Showing posts with label Rabbi Deborah Zuker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rabbi Deborah Zuker. Show all posts

Monday, February 3, 2020

Jewish Disability Awareness, Acceptance and Inclusion Month: ‘Inclusion enthusiasts’ JOIN together to create positive change

(From left) Ruchama Uzan, Madeleine Hill Werier and Rabbi Deborah Zuker founded JOIN to advocate for the inclusion of special needs children in Jewish community life.

“The purpose of JOIN is to create a network of mutual support for families dealing with the joys and challenges of raising exceptional children,” says Rabbi Deborah Zuker.

By Louise Rachlis

When Madelaine Hill Werier once went to sign up her special needs child to participate in a general program, she recalls being told, “We don’t do that here.” Fortunately, such negative experