Thousands Celebrate Rosh Hashanah at JDC Events Worldwide

Handmade class within “Family Sundays” project at Beit Grand JCC of Odessa with kids and parents making plates and other attributes themed around Rosh Hashanah. Photo courtesy JDC.

This Rosh Hashanah, thousands of Jews from emerging, established, and ancient Jewish communities around the world are celebrating the holidays at scores of JDC events including concerts, workshops, volunteer opportunities, trainings and cultural performances.

Roza F. in Rivne, Ukraine – receiving a jar of honey from JDC to celebrate the Jewish New Year. Photo courtesy JDC.

For Roza F., a 64-year-old former construction firm secretary, Rosh Hashanah activities and the jar of honey she receives from JDC are reminders of her deep connection to a community that has now become her family. Without living parents or siblings, and never married due to a history of illness, Roza’s life can get lonely, especially around holiday times. Though comforted by memories of her parents – whose cooking she fondly recalls as both were involved in culinary professions – its the Jewish community of Rivne, Ukraine, where she finds her joy. Not only does she receive aid to help her live beyond her small monthly pension and health issues, she is enthusiastically involved in holiday celebrations and other community activities.

Judafest 2019; photo courtesy JDC.

In Hungary, JDC’s annual Judafest – a Jewish cultural festival in Budapest which draws thousands of people each year – focused on Jewish High Holiday traditions through music, art, food, and performance. At the JCC Warsaw, local families attended Rosh Hashanah “seders,” learning holiday traditions and creating their own for years to come. In India, holiday services were offered at the local JCC in Mumbai together with holiday focused mindfulness classes and retreat on the theme of empowerment and deeper listening.

Rosh Hashanah party at the Old Age home in Casablanca. Photo courtesy JDC.

In Morocco, the Old Age Home of Casablanca hosted a holiday party for residents, with local volunteers delivering holiday gifts to the elderly. In Berlin, Germany, 50 home-hosted meals were organized by young adults around the city for anybody looking to connect and celebrate the holiday, stressing the Jewish value of welcoming strangers. And in a number of cities throughout Romania, cooking classes, ceramics workshops, wine tastings and educational events focused on the foods and ritual aspects of the holiday.

Home visits to elderly in Nikolaev by members of local volunteer center, with delivery of new Jewish calendars (printed by the JCC) and holiday sets. Photo courtesy JDC.

Among Rosh Hashanah events in post-Soviet nations, volunteers in Kharkov, Ukraine and Rostov, Russia, are visiting homebound and elderly community members to deliver holiday packages and provide company to the loneliest without family to share the holidays, while in Moldova and Belarus, special concerts by local performers are being held in honor of the New Year.

Handmade class within “Family Sundays” project at Beit Grand JCC of Odessa with kids and parents making plates and other attributes themed around Rosh Hsshanah. Photo courtesy JDC.

In Kiev, local families were treated to Rosh Hashanah celebrations featuring traditional holiday feasts and family games around the corgi, including JDC’s Halom JCC. In Krasnodar, Russia participants will have the opportunity to attend a pottery class dedicated to making holiday related products, while in Yekaterinburg, Russia participants will make challah and jam for community members in need.

Photo credit JDC

Most holiday events in this region will be held at JDC’s vast network of Hesed social welfare centers and Jewish community centers and made possible by JDC through its partners: the Jewish Federations, Claims Conference, and the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ).