﻿<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><channel><title>Home Blog</title><link>http://www.ohiohillel.org</link><pubDate>Tue, 07 Sep 2010 23:27:20 GMT</pubDate><description /><item><title>Hillel featured in The Post for Haiti Fundraiser</title><link>http://www.ohiohillel.org/hillel-featured-in-the-post-for-haiti-fundraiser</link><pubDate>Fri, 12 Feb 2010 16:34:54 GMT</pubDate><dc:creator>Graylyn Roose</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<span style="font-family: arial,sans serif; font-size: 13px; color: #000000;">Several of
Athens' faith-based groups will collaborate to hold a fundraiser
tonight to collect money for a country that still needs aid nearly a
month after disaster struck.<br />
<br />
The University Interfaith
Association will present "A Day of Hope For Haiti" from 5 to 8 p.m.
tonight at the First United Methodist Church on 2 S. College St. The
event will include a dinner featuring traditional Haitian cuisine and
musical entertainment by three area groups. Although the cost of the
meal will be covered by the University Interfaith Association,
attendees are encouraged to donate to Haiti relief efforts.<br />
<br />
"I
feel that we are just one of many wonderful partnerships between
student organizations and community organizations that have rallied
together in recent weeks for Haiti relief," said Rabbi Danielle Leshaw
of<strong> Hillel</strong> at Ohio University, which is also involved in the
fundraiser. "Our work is in keeping with the vision of Ohio University
to be part of a global people and to realize that our lives are best
lived when we serve other people."<br />
<br />
The event is an opportunity
to educate people about Haiti's condition, which was poor even before
the earthquake hit, said Bill Carroll, the priest at the Episcopal
Church of the Good Shepherd in Athens.<br />
<br />
"It will be a chance to
give and a chance to learn about Haiti and its people," Carroll said.
"We really want to get people involved in Haiti for the long haul."<br />
<br />
In
addition to each denomination's respective relief funds, there will be
four non-sectorial organizations to which attendees can give money,
said Jeff Bartlett, the interim pastor at the First Christian Church in
Athens. Doctors Without Borders, Habitat for Humanity, Red Cross, and
UNICEF were chosen because of their widespread reputations.<br />
<br />
"We kind of want to have organizations that we believe do credible work," Bartlett said.<br />
<br />
Bartlett likens the tradition of relief aid to the health of the physical body.<br />
<br />
"If
there's not a good circulation system of blood in the human body, it
can be disastrous. If we don't have a healthy flow of compassion, it's
not just people off in one part that suffer, the whole humankind
suffers," Bartlett said. "It's also in giving that we receive a kind of
blessing as well."
<p><span>&nbsp;</span></p>
<span><a target="_blank" href="http://thepost.ohiou.edu/main.asp?Search=1&amp;ArticleID=30489&amp;SectionID=1&amp;SubSectionID=2&amp;S=1">View article at The Post online &gt;</a></span></span>
]]></description><guid>http://www.ohiohillel.org/hillel-featured-in-the-post-for-haiti-fundraiser</guid></item><item><title>Jew Like Me</title><link>http://www.ohiohillel.org/jew-like-me</link><pubDate>Sun, 14 Feb 2010 21:28:23 GMT</pubDate><dc:creator>Evan Wilkof</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<p>I am excited to write the first blog for Ohio University Hillel’s new website!
<br />
<br />
My name is Evan Wilkof and I am junior in the College of Business, serving the Jewish student body as a Peer Network Engagement Intern and a Shabbat service leader and musician. While my freshman year on campus was filled with new and exciting experiences, the relationships I made and the opportunities experienced at Hillel have been the most significant and meaningful. The skills I've gained as a musician at Hillel have profoundly impacted my leadership abilities -- once reticent, I'm now confident to speak in front of a group or lead a congregation in religious observance. I feel embraced and welcomed at Hillel because of the warm, comfortable atmosphere, and because of our Hillel’s most significant asset -- Rabbi Danielle Leshaw. Her energetic, enthusiastic, and welcoming personality has encouraged so many new and current students to become an active part of Hillel. I encourage you to further your Jewish experiences whether it’s reaching out to a fellow Jew like me (<a href="mailto:ew206507@ohio.edu">ew206507@ohio.edu</a>)or Rabbi Danielle (<a href="mailto:leshaw@ohiou.edu">leshaw@ohiou.edu</a>) or by simply visiting Hillel, where students are always welcome.
