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April 30, 2026

Niver’s Spring News 2026: 75 Countries, New Flags, and a Map That Keeps Expanding

🎙️ The Map Is Alive: 75 Countries, New Voices, and a World Expanding in Real Time

April arrived in motion—across continents, across platforms, and across milestones that feel both expansive and deeply personal.

The biggest headline is one that still feels surreal: Make Your Own Map is now streaming in 75 countries, and what’s unfolding feels bigger than numbers.


🌍 75 Countries. The Map Is Alive.

In the past few weeks alone, the map has expanded across Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, and South America, with new listeners joining from:

🇨🇴 Colombia 🇪🇬 Egypt 🇨🇮 Ivory Coast 🇺🇿 Uzbekistan 🇲🇦 Morocco 🇴🇲 Oman

Just days after welcoming listeners in Iran, Vietnam, and Iraq, the reach continues to grow in real time—each new country a reminder that stories don’t just travel, they connect.

This moment isn’t simply about scale. It is about presence across borders, languages, and lived experience. The map is not just expanding—it is alive.


📺 On Air, In Print, and On Stage

That sense of expansion has carried into every corner of my work this month.

On Jet Set TV, I shared conversations around sailing with Windstar, exploring travel that slows you down just enough to see the world differently. In print, my feature on Four Seasons Resort Orlando at Walt Disney World Resort appears in Pasadena Magazine, highlighting luxury as a gateway to deeper discovery across Central Florida.

https://youtu.be/B920tOemB1s

At the same time, new stories continue to reach audiences through Bored Panda and Deer Valley, extending the conversation across digital platforms in unexpected and exciting ways.

There was also a meaningful moment of recognition with a DotComm Award—earning a Triple Crown—which I celebrated while in Ireland, a place already filled with memory, history, and connection.


🎤 Speaking, Signing, and Showing Up

This month has also been about connection in person and in conversation. From speaking with the Brandeis community in Tucson to signing BRAVE-ish at SXSW, these moments are a reminder that storytelling lives not only online or in print, but in the shared space between people. Each conversation, each book signing, each question asked across a table reinforces why this work matters.


🌴 Stories from the Road: San Jose and Beyond

San Jose brought collaboration, reflection, and connection, including time with Carl and witnessing the continued impact of his work.

A special congratulations to Dr. Carl Law, featured in the “Inspirational Black Men and Women in Medicine” series. His leadership through Doctors First Staffing, now celebrating its one-year anniversary, reflects a thoughtful and intentional approach to transforming healthcare staffing with care and purpose.


✈️ Switzerland, Liechtenstein and Italy

The journey continued with the Travel Classics Magazine Conference in Lugano, Switzerland, then on to country #103: Liechtenstein, and time with friends in Italy. I am grateful for the ability to move through the world, to witness, to listen, and to share.

Videos from Travel Classics Ticino are live and more photos, stories and videos coming soon!


💛 Gratitude, Health, and Joy

And yet, the most meaningful update this month has nothing to do with distance traveled. My mom is out of the hospital and was home in time for her birthday. There is no greater milestone than health, and no deeper gratitude than being together. This month, that is the wish—for her and for all of us. More health. More freedom. More joy.


🌎 Looking Ahead

With 75 countries now listening and new voices joining every day, this moment feels both like a milestone and a beginning. The map is alive—and there is so much more to come.



Learn more about my events: click here and my articles here

Want to travel more? I have a Travel Writer 101 class on Udemy.

My students are from 13 countries: Australia, Canada, India, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand, Philippines, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland, Thailand, UK, USA! Join us on the adventure of travel writing!

THANK YOU for watching my award-winning podcast, Make Your Own Map: Are YOU ready to be BRAVE? It has now been seen and heard in 75 countries on 7 continents.

Have you heard my recent podcast episodes?

WATCH my podcast, “MAKE YOUR OWN MAP: ” on Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, YouTube PodcastGoogle Podcasts, Audacy, Audible, Anchor, PandoraiHeart Radio

WHERE CAN YOU FIND MY TRAVEL VIDEOS?

Here is the link to my video channel on YouTube where I now have over 2.7 Million views on YouTube! (now at: 2,710,468).

I hope you will join me and subscribe! For more We Said Go Travel articles, TV segments, videos and social media: CLICK HERE

Find me on social media with over 150,000 followers. Please follow me on social @LisaNiver TikTok, X  Instagram, FacebookPinterestYouTube, LinkedIn, BlueSky and at LisaNiver.com.

Do you LOVE my book BRAVE-ish? PLEASE WRITE A REVIEW!! Click here to go directly to rate or review BRAVE-ish on Amazon (now at 66 reviews. Help me get to 75) You can find my book on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Simon & Schuster, Post Hill Press, Target, Walmart, BookShop, BAM! and wherever you get your audiobooks!

People always ask me where is it best to buy my book. I recommend you go into or call your favorite local book store and ask them to order it for you and pick it up IN THE STORE! You never know what other treasures you will find. Any bookstore can order my book because my publisher is Post Hill Press and it is distributed by Simon and Schuster. My book is now in the library on Quark Ultramarine, Windstar StarBreeze, NCL Escape and in the store at Dubray bookstore on Grafton in Dublin, Ireland! Brave-ish is available all over the globe!

You can also find me now on SUBSTACK!

 

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Let us Not Speak – A poem for Parsha Emor

Emor — speak (Leviticus 21:1–24:23)

Let us not speak of all the things
we are not supposed to do because
the list is long and the Omer
isn’t going to count itself.

I’m writing these words on the eighteenth
day of the space between the second telling
of the feast of unleavened bread, and the day
our top ten laws were etched in stone.

I’m writing these words after reading the
ancient words which tell me to do this counting.
It’s a real Inception-level situation.
Let us not speak of the day the manna

stopped falling out of the sky, and we
had to learn to fend for ourselves.
Or is that assumption a lack of faith?
If it is a lack of faith, let us not speak of it.

The truth is, if you got me in a room,
I’d be willing to speak of almost anything.
I’d list all the laws, like one of those memes
where you give yourself a point for

every one you followed, or don’t follow.
You could share your score in the comments.
Let us not speak of each other’s scores.
Let us not speak of my blasphemy and

how I disguise it as poems. It is spring today
and when all this counting is counted
we can speak of anything we want.
Let’s do that. Let’s put it on the calendar.


Rick Lupert, a poet, songleader and graphic designer, is the author of 29 books including “God Wrestler: A Poem for Every Torah Portion.” Visit him at www.JewishPoetry.net

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When Protecting Jewish Students Becomes a Litmus Test, Voters Must Answer

California Jews have long believed in broad coalitions. We stood with labor, marched for civil rights, welcomed immigrants, fought poverty, and invested in the civic life of this state. We believe that when any community is threatened, all communities should respond.

That belief has been shaken.

In this election season, candidates for office are being asked whether they are taking Jewish money or seeking to change Assembly Bill 715, the landmark bill to protect Jewish children in public K-12 education against antisemitism, which Governor Newsom signed into law. In some cases, endorsements largely hinge on their position on this singular bill.

In October 2025, CFA issued a candidate questionnaire, which was later retracted, asking political candidates to disclose if they “have endorsements or take contributions from groups and sectors like AIPAC/JPAC.” In partnership with JFEDLA, Jewish California (formerly JPAC) led the effort to pass the bill, which was sponsored by Assemblymembers Rick Chavez Zbur and Dawn Addis.

Surveys across the board reveal an alarming uptick in antisemitism across California and in our schools. The battle over AB 715 revealed a hard truth: Jewish student equity, inclusion, and safety have become a political litmus test in California. And if others insist on making it one, then voters who care about fairness and pluralism should answer in kind.

AB 715 is not extreme. It requires that controversial subjects in classrooms be taught in a balanced manner, without vilifying or ostracizing students, and without presenting opinion as fact. This legislation establishes an Office of Civil Rights, creates an Antisemitism Prevention Coordinator, and requires school districts to investigate and respond when discriminatory content appears in classrooms or educators’ professional development. It requires classroom material to be factually accurate. Californians asked for something simple: Schools should educate, not indoctrinate. Teachers should protect children, not target them.

Yet powerful opposition mobilized anyway.

Organizations such as ACLU California Action, California Federation of Teachers, California Teachers Association, and United Teachers Los Angeles publicly campaigned against AB 715. Some opponents even filed a lawsuit to prevent the law from taking effect, an effort that was subsequently denied by a federal judge and attacked provisions requiring instruction to be factually accurate, revealing that, for some activists, protecting ideology mattered more than protecting students. Some candidates and lawmakers saw the stakes clearly: If you support protections sought by Jewish families, expect backlash from organized political forces. This is what a litmus test looks like.

Some progressive institutions are already using Jewish issues as a filter. Jewish voters should educate themselves on candidates and incumbents who champion the concerns facing the Jewish community, including those who prioritize addressing antisemitism and supporting Jewish students. Jewish voters care about many issues: housing costs, education quality, healthcare, climate, public safety, reproductive freedom, workers’ rights, and economic opportunity. We are not a single-issue community, nor should we be. But no parent should be asked to ignore whether their child will be safe at school. No voter should be expected to support leaders who treat antisemitism as an inconvenience rather than the crisis it is.

Throughout history, time and again, when our Jewish community faces challenges, we rise to meet them. We embody the Jewish value of courageously pursuing justice, even when the odds are long. This persistence and diligence helped pass AB 715 into law.

But that wasn’t the end of this chapter. Our community must continue to forcefully advocate for our protection, this election cycle, and every one that comes after. It is a challenge we are well-equipped to overcome.


Rabbi Noah Farkas is President & CEO of Jewish Federation Los Angeles.

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A Bisl Torah — Good, Sad Tears

A friend’s child remarked that he would be saddened to see his mother cry at his Bar Mitzvah. When she cries, he feels her emotions.

She and I both tried to explain that tears are good. Good tears. But we both realized the tears were certainly good in the sense of celebration and joy in witnessing a monumental milestone. But the tears did, in fact, carry a sense of sadness. Sadness in knowing that everyone is growing up—her child maturing through a rite of passage and she as the adult, now old enough to have a teenager.

Bittersweet tears that recognize the abounding exhilaration that pairs with watching a child come of age. Bittersweet tears that also hold space for the whispers of childhood nestling into memories of yesterday. Good, sad tears.

Our tradition doesn’t wave tears goodbye. Emotion is welcomed. The Talmud laments the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem and explains that with its ruin, the gates of prayer were locked. However, the gates of tears were always open. Never closed. Signaling those who cry are always within God’s embrace.

May we find ourselves in moments that warrant the stirring of our hearts. The ability to watch another grow up. The blessing in ourselves, getting older. And through it all, feeling tears on our cheeks. Good, sad tears.

Shabbat Shalom


Rabbi Nicole Guzik is senior rabbi at Sinai Temple. She can be reached at her Facebook page at Rabbi Nicole Guzik or on Instagram @rabbiguzik. For more writings, visit Rabbi Guzik’s blog section from Sinai Temple’s website.

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Blessing Evolution Produced from Lucky Mud

Did lucky mud produce primordial ooze
from which we all evolved, or was divine
design behind creation? If you choose
the latter, must you be prepared to sign
away your right to disbelieve the data
supporting the Darwinian point of view,
in case the Lord considers this a matter
concerning which He’s quite prepared to sue?

The blessing Jews must make on seeing
monkeys, is this problem’s solution.
God changes every living being
in the process we call “evolution,”
a process in which, being most creative,
reality transforms His divine dreams,
which are not doomed to die or even date if
they sink like lucky mud beneath clear streams.

Berakhot 58b states:

תָּנוּ רַבָּנַן: הָרוֹאָה פִּיל, קוֹף וְקִפֹוף, אוֹמֵר: ״בָּרוּךְ … מְשַׁנֶּה אֶת הַבְּרִיּוֹת״. רָאָה בְּרִיּוֹת טוֹבוֹת, וְאִילָנוֹת טוֹבוֹת, אוֹמֵר: ״בָּרוּךְ … שֶׁכָּכָה לוֹ בְּעוֹלָמוֹ״.

The Sages taught: One who sees an elephant, a monkey, or a vulture (Rashi) recites: Blessed…Who makes creatures different.

One who saw beautiful or otherwise outstanding creatures or beautiful trees recites: Blessed…Who has such things in His world.

In “Out of sheer intention:  Writing about others as a means to write about yourself,” TLS, 4/17/26,  Catherine Taylor, reviewing

My Year in Paris with Gertrude Stein by Deborah Levy, writes:

Deborah Levy loves to write about water as an element both ruinous and reviving. The action of her novel Swimming Home (2011) takes place around the pool of a rented villa in France; a beach in southern Spain provides the backdrop to the Grand Guignol scenes of Hot Milk (2016). In the titular short story of her collection Black Vodka (2013), a character confides: “There’s something about rain that makes me slam the doors of cabs extra hard. I love the rain. It heightens every gesture, injects it with 5ml of unspecific yearning”. In Paris, Levy’s unnamed narrator treks in a downpour to the vast Pére-Lachaise cemetery in search of the grave of the impossible-to-write-about Stein. Unable to find it, she returns soaking wet to her studio flat in the fifth arrondissement – a place of kilim rugs, unwanted mice and, as the months move into spring, vast bunches of glowing mimosa. This literary deliquescence is perfect for a book about a shapeshifter such as Stein: a woman for whom convention was anathema to happiness, who stated: “my writing is clear as mud, but mud settles and clear streams run on and disappear”.


Gershon Hepner is a poet who has written over 25,000 poems on subjects ranging from music to literature, politics to Torah. He grew up in England and moved to Los Angeles in 1976. Using his varied interests and experiences, he has authored dozens of papers in medical and academic journals, and authored “Legal Friction: Law, Narrative, and Identity Politics in Biblical Israel.” He can be reached at gershonhepner@gmail.com.

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A Moment in Time: “The Choreography of Trust”

Dear all,

Last month I watched as two planes made a parallel approach into San Francisco International Airport. Since then, the FAA has banned such approaches, citing the very real risks—those runways are simply too close together for today’s levels of congestion.

Which means what I witnessed was not just impressive. It was precarious.

It was a choreography of trust, precision, and constant communication—pilots and tower moving in perfect coordination, aware that even the smallest misstep could have consequences.

I found myself in awe. Not just of the planes, but of everything we don’t see—the thousands of tiny adjustments, the quiet expertise, the unseen voices guiding everything safely to the ground.

And it made me think about our own lives.

In our work, our relationships, our families—we’re quick to notice when things fall apart. When communication breaks down. When someone misses a step.

But how often do we stop and recognize the opposite?

How often do we pause and say: “this is working because people are showing up, paying attention, adjusting for one another”?

Because just like those planes, the moments when our lives are “in sync” are not accidental. They are built on trust, on effort, on people who are quietly helping guide us forward.

Take a moment in time this week to honor the extraordinary coordination when things go right. Reach out to someone who has been part of that unseen choreography in your life and let them know you see them.

With love and Shalom,

Rabbi Zachary R. Shapiro

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Print Issue: Changing Your Energy | May 1, 2026

CLICK HERE FOR FULLSCREEN VERSION

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How to Support Your Jewfluencers ft. Brian Spivak

This week on Schmuckboys, Libby and Marla give you their post-Passover recaps they then welcome their guest, Brian Spivak, who founded Barzel Media, a company focused on helping Jewish content creators partner with businesses for brand deals.

