informal education. I have witnessed an Israeli Prime Minister stand at the podium of this country’s most sacred institution and deliver an address that few will ever forget.

In meeting rooms, offices and hotels I have sat across the table from Jewish social entrepreneurs who often see in the Jewish people what we can not often see in ourselves. It resonates in their eyes as a reminder of what is possible if only we can forgive our own self doubt. It is a rare gift that gives me hope for the future.

If the Jewish people want to maintain our strong identity we have a responsibility to honor, nurture and protect those who help lead the way, those who dream in colors and shapes that often confuse and frighten us. Without our support and protection, they fall prey to cynicism and criticism.

Earlier today I read Debora Nussbaum Cohen’s piece “The Paradox of Yossi Abramowitz.� It was an article that saddened me greatly because it brought into question the motives, personality and style of a fine Jewish social entrepreneur whose only true motivation is to create a new vision for our community, embodying a proud commitment to Jewish peoplehood, social activism and Jewish values.

For anyone who truly knows Yossi Abramowitz, the article stands as a grossly unbalanced, unfair and pointless assessment of someone who daily strives to live a life filled with compassion and goodness.

If I would wish anything for my own four children it’s that they have the heart of Yossi Abramowitz.

Where in this story is mention of the role Yossi played in energizing the Jewish community’s movement to free Soviet Jews? Where is there mention of his tireless commitment to recruit the Israeli government’s support for a worldwide social activism month?

He helped lead a team that created MyJewishLearning.com which today reaches hundreds of thousands of people wishing to engage in Jewish study. He helped tackle the challenges of re-engineering Hebrew schools, creating a 21st century curriculum and website called Babaganewz that today appears in over 3,500 classrooms throughout the country.

While many of us sit on the side line and bemoan the challenges facing our people, Yossi is in the game, each and every day.

Whether standing at a PEJE conference advocating for zero interest day school loans that are guaranteed by the government of Israel, or flying to Israel to campaign for a newly created political party aimed at supporting Ethiopian Jewry, he challenges us with new ideas. He implores us to be better Jews and better people. He reminds us of what is still possible… if only we believe enough, if only we care enough, if only we try hard enough.

And yes that comes with a price. Dreamers are not always the best administrators, or managers. Dreamers can not always control their enthusiasm and at times are impulsive and pushy. They are often not practical and get enamored with their visions. They can do stupid things that remind us of a groom overcome with infatuation for his future bride.

But in truth, they are the key to our future and the power of our past. People like Yossi Abramowitz stand on the abyss and tell us not to be afraid. They imbue hope and kindness, enthusiasm and naiveté. They see what is possible and perhaps what does not yet exist.

Today was a sad day for the Jewish people. Debra Nussbaum Cohen’s article was mean spirited and unfair. It tarnished a person who for all his mistakes embodies the best in the human spirit and our best hope for the future.

Perhaps Michael Steinhardt said it best. “He’s one of the more original and creative people in the Jewish world,� Steinhardt said. “He is a valuable asset to the Jewish world and will become increasingly more so over time.�

June 29, 2006 | Permalink

yosefa said:

Having read the article I obviously had many things to say but one thing stands out more than anything: Where was Babaganewz?

How did the fact that BABAGANEWZ, a JFL publication, the only publication in Jewish life for middle school kids, a magazine that is PURCHASED by 2,000 schools for 4,000 teachers and 35,000 kids EACH year for 5 years now, with mountains of research to support its success, where was BABA in the article.
Where was the AEP award, the AJPA awards, the stamps, the teacher training record breaking sign ups? Where was BABA.
Call me self promoting and quirky and what you want that is all fine for the purpose of making headlines, but writing about JFL without BABAGANEWZ and its long provem measured success is like writing the history of Israel without the six day war.

June 29, 2006 | Permalink


 

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