Hello, friends.
This week I attended an excellent
Jewish leadership conference as part of the MASA program. MASA provides a
lot of funding for young Jews to come to Israel from abroad--including
people doing programs like mine. In total, there were 200 young people at
the conference from all around the world--about half are Americans, a
quarter are from Russia or countries that were formerly part of the
USSR, and a quarter are from other places (Europe, South America, etc.).
This
week was very rewarding. I find group settings like this can be hit or
miss--are the people going to be truly thoughtful and engaged? Will the
sessions be educational or boring? Five days is a long time to spend
together if things do not mesh--but the sessions were largely
thought-provoking, the people were friendly, and it was a worthwhile
experience.
I was also very grateful that the conference
organizers selected me as one of seven people to present a ten-minute
speech to about 170 of the participants. Of course, when they asked for
proposals, I made mine all about interfaith. I gave my speech on
Tuesday night, entitled, "Jewish Leadership: Why Do We Need
Interfaith?"
I was so happy that people really seemed to
connect with my push to more interfaith outreach. It was very moving that after all the
speeches ended, a number of participants lined up to discuss the topic
further with me. These were people that agreed with my sentiments, or
came from mixed-faith families themselves, and more. We continued the
conversation on interfaith for a while. Throughout the rest of the
conference, people continued to approach me to say that the speech had
had an impact on them.
They took a video of the
speeches, so I wanted to share mine here for those interested in hearing a bit more about my perspective on the necessity of interfaith dialogue. Just scroll down the page a bit until you see, "Welcome to the Masa-GLI Global Leadership Summit November 2016 TED Talks - Part 2." If
you drag the viewer to the time of 14:00, you'll
see me: Allyson's MASA Speech
Please feel free to offer helpful critiques if you have some
ideas for topics I should have included in the speech, if you see any weak parts of the presentation,
etc. I would love to hear ways that I can make my personal narrative
more effective, so that it can hopefully be a more powerful tool to encourage
others to participate in interfaith dialogue. I am so happy after this week, and really very motivated to continue to share my experiences in interfaith more widely.
Now go out and love one another.
<3,
Allyson

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