We get into Brian’s unexpectedly thriving Miami dating era, his Modern Orthodox New Jersey upbringing, and how his relationship to Judaism evolved from routine to real intention. He shares how October 7th completely shifted his career path, leading him from the tech world into building the Hostage Forum’s influencer program from the ground up.

Brian takes us behind the scenes of powerful campaigns like “Recipes for Return” and “Reels for Return,” explaining how food, fitness, and everyday lifestyle content became surprisingly effective tools for hostage awareness. He opens up about the social media fatigue surrounding war content, why relatable storytelling matters, and how strategic creativity can break through the scroll.

The conversation dives deep into the harsh reality many pro-Israel influencers faced after speaking out — including losing brand partnerships and financial stability — and why Brian founded Barzel Media to help create real economic infrastructure for creators who chose advocacy over silence. He also addresses the criticism around influencers getting paid to advocate, making the case for why sustainable activism requires actual support, especially for mid-level creators who are often overlooked.

Marla and Libby also talk with Brian about the difference between nonprofit and for-profit partnerships, what brands are actually willing to support, and how influencer marketing can serve as both advocacy and business strategy. They unpack creator burnout, the exhausting pressure of the algorithm, and Brian’s vision for building systems that give creators more support, resources, and maybe even the occasional mental health break.

Of course, because this is Schmuckboys, they also cover dating while working in media and activism, public perception, social intimidation, and how being visible online doesn’t always translate into romantic success.

The episode closes with a surprisingly deep conversation about AI, technology, and the future of human connection, with Brian sharing why he believes Shabbat, digital detox, sports, and in-person community may become even more essential as society becomes increasingly online.

And in true Schmuckboys fashion, Brian defines a Schmuckboy as: “A guy who gives advice on things he knows nothing about, always has a story for everything, and definitely knows a guy with a rooftop.”

Instagram: @brianspivak / @barzel.media Website: barzelmedia.com

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‘The Hollywood Rabbi’: Inside the Story of Marvin Hier

Is it possible to make a compelling film about a rabbi? The answer is a definite yes — if you have a rabbi with the star power and story of Rabbi Marvin Hier. “The Hollywood Rabbi,” a new documentary about Hier, is proof.

Hier, 86, the founder of the Simon Wiesenthal Center (SWC), is arguably one of the most well-connected rabbis in the world. His reach spans Hollywood and global politics: he has met with eight presidents, three popes and four kings, and he is also a two-time Oscar winner — for “Genocide” (1981) and “The Long Way Home” (1997). Not bad material for a Hollywood film.

Shortly after he announced that he would be stepping down as CEO and president of the Simon Wiesenthal Center on Jan. 1, 2023, becoming its Dean Emeritus, producer Brad Krevoy approached director Jon Kean with the idea of making a film about the legendary rabbi. Kean, who has known Hier since 1995, replied that he would meet with him and “see if there’s a story there.”

Sure enough, there was enough material for a series, not just a documentary. Kean saw in Hier a layered story that went beyond public achievement, shaped as much by personality as by legacy. “He’s still so charming, unique and entertaining,” Kean said. “But he’s also older now and more reflective about his life, as opposed to the hard-charging figure I once met. I felt there was a really nice story there — one that could make people feel optimistic, hopeful, and see there is a nice path forward for all of us.”

And so, on Sept. 11, 2023, filming began. Kean admitted he was somewhat hesitant about the date — and sure enough, less than a month later, the Oct. 7 attacks occurred, dramatically shifting the direction of the story.

Kean ultimately included a powerful meeting arranged by Hier between survivors of the attack and Arnold Schwarzenegger in his office. One of the survivors, 14-year-old Ella Shani, told him how her father was murdered and her cousin Amit was kidnapped and taken to Gaza.

