Missed a session? Watch recordings from Festival events that highlight the kind of bold vision and action we’ll need to confront the climate crisis.
Wednesday, January 27, 9 – 10 am ET
Judaism offers a unique and powerful spiritual perspective on collective action in the face of existential crisis. We will look at Moses, Isaiah and Daniel as individual figures in Jewish text who faced existential, societal crisis and what their responses can teach us about the spiritual aspects of working together to promote climate justice.
With Josh Bender, a second year-rabbinical student at the Jewish Theological Seminary and Organizing Fellow with Dayenu, a Jewish call for climate action.
Wednesday, January 27, 12 – 1 pm ET (9 – 10 am PT)
We believe the time has come to make addressing the climate crisis a central moral issue of the Jewish community. We have a moral imperative to demonstrate our care for the natural world and for all who will be impacted by the effects of climate change. As a Jewish community, we have always dedicated ourselves fervently to the future. Often, this interest has led us to invest in building a vibrant Jewish future. Now, we must pause to recognize that the rich and beautiful Jewish future we dream of is predicated on a human future, and a future for our planet. We who are so committed to ensuring Jewish continuity must also be committed to the cause of human continuity. With Eric Fingerhut, Ruth Messinger, Rabbi Jennie Rosenn and Nigel Savage, 4 of our community’s most influential leaders.
Wednesday, January 27, 1 – 2 pm ET (10 – 11 am PT)
We know that work in the climate is more important than ever and real opportunities are finally here! Do you want to get involved in the ground breaking, even historic, action needed right now?
This session’s panel will describe how with grit, daring and fun a grassroots organization in NYC –Jewish Climate Action Network NYC – developed effective relationships with state senators, converting them into climate champions who prioritize climate as part of their legislative agendas. You will gain important insights and valuable tips and tools from our panel, all of whom participated in these efforts in NYC, to do this work as well.
Wednesday, January 27, 8 – 9:15 pm ET (5 – 6:15 pm PT)
Let’s Zoom! Zoom way out, that is. As we face the sixth great mass extinction, the tree of evolutionary life is teetering. Yet life plays the long game. In this session, we will explore the Tree of Life in the Garden of Eden, the Tree of Evolutionary Life, and the Unetaneh Tokef prayer of the High Holidays to zoom way out on the climate crisis and find a perspective that is broader and deeper than our individual lives or even humanity. There is much awe and wonder to be found when we learn about and imagine deep time.
SHOSHANA MEIRA FRIEDMAN is a rabbi, writer, mother, activist, and song-leader in Boston. She serves as the Director of Professional Development at Hebrew College, and as a rabbinic consultant to Dayenu: A Jewish Call to Climate Action.
Wednesday, January 27, 8:30 – 9:30 pm ET (5:30-6:30 pm PT)
To effectively combat climate change, we need action in every sector and at all levels of government. Across the country, Jewish communities are joining with our neighbors to win strong climate policy at the state and local level that is often leading where federal action has lagged. In this panel, we’ll hear from state legislators, activists, and advocates engaged in intersectional politics to advance climate policy. How can our communities lend our gifts and voices to join winning coalitions for systemic change?
With Vlad Gutman-Britten, Washington Director for Climate Solutions; Chloe Maxmin, Maine State Senator; Representative Debra Lekanoff, 40th legislative district of Washington state and the only Native American woman to currently serve in the Legislature, Aaron Regunberg, and Joelle Novey, Director of DC and Maryland Interfaith Power & Light and Dayenu Advisory Board Member.
Thursday, January 28, 7 – 8 pm ET (4 – 5 pm PT)
One week into President Biden’s new administration, climate and environmental justice movement leaders Kerene N. Tayloe, Esq., Director of Federal Legislative Affairs with WE ACT for Environmental Justice, Sara Blazevic, co-founder and Training Director of the Sunrise Movement, and Anthony Karefa Rogers-Wright, of NY Lawyers for the Public Interest and former Policy Coordinator for the Climate Justice Alliance reflect on how we got here: on the one hand, colliding pandemic, climate, racism, economic, and rising white supremacist crises, and on the other hand, historic voter turnout and the most aggressive U.S. climate policy platform in history, fueled by movements led by young people and people of color. And we look ahead to where we go from here to transition urgently from a fossil fuel economy to a just, green, economy, and the roles Jewish communities can play and are playing in solidarity with others for a just, livable future for all. Moderated by professor, author and Dayenu Advisory Board Member Dr. Dana R. Fisher.
Thursday, January 28, 12 – 1 pm ET (9 – 10 am PT)
We don’t often think about the climate crisis as an opportunity for spiritual practice, but it’s one of the most important tools we have to build our personal and collective resilience. This interactive workshop will focus on the spiritual, emotional, and ecological rhythms that keep us and the planet aligned and whole. We’ll incorporate stories, meditation, writing, learning, and discussion to workshop our connections with ourselves, each other, and the earth.
Led by Alison Laichter and Nati Passow, this session will be a collaborative experience weaving together Earth-based Judaism, mysticism, spirituality, climate science, and fun.
Thursday, January 28, 3 – 4pm ET (12-1 pm PT)
We all want to confront climate change, but how? In this session, we will study models of Jewish leadership in moments of environmental crisis, using sources from Torah commentaries, the Zohar, and Hasidic literature. We will focus on the question of how we can act to prevent climate disaster. This will give us the opportunity to consider what is needed in this era of climate crisis, and what role we each can play.
With Rabbi Josh Weisman, co-founder of the Big Bold Jewish Climate Festival, the Urgency of Now Seattle Jewish Climate Festival, and JTree.
Thursday, January 28, 3 – 4 pm EST (12 – 1 pm PST)
To make climate action a central moral priority of the Jewish community, we need to train leaders to tackle this important issue and lead their communities. Seminary leaders from across and beyond denominations will discuss the opportunities and obligations of Jewish leadership in this era of climate crisis.
With Rabbi Sharon Cohen Anisfeld, Hebrew College; Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson, Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies and American Jewish University; Rabbi Daniel Nevins, Rabbinical School, Jewish Theological Seminary of America; Rabbi Deborah Waxman, Ph.D., Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, Rabbi Dvora Weisberg, Ph.D., HUC-JIR Rabbinical School, Moderated by Rabbi Jennie Rosenn, CEO, Dayenu
Thursday, January 28, 4 – 5 pm ET (1 – 3 pm PT)
This session will examine communal psalms of lament in the Bible and contemporary poetry expressing grief about the climate crisis. Using these tools as models we will compose short poems expressing our own feelings about the crisis. By acknowledging the depth of our grief, we will gain strength and conviction in our social action in the future.
With Maor Greene, a rabbinical student and doctoral candidate in Hebrew Bible at Jewish Theological Seminary. They currently work with both Dayenu and Park Slope Jewish Center as a rabbinic intern.
Thursday, January 28, 6:30 – 8:00 pm ET (3:30-5 pm PT)
In this interactive workshop, youth from Jewish Youth for Community Action (JYCA) and adults from Jews On Ohlone Land (JOOL) will share why we’re focusing on partnerships with local indigenous community as part of our Jewish practice and climate justice work. We will hold space for participants to learn and explore the connections between land, climate, and Indigenous sovereignty. We will share resources for other youth, families, and organizations to start supporting Indigenous-led land efforts.
*Note: We will be framing this workshop from a solidarity perspective because none of our current youth or staff are Indigenous. We welcome knowledge, experience and voices of Jews Indigenous to Turtle Island/North America.
Friday, January 29, 9 – 10 am ET
What ideas in Jewish tradition motivate us to take action on climate change? There are many, and each will resonate differently with each person. The goal of this class is to explore the Jewish ideas and texts that can both inspire and spiritually sustain our activism. We will discuss the different possible motivators in the Jewish tradition that call a person to take climate action and study texts that can help serve as a foundation for one’s climate activism.
Joshua Klein is a rabbinical student at the Jewish Theological Seminary, an intern at Dayenu: A Jewish Call to Climate Action, and a founding steering committee member of the Jewish Climate Coalition.
Friday, January 29, 1 – 2:30 pm ET (10 – 11:30 am PT)
As Jews, when we discuss “environmental racism,” conversations and learning often fall into the paradigm of framing the conversation as “Us” (Jews) and “Them” (People of Color). When this framing occurs, even if subconsciously, what assumptions are being made about who Jews are and where do Jews of Color fit in?
Join Kristy Drutman (Brown Girl Green), Nate Looney (Avodah), and Yoshi Silverstein (Mitsui Collective) for a conversation and Q&A on their experiences as Jews of Color working at the intersections of nature connection, environmental activism, farming, service, and Jewish education; and on how the Jewish climate movement must evolve in its relationships and practices both external and internal to Jewish community in order to actualize a green and equitable future.
Saturday, January 30 8 – 9:30 pm ET (5-6:30 pm PT)
Join us for an evening of singing to sustain us in our climate work. Meet new musicians, learn new songs, and feel more connected. We know from the justice struggles on whose shoulders we stand that communal song is a vital element of a powerful movement.
Join Rabbi Shoshana Meira Friedman of Hebrew College, Rabbi Micah Shapiro of Penn Hillel, Ariel Korman of Ammud: Jews of Color Torah Academy. We will sing our way into a new week together.
Sunday, January 31, 1 – 2 pm ET (10 – 11 am PT)
Community organizing is a craft. In Torah, and in the contemporary struggle for climate justice, strategic confrontations with decision makers catalyze whirlwind moments where what seemed impossible yesterday may soon come to pass. How do we create these whirlwind moments to win big and lasting changes? By looking at case studies from the Sunrise Movement and Torah, we will draw out organizing principles behind dramatic moments of confrontation that changed the balance of power.
With Jesse Yurrow (Urban Adamah and Sunrise Bay Area), Muriel MacDonald (Dayenu and Sunrise Bay Area), and Mo Zuckerman (Sierra Club and Sunrise Bay Area)
Sunday, January 31, 7 – 8:30 pm ET (4 – 5:30 PT)
Join the young Jewish rock stars of the climate movement, including Dayenu Advisory Board Member Isha Clarke, to learn about the passion, power and practical impact they have had, and continue to have, on this movement. This event will be an energetic, thoughtful conversation between movement leaders.
With Jamie Margolin(Zero Hour), Isha Clarke (Youth Vs. Apocalypse), Katie Eder(Future Coalition) and Amalia Hochman (Sunrise Movement), guided by personal stories of past activism and organizing that spur discussion around what’s in store, for the youth movement at large and our Jewish response, in the year to come.
Sunday, January 31, 5:30 – 6:30 pm ET (2:30-3:30 pm PT)
Cities use ⅔’s of the world’s energy and generate more than 70% of the world’s carbon, which means cities are central to our climate problem and its solution. What’s more, folks in cities tend to have greater consensus on climate than voters at the state or national level. Cities can model liveable solutions to climate change, creating momentum for Federal action.
Join some of the most visionary and effective city leaders who have been making change locally to learn how cities can lead on climate.
With Brad Lander (New York City Council) Councilmember Tammy J. Morales (Seattle City Council) and Aura Vasquez (Commissioner for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power)
Sunday, January 31, 6:30 – 7:30 pm ET (3:30-4:30 pm PT)
Organizing is partly science and partly art. Join us to get tips from experienced activists about how you can grow the Jewish grassroots. Come prepared to try out some great ideas during our session and share your best techniques too.
This will be a moderated discussion and workshop with lots of stories and examples from on the ground organizing, and opportunities to practice techniques for organizing and advocacy like building relationships through storytelling, one on one conversations and facilitating advocacy through letter-writing.
With Mirele B. Goldsmith, Jewish Earth Alliance and Dayenu Advisory Board; Madi Hirschland, Creation Care Partners; Benjamin Kreiswirth, Jewish Climate Action Network-NYC and Eric Weltman, Food & Water Watch.
The Big Bold Jewish Climate Fest is a free, virtual and collaborative festival by and for people who want to activate Jewish values to move the needle on climate change. We believe the time has come to make climate action a central moral issue of our community, and our current moment is a unique opportunity for collaboration and engagement that might otherwise not have been possible.
By signing up, you will receive periodic communications from Dayenu.