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Jennifer Lipman

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

Opinion

Our teenagers could become a lost generation

'Youth movements are journeys, every step a milestone. What happens when those steps fall away?'

June 22, 2020 13:34
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3 min read

it’s hard to overstate the influence youth movements have had on my life. They are where I made lasting friendships, formed my Jewish identity, learnt about Jewish history, the conduit through which I became a Zionist. They are my teenage memories, my coming-of-age backdrop, where friends fell in love; as a leader, they were where I learnt how to handle difficult situations.

And, while the picture varies for different movements, they are under threat. Beyond sustained school closures, summer is beckoning. This year there will be no tents in muddy fields, no wide-games at remote boarding schools. No post-GCSE Israel trips; no programmes taking teens in the footsteps of their ancestors across Europe. And, as classrooms have sat empty, there have been no in-person Shabbat activities, no weekly meetings since early March.

Summer is their peak season and, like hotels and beachside cafes, they are facing three winters. I’ve spoken to several movement leaders; in the short-term they have availed themselves of the furlough scheme and other stopgap measures. But as not-for-profits, they don’t have mounds of cash to fall back on. Especially for those not backed by a world movement or synagogue, summer programmes are key to enabling them to stay afloat year-round. “We are struggling in the face of reduced income,” says one, pointing out that the immediate pressure to provide refunds for planned activities, alongside likely reductions in donations, could leave them in financial jeopardy.

There is another, perhaps more existential threat; that those who miss out don’t return next summer. Boohoo, so they don’t get a holiday, but it’s more than that. A positive Jewish experience at 16 will shape your life at least to some degree; influencing, if not deciding, whether you mix in Jewish circles, whether you look for shared Jewish values in a partner, whether maintaining your heritage is important.