fbpx

Debra Berger, founder of Project Interchange, dies

Debra Berger, the founder of Project Interchange that sent influential leaders to Israel, has died.
[additional-authors]
September 3, 2010

Debra Berger, the founder of Project Interchange that sent influential leaders to Israel, has died.

Berger, of Rockville, Md., died Wednesday.

Project Interchange, which Berger founded in 1982 and became an institute of the American Jewish Committee a decade later, has brought more than 5,000 leaders to Israel from more than 60 countries for weeklong educational visits.

She founded Project Interchange out of a desire to inform the American public about Israel. The mission, Berger reasoned, could best be realized through educational visits for groups of highly influential leaders, who upon returning home could share their perspectives with vast audiences, thus shaping public opinion on Israel.

In 1983, she sent off a delegation of congressional staff from the United States, marking Project Interchange’s inaugural program. Berger ran Project Interchange first from first from her suburban Washington home and then from an office in Washington D.C.

AJC Executive Director David Harris called Berger “a visionary.”

“She started Project Interchange from scratch,” he said. “Her goal was to introduce the Israel she loved to leading American figures. She succeeded beyond anyone’s wildest dreams.”

Harris said Berger “suffered from a prolonged and debilitating illness, but her courage, strength and determination inspired everyone around her.”

Did you enjoy this article?
You'll love our roundtable.

Editor's Picks

Latest Articles

When Everything Becomes a Product—Including Girlhood

In her debut book, “Girls®: Generation Z and the Commodification of Everything” Freya India presents a stinging indictment against those she blames for having turned normal girls into GIRLS®, an ideal target market for the social media, pharmaceutical, beauty and online therapy industries.

Gabba Gabba Oy!

For Cate Thurston, the chief curator at the Skirball, the exhibit gives the museum a chance to “explore this sort of underserved story” about the Jewish relationship and participation and crafting the look of punk

Recognizing Jewish Heritage Month

On this beautiful Sacramento morning, in the face, perhaps in defiance of, so much in the world that is painful, tenuous and deeply troubling, we convened and we lifted up what connects us – the promise of growth and healing, and the potent ability for people to endure, to create change, and to scaffold our communities in justice and truth.

J Street: All Tough, No Love

Slinging criticism without responsibility and spewing all complaints all the time, is barn-burning, not bridge-building.

More news and opinions than at a Shabbat dinner, right in your inbox.