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2024 Auerbach Launch and Ignition Grant Recipients

Reconstructing Judaism’s Auerbach Launch Grants and Ignition Grants support rabbinical students and rabbis in reconstructing the Jewish landscape to be more inclusive and engaging. This year’s winners point the way to a dynamic Jewish future.

Auerbach Launch Grants

Coming soon!

Auerbach Ignition Grants 

Lev DiPaolo

headshot of Lev DePaolo

Lev’s innovative project is called: “Kol HaNeshamah“, and it aims to bridge the gap between “audience members” and “performers” by inviting the kahal (audience) into the performance experience. The hour-long program will consist of all original compositions by Lev DePaolo, scored for voice, viola da gamba, violin, and harpsichord, including settings of Yedid Nefesh, Kol HaNeshamah, Essa Einai, and verses from Yotzer OrThe ensemble will share fully-orchestrated versions of each 

composition, interspersed with simplified refrains that invite the kahal to sing and immerse themselves in our melodies. Participants will take time to invite repetition, variation, and silent meditation. This experimental project aims to blur the boundaries between professional and communal music-making, asking: what can we learn from each other when we allow these boundaries to become more porous? By removing barriers to participation in classical music, we also hope to make the genre more accessible to those who have been historically excluded from classical music. In bringing newly composed Jewish music to audiences in Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., Lev also hope to diversify the sound of Jewish music, offering new options for prayer leaders and clergy members to bring back to their own communities.

Rakhel Silverman-Gitin

Headshot of Rakhel Silverman Gitin

Rakhel’s Innovative project aims to educate and engage the community of Or Haneshamah, Ottawa’s Reconstructionist Congregation, on disability justice, and place it in conversation with the tradition of Shabbat. 

Instead of being focused on how to address the “issue” of disability within Judaism (i.e. what Jewish text thinks of disability), this project is focused on what Jews can 

learn from the wisdom of the disability community regarding rest and joy, and how to apply these teachings to deepen personal and communal Shabbat practices.

Their project will consist of two in-person workshops titled: “Disability Wisdom and Sacred Rest.” The first workshop will be an introduction to disability justice. It will teach different perspectives on disability such as social and medical models. It will then explain the difference between tolerance, acceptance, inclusion, and justice, and will examine how disability justice benefits all people, through concepts such as universal design. The second workshop will talk about sacred rest: Participants will learn about the disability concept of “cripping time” and perspectives on radical rest. Concluding the workshop, participants will close by brainstorming how to apply these learnings to personal lives and communal practices. Both workshops will utilize different modalities: readings from disability scholars and activists, artistic performances, ancient Jewish texts, and small and large group conversations.

Mat Wilson

Mat’s innovative idea: “The Disability Torah Project” seeks to grow the library of disability Torah (Torah and Jewish resources written by and from the perspective of people with disabilities), in order to uplift disabled perspectives, and reframe conversations around ability, normalcy, and value in both Torah and broader Jewish life. Existing gaps in leadership and scholarship in the Jewish learning sphere will be addressed by creating a digital space and presenting new content where disabled perspectives are not only included but centered: transforming Jewish learning into a more inclusive and equitable practice.

The Disability Torah Project is a new initiative dedicated to not only uplifting disabled voices, but empower disabled and chronically ill Jews to author and share their Torah. Through the use of social media and dedicated website, Disability Torah will create a space to house the writing and creations of disabled Jews, who will also be compensated for their work.

Mathieu’s goal is to connect with, empower, and compensate disabled and chronically ill authors in writings related to the weekly parshiot in the book of Exodus, as a start. With these resources in hand, they will create a library of Torah interpreted and understood through a disability lens that will be available to the public, that will celebrate and elevate the work of disabled Jews, who are often overlooked from the Jewish discussions. 

Interested in applying for an Ignition Grant? Click here to learn more and apply.

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