Rabbi Hier and Arnold at an event for families of Israeli hostages from 10/7

At a time when many celebrities chose to distance themselves from Israel, it was moving to see such visible support from an A-list movie star. “You can see how Arnold and the rabbi have a genuine affection for one another,” Kean recalled. “Arnold really loves this guy, and the rabbi loves Arnold.”

The actor and former Republican governor of California has been a close friend of Hier’s for many years. When Hier set out to build the Museum of Tolerance, he called Schwarzenegger and invited him to the site. Schwarzenegger, in turn, introduced him to potential donors and contributed generously himself.

The museum opened in 1993 at a cost of $50 million.

Many of the celebrities who have supported Hier’s efforts over the years say it is nearly impossible to say no to him. In “The Hollywood Rabbi,” producer and former chairman of Walt Disney Studios Jeffrey Katzenberg says there is no such thing as “no” for Rabbi Hier. “And ‘yes’ is never good enough.” While one actor adds,  “If you say, ‘No, I can’t do it right now,’ he says, ‘Fine, I understand — you’ll have a limp in the morning.’”

When Schwarzenegger donated $100,000, Hier replied: “Thanks, and I’ll be back.”

Arnold Schwarzenegger and Director Jon Kean

There is no shortage of well-known figures who participated in the documentary. These include former President Bill Clinton, Governor Gavin Newsom, Israeli President Isaac Herzog, Netflix co-chief executive Ted Sarandos and others.

Kean recalled how excited Hier was about the filming. “He used to call me all the time: ‘Jon, how are you doing? What’s going on with this? What’s going on with that?’ He was so flattered that somebody wanted to tell his story. For all his accomplishments, he’s a very modest man, and it’s all about the mission, not about himself.”

“The Hollywood Rabbi” tells the story of Hier, who was born in New York to immigrant parents from Poland, and came to Los Angeles following a visit to Holocaust sites in Europe in 1977. It traces how he met Holocaust survivor and Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal and asked for permission to establish a center in his name in Los Angeles.

There is no shortage of rabbis in Los Angeles seeking donations for one cause or another. Raising funds is never easy — especially not on the scale required to build an institution as large as the one Hier envisioned. But he proved remarkably effective, largely due to his ability to build relationships and connect with people across different worlds.

Hier is, at heart, a storyteller. He recalled how it all began with a phone call from Frank Sinatra. “I heard you want to start the Simon Wiesenthal Center. He is a great guy, I want to help,” the singer said.

Hier drove to Sinatra’s home in Palm Springs, and it didn’t take long for Sinatra to pick up the phone and call real estate developer Don Soffer in Miami, telling him: “I’m going to send you my rabbi, we want a significant donation.”

“Sinatra wanted to help and immediately everyone else followed,” Hier recalled. “If it’s good for Sinatra, it’s good for us.”

In 1977, the Center was established on Pico Boulevard. Since then, many prominent figures have visited, and Hier himself became one of the most well-known rabbis in the world.

One surprising relationship he developed was in the Arab world, with Emirati businessman Mohamed Ali Alabbar, who built the Burj Khalifa and the Dubai Mall and was even invited to the wedding of Hier’s granddaughter in Jerusalem.

In fact, Rabbi Hier was among the first American Jewish leaders to establish relationships in the United Arab Emirates, even before official normalization between the UAE and Israel. King Hussein of Jordan also visited the Museum of Tolerance in the years surrounding the early stages of peace talks between Israel and Jordan.

When I asked Kean what Rabbi Hier’s secret is, he pointed to something simpler than power or influence. “He really cares about teaching the world, teaching tolerance, bringing people together,” Kean said. “He doesn’t get frustrated or disappointed. You can have people disagree with him, or say negative things about him, and he doesn’t hold a grudge. He just keeps going. You can’t frustrate him. He’s very simple in his mission, and that’s all he cares about.”

Rabbi Marvin Hier and Marlene Hier on set

Kean said that what ultimately sets Hier apart is the rare combination of focus and sincerity in his work. “I think that’s when people respond. There are very few people who are so genuinely focused and sincere in what they do, and the rabbi is one of them,” he said.

The broader lesson of Hier’s story, Kean believes, goes beyond institutional success or celebrity encounters. It is rooted in a simple idea about connection and shared responsibility. “There are a lot of lessons in there,” he said. “One of the things Hier is saying is that we’re all Americans — we have to talk to one another. Whether you’re on one side or the other. I mean, how much more universal can we get right now?”

The World premiere of “The Hollywood Rabbi” will take place on Tuesday, May 12 at 7 p.m. at the Saban Theater. The festival will run between May 12-19 at Laemmle Theaters. For Tickets & info, please visit: LAJFilmFest.org.

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Jewish After School Accelerator: Helping LA Families Make Jewish Connections

Many Jewish families across the U.S. want to provide their children with a Jewish education but simply can’t afford the high tuition. As a result, many attend public schools and receive little to no formal Jewish education. Some enroll in Hebrew school once or twice a week, typically during the middle school years, where the focus is largely on learning Hebrew as a second language. Others participate in bar and bat mitzvah preparation programs, which are often limited in duration and centered around that milestone rather than ongoing Jewish learning.

Thanks to the Jewish After School Accelerator (JASA), families now have an alternative that allows children to receive Jewish education as part of their daily after-school routine.

JASA, an initiative of Jewish Kids Groups (JKA), offers an accessible alternative by integrating Jewish learning into after-school care. Launched after more than a decade of success in Atlanta, the program has expanded nationally since 2023, with 27 programs now operating or in development across North America.

In Los Angeles, four synagogues have joined the initiative over the past two years: Hamakom in Woodland Hills, Temple Adat Ariel in Valley Village, Beth Shir Shalom in Santa Monica and, most recently, Temple Isaiah on West Pico Boulevard. Children from pre-K through fifth grade are picked up from school and brought to participating synagogues, where they receive help with homework, learn Hebrew, study Jewish holidays, have snack time and build friendships with other Jewish students.

Rachel Dobbs Schwartz, JKG’s Chief Innovation Officer at Temple Isaiah, said the curriculum is designed to help children deepen their understanding and connection to Judaism throughout the day.

“We base it on Jewish values and follow the Jewish calendar,” she said. “Every part of the day is enriched with Judaism. These kids are able to live Jewishly on a daily basis, not just on Sundays when they go to Hebrew school.”

Schwartz added that one of the goals is to “create opportunities for synagogues to engage with new families” while building “hyper-local communities” that are accessible and welcoming to those who may not yet be connected to Jewish life.

“Most of these parents have not stepped foot in a synagogue before,” she said, noting that many families are still exploring what kind of Jewish education feels right for them or have not yet connected to a Jewish community. The program, she explained, serves as an entry point — an “onboarding process” — helping families incorporate Jewish life into their daily routines without it feeling overwhelming or out of reach.

The program is designed to meet families where they are, regardless of background or level of observance. Some are seeking a supplement to what their children already receive, while others are introducing Jewish learning for the first time.

Beyond the structure of the program, Schwartz emphasized its deeper impact on community-building — something she has experienced firsthand as both a professional and a parent of two children, a 10-year-old son and a 14-year-old daughter.

“I met maybe 10 families within a mile of me just through this program that I did not know were Jewish,” Schwartz said. “Now my son has playdates every weekend with these kids — he can ride his bike over or we can walk there because everything is so hyper-local.” According to Schwartz, this kind of organic community-building is one of the program’s most meaningful outcomes, as children not only learn together but begin to form lasting friendships that carry into their daily lives.

The program ultimately aims to make Jewish life a natural and consistent part of a child’s daily routine. Rather than limiting engagement to occasional classes or milestone-based learning, it weaves Jewish values, traditions, and community into everyday life — both inside the program and beyond.

Families in Los Angeles who want to learn more about the new after school program can fill out the online interest form at https://bit.ly/4sV3DHV. 

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