Friday, February 4, 2011

The JCC Does Not Support the global BDS Movement: A response to an inaccurate article in The Jewish Week

Dear Friends,

A disturbing and inaccurate article appears in The Jewish Week today that attacks the JCC. Allow me to be very clear:

The JCC does not support the global BDS (Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions) movement, which has within its midst those who aim to de-legitimize the State of Israel. Nor do we partner with any organization that supports BDS. The JCC stands with Israel in its fight against such attempts to deny Israel's legitimate status in the family of nations.

The JCC further stands with our community in all its diversity regarding how best to insure a safe and secure Israel. We recognize that there will be differences of opinion throughout the community on that and many other issues. Only with open and respectful dialogue and debate—hallmarks of the Jewish people—can we hope to sustain a healthy community.

The JCC will resist narrowly-focused efforts to circumscribe activities that do so. We make decisions every day about what programs are worthwhile and consistent with our mission. This sometimes involves sensitive judgments about which groups intend to strengthen Israel through constructive criticism and which groups do not have Israel's best interests at heart. We are justifiably proud of the rich programming.

Please don't hesitate to be in touch if you have questions or concerns.


Shabbat Shalom,
Joy

Monday, August 23, 2010

Statement about the Muslim Community Center

Dear Friends,

I am sure many of you have been following the news regarding the Cordoba Initiative’s plans to create a community center downtown. You also may have read or heard on the news that the JCC has helped Cordoba’s leaders over the last several years because they are interested in building a center modeled after ours—one that welcomes everyone, celebrates pluralism and diversity, and is a place of growth, learning, and connection. Our experience with them has been a very positive one.

The JCC has not commented, nor will we comment, on the location of the Cordoba Initiative's center. While I believe there is consensus in the Jewish community about Cordoba's right to build wherever they choose, there is difference of opinion regarding their decision to locate the center so close to Ground Zero. As a general rule, the JCC does not take stands on issues where there is not a clear community consensus.

I regret that this conversation has generated so much heat and so little light. Accusations on both sides have reached a pitch that has made it impossible for people to hear one another, which is never helpful. It is my hope that as the days get cooler, so will the rhetoric.


-- Rabbi Joy Levitt

Friday, August 14, 2009

Change is among us.

As summer winds down, we will start feeling it in the air and many of us will begin the process of renewing ourselves as well as we prepare for the High Holidays.

It has been a very long year. A year that saw jobs lost, retirement funds evaporate and anxiety grow as we watched our economy crumble. For us at the JCC, it has been a year of feeling more necessary than ever. More of you came through the doors. More of you expressed your gratitude for the community we are all building. We have been filled with a sense of purpose as we try to respond to a community with shrinking resources and growing need. And we appreciate all of you who have supported us throughout this year and recognized the importance of a strong community, particularly now.

Change is definitely among us. But, here is what will not change. Our commitment to a Jewish tradition that values each individual will not change. Our determination to find ways to help one another, our neighborhood, and the larger world around us will not change. Our desire to support you and those you love through our programs will not change.

My wish to you all --
Health. Happiness. Joy.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Thankful for Free Speech

An Open Letter to The Westboro Baptist Church, following their picketing of The JCC in Manhattan yesterday:

First, let me thank you on behalf of The Jewish Community Center in Manhattan. You taught us so much yesterday, as you stood across the street shouting your vile obscenities.

You reminded us that hatred toward us and everything we stand for is still alive and well in this America we so dearly love and that we must be aware, informed, and able to meet and defeat it wherever we see it.

You enabled us to clarify our own values and articulate how much we cherish our tradition and the diversity of our community.

You encouraged hundreds of our members and participants to rally around the values of this institution. We were particularly moved by our Christian and Muslim friends who were appalled by the expressions of hatred in the name of religion.

You reaffirmed our commitment to the principle of free speech, however disgusting and painful that speech might be and confirmed our belief that love, kindness, and community connection can overwhelm even the loudest hateful screaming.

We learned quite a lot.

Have you learned anything?

On July 22nd, Rabbi Joy Levitt sent the following special alert to JCC members and constituents:

We have been notified that on July 23rd, from 9:30-10:15, the JCC (along with several other New York institutions) will be picketed by a fringe hate group. The group will be small (5-8 people), but disturbing because of the ugly nature of the signs they carry.

The JCC has taken every precaution to ensure the safety and comfort of everyone who comes through our doors. We can assure you that our building remains the beacon of warmth and welcoming, regardless of who stands outside our doors.

Since we first alerted our community to this situation, we have received an outpouring of emails and phone calls supporting the JCC and its vision. We are strengthened and honored by the responses. We have chosen to respond to the picketers by simply going about our normal business. We know that it may be hard to ignore their obscenities but responding to them verbally validates their viewpoint. The best response is actually what goes on inside our building each day—a vibrant, diverse, community committed to values of pluralism and decency. Please walk past the picketers without comment, through the gates that frame our community into the space where each of you is always welcome.