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NEWS RELEASE:
June 5, 2003
For Immediate Release |
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Jewish Women's Archive Announces "Jewish Women Making Community" Fellowships
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BROOKLINE, MA -- Gail Reimer, Executive Director of the
Jewish Women's Archive (JWA) announced today six winners of the JWA
fellowship program, "Jewish Women Making Community," for the study
of the role Jewish women have played in building communities in
America. This program is one of JWA's initiatives to celebrate the
350th anniversary of Jewish settlement in North America.
"The research projects will shed important light on the ways in
which local women have made their communities into vital and
meaningful homes for both Jews and non-Jews," said Reimer. "We were
astounded at the depth and breadth of the many proposals we
received. It was extremely difficult for our Academic Advisory
Council to make a decision," she continued.
The papers of the fellows will be published as an edited volume
focused upon Jewish women's work in building community across North
America. JWA will convene a conference where the fellows, along
with contemporary Jewish women activists, will look at the American
Jewish past and present in light of the long tradition of American
Jewish women's activism.
The grant recipients and their fields of research are:
- Dr. Jeanne Abrams, Associate Professor, Penrose
Library, University of Denver, Director, Rocky Mountain Jewish
Historical Society and Beck Archives "Moving Beyond Lady Bountiful:
How Jewish Women Shaped Philanthropy in Early Denver"
- Aleisa Fishman, Ph.D. candidate, American
University, Washington, DC "Jewish Women Making Community in
Suburbia: Nassau County, NY 1946-1960"
- Dr. Adele Hast, Scholar in Residence, The
Newberry Library, Chicago, IL "A Study of Chicago Woman's
Aid"
- Mary Ann Irwin, writer/instructor, Diablo
Valley College, Chabot College, and San Francisco State University
(SFSU) "Jealous of Their Powers: The Emanu-El Sisterhood for
Personal Service and the Jewish Center Movement in San
Francisco"
- Barb Schober, Ph.D. candidate, University of
British Columbia "A Study of the Vancouver, British Columbia
Section of the National Council of Jewish Women"
- Hollace Ava Weiner, writer, MA. candidate,
University of Texas at Arlington "The Jewish Junior League: The
101-Year Rise and Demise of the Fort Worth, Texas, Section of the
NCJW, 1901-2002"
About the 350th anniversary
In September 1654 twenty-three people, including women, men and
children, landed in New Amsterdam to form the first Jewish
settlement in North America. Individual Jews, all men, had lived
and worked on this continent previously, but 1654 marked the first
time that the presence of women and children made it possible to
begin a community that could have both a rich present and a future.
The official commemoration for the event will begin in September
2004 and run through June of 2005. JWA will serve as a coordinator
and catalyst for programs focused on women and their contributions.
An honorary
committee still in formation includes Jewish women in Congress,
authors and artists.
Along with the research and fellowship program to delve into
community histories, the Jewish Women's Archive will offer several
special programs. They will include a speaker's bureau, curricular
materials for teens, film and book discussion guides and a technical
assistance manual for conducting oral histories. In addition, JWA's
online presence at www.jwa.org will enable organizations throughout
the country to communicate with one another and share their ideas
for 350th anniversary programming.
About JWA
The Jewish Women's Archive (JWA) is a national, nonprofit
organization that employs a combination of approaches to its work,
from online exhibits to community-based oral history projects to
public programs and events. Founded in Boston, Massachusetts in
1995, JWA was one of the first organizations in the Jewish community
to stake a claim in the new frontier of the web, and continues to
innovate in its use of the virtual world for academic, cultural,
archival and educational purposes. JWA's award-winning website,
www.jwa.org, has the most extensive collection of material on
American Jewish women on the web. JWA has become a leading advocate
for and center of education in Jewish women's history, ensuring that
we remember the women who came before us, honor the women among us,
and inspire those who will follow us.
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