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The Jewish Chronicle

Starting the 'global conversation'

May 26, 2011 10:11
Participants at the Siach conference in Connecticut were divided into groups according to their area of activism

By

Jessica Elgot,

Jessica Elgot

2 min read

More than 120 Jewish environmentalists, social justice leaders and activists converged upon a quiet corner of Connecticut for Siach, the first major global conference on Jewish social action.

The UK's Jewish Social Action Forum, headed by David Brown, was the European organiser, bringing 20 per cent of participants from nations also including France, Germany and Hungary, to meet activists from the US and Israel.

The UK's representation was cross-communal, with delegates from the Board of Deputies, the United Synagogue, Noam, Reform Judaism and charities such as Tzedek, Gift and UJIA. Others came from more alternative organisations, such as Moishe House's Joel Stanley, who is setting up social action group Avodah UK. Delegates had to be social action professionals and apply for places. Co-organised with JSAF and US social action group Hazon, the four-day conference at the Isabella Freedman Retreat Centre was the brainchild of Dyonna Ginsberg, director of the Israel's Bema'aglei Tzedek.

Her aim was to establish "a global network of experienced Jewish environment and social justice professionals, as well as highly dedicated lay leaders, to connect and collaborate on a shared passion and commitment to tzedek and tikkun olam".