My Official Start to Summer
For many of our children, summer begins when the last exam is completed and their battle-tested backpacks are thrown into the closet until the fall. According to my wall calendar, the first day of summer is today, June 21. This is the day when the most light from the sun will reach our planet during the twenty-four hour journey around our own axis. I will gladly argue that for my internal clock, that yesterday at URJ Crane Lake Camp summer had officially began. Seemingly more light had touched down than any other day for me and I suspect many others.
For many of our children, summer begins when the last exam is completed and their battle-tested backpacks are thrown into the closet until the fall. According to my wall calendar, the first day of summer is today, June 21. This is the day when the most light from the sun will reach our planet during the twenty-four hour journey around our own axis. I will gladly argue that for my internal clock, that yesterday at URJ Crane Lake Camp summer had officially began. Seemingly more light had touched down than any other day for me and I suspect many others.
Yesterday was Yom Limmud- a day
when the faculty, comprised of Rabbis, Cantors, Educators and some on the
journey to these roles, come together to be introduced to the staff hired to
make meaningful summer experiences for the hundreds of children that will
arrive early next week. Many of us veteran faculty members have experienced Yom
Limmud in various forms, some more successful than others but all with the goal
of imparting some significant instructions to the staff, which is made up of
former campers, other American and Israeli Jewish young adults and American and
foreign non-Jewish young adults. In a few hours, we faculty are tasked with
helping each of these groups gather insight into where they are working, the
power each of them have in creating the future of Judaism in both obvious and
unsuspecting ways. Each of these groups has a role to play and they all
bring key life experiences and vital perspective to the campers who look to
them for most things during their time at camp.
This year, we tried and implemented
something very new. The program was made up of a collection of other smaller
exercises, some of which were not so new, but arranged in such a way to be
experiential, to promote free thinking and free choice while remaining to be
guided and considerate to our clear overall goals of helping staff grasp the
significance of working in a Jewish camp. In a tactile, frontal way we were
able to ask difficult questions about God's presence in our lives, about what
symbols and seasons we hold dear that might be packed in our suitcase and we
discussed how different generations have played a role in making us who we are
so we might better understand our roles in shaping the future generations. In
one station, single statements about God and belief were put on the walls
around the room along with the opportunity to place a sticker on
"agree" or "disagree." No justification necessary, no
judgement. Just answer. The process would come later. There were no time limits
for staff to stop and ponder these questions, and they were able to move on to
another area to discuss and explore other activities until ultimately coming
together to sort out what they had learned. In another station, they were shown
a picture of an empty suitcase and given a list of possible things they would
pack that might help identify them including holidays such as Passover, ritual
objects like candlesticks and other things which we use to better express who
we are. The staff was also asked about where they come from, what cities their
parents and grandparents have lived in so they can both visually and
cognitively understand how growing up in one part of the world in a particular
time in history plays a part in helping us live in this space at this time.
While it is not unusual to have had great success with these programs in past
years, it is important to express how good it felt this year.
I return year after year to URJ
camps because as a professional, there is no greater recharging of my batteries
than being around this kind of energy. The love and joy that campers and staff
express towards each other is both life changing and life sustaining. But it
must start somewhere, and for me- it begins now. It is easy to talk technically
about what and how we learned about each other. I also think it is important to
let you know how amazing it feels to be around so much light on the day before
the first day of summer.
#FacultyTeam78
#URJCraneLake #WhatCantorsDo #URJCamps
#FacultyTeam78
#URJCraneLake #WhatCantorsDo #URJCamps