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Opinion

Youth movements remain an exceptional opportunity for Jewish young people

The controlled risk-taking these movements afford generates extraordinary returns at a time when wider society is becoming increasingly smothering

August 10, 2023 12:21
LJY Camp
2 min read

Were you in a youth movement? Many readers will have attended a youth movement summer camp or Israel tour. This summer, more than half of the 16-year-olds amongst mainstream Jewry will have just come home from youth movement Israel tours, supported by UJIA Israel Experience, and 3,200 are currently on UK summer camps, across the ideological spectrum of our diverse community.   

For tens of thousands of you, youth movements will have left indelible, positive memories that shaped your lives — whether by finding meaning in Israel and Jewish identity, meeting your life partner or making lifelong friendship groups (with uncontrollable laughter along the way). Thousands of you will have given up time and energy in volunteer leadership roles as madrichim/madrichot and will appreciate the responsibilities you were given and the invaluable learning and life skills you developed.

It is not by chance that our cross-communal organisations today are led by graduates of our youth movements — the Board of Deputies, CST, Jewish Care, the JLC, JW3, Norwood and UJIA, to name just a few.

I have been privileged to witness today’s transformative power of youth movements and their ability to consistently deliver Jewish life-affirming programmes that provide a very effective antidote to disengagement from our Jewish community and Israel. Their informal Jewish education approach is built on voluntary participation in a highly creative and dynamic setting, providing intensive group experiences in which deep friendships flourish and where everyone has a chance to become a leader.