</p>
]]></description><guid>http://www.ohiohillel.org/jew-like-me</guid></item><item><title>Shedding Armor In Georgia - One Intern's Experience at Hille's Engagement Institute</title><link>http://www.ohiohillel.org/shedding-armor-in-georgia---leadership-training-among-500</link><pubDate>Thu, 11 Feb 2010 16:33:56 GMT</pubDate><dc:creator>Mary Brett Koplen</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p>
Sometimes I wish I could be someone who wears her biography on her
sleeve. Or that I could be someone who isn’t so guarded. But I live in
a pretty little fortress with a high stone wall, and most of the time
it’s quite happy. Most of the time I don’t realize that I’m talking
through a wall. But every once in a while, I get claustrophobic, hop my
own fence, and walk around with armor shed. While we were in Georgia
I became acutely aware of this desire to open up and how hard it is. On
our second night there, the five of us from Ohio met with students from
two other schools, and spent hours sharing anecdotes from some of the
most tender parts of our memories. Needless to say, it was emotional.
Doubts, fears, unhealed scars were all cast into this circle, and no
one asked questions, no one judged; we all sat facing each other with
our walls torn down. But my jaw was rusted shut.</p>
I didn’t realize
why I had frozen in that very warm place until later that week. It
wasn’t anything specific that helped me realize what had happened— just
a good combination of conscientious thoughts and meaningful
conversations—and all the colors came together. While our big
wall-crumbling moment was meant to crumble walls, it was a time when I
needed to listen and soak in the pains of other people. That night I
needed to halt the deconstruction of my own boundaries, to save my
energy for those around me.<br />
<p>
In realizing this, I also promised
myself that when another opportunity arose, I would grease up my rusted
jaw and take it for a spin. And I promised myself it would be worth it. </p>
The
next chance we had to shed our armor came in the middle of Shabbat
preparations on Friday afternoon. We met with the same two schools out
in the Georgia sunshine, and we were asked to share the story of our
Jewish journeys. This is what I shared…<br />
<p>
Before I could formulate
memories of our family my parents had a very nasty divorce. My older
sister and I bounced back and forth between our parents, always
chauffeured by a third party. When we were with one parent we weren’t
permitted to contact the other, and mentioning one parent to the other
usually resulted in anger. But we were accustomed to our duel lives,
which crossed all components of living, including religion. Mom was
Episcopalian and Dad was Jewish, and I was Episcopalian and Jewish
depending on my address that week. The older I got the more I felt
drawn to Judaism, and the more I understood that it’s part of who I am.
But Mom was determined to have me on her side of the Bible. She
reminded me often that religion is matrilineal; because she wasn’t
Jewish I wasn’t either. It became an almost weekly conversation. My
Rabbi seemed to have the same opinion as my mother. He was hesitant
about my becoming Bat Mitzvah because of my “Christian influence.” When
I was 15, my congregation got a new Rabbi, and again, I brought up the
topic of Bat Mitzvah. Our new Rabbi had no reservations, but time was
an issue. I could either wait 2 years or 4 months and become Bat
Mitzvah in April. I chose the later and set to work. My Mom took the
news badly. She refused to take me to my lessons, and I had to sneak
out to meet with my Rabbi. When April finally came she wouldn’t come to
my ceremony. After that our relationship started to break apart. The
same year I became Bat Mitzvah, my sister formally converted, Mikveh
and all. After her conversion, she joined the chorus of voices trying
to convince me that I wasn’t Jewish. As recent as last week, we had an
argument after she told me she wasn’t going to let her future children
visit my secular home. You would think that all these struggles would
turn me into a Super-Jew, a girl so knowledgeable and confident in her
religion, that not even the voice of G-d could convince her otherwise.
That isn’t exactly true. There are many moments when I have to tell
myself that the only person that my Judaism depends on is me, and I’m
not the easiest person to convince... Back in Georgia, I closed my eyes
and my lips came back together, feeling like each syllable from my
mouth had been a wisp of smoke from ashes that could never be returned
to twigs. </p>
<p>
Later that day, after that second chance at sharing,
someone from our group came up to me and said that she had no idea
there were Jewish students who have had to struggle with so much doubt,
but this school year when she’s on her campus she’s going to remember
what I said. She said that her goal for this year will be to engage one
student who is struggling against everyone else’s definition of
Judaism, and to remind him that his is the only one that matters.</p>
<p>
She
was so right. As interns we’re expected to make a lot of relationships,
but if I can help one student fall in love with his own idea of
Jewishness, then I will feel like I have been successful. After all,
being Jewish (or being human for that matter) has very little to do
with what you know. It’s all about what do with the little you do know.</p>
I
realized in the week I spent with Dan, Evan, Max, and Danielle that
being brave enough to tell my own story can help others find their own
words.<br />
<p>
So that was a short tale about how my experience in Georgia
helped me melt my armor, and jump my fence. I hope you take this as a
welcome invitation to share something of yourself.</p>
I don’t know if anyone is reading this, but if you are… open up. I’ll listen.<br />
<div></div>
]]></description><guid>http://www.ohiohillel.org/shedding-armor-in-georgia---leadership-training-among-500</guid></item></channel></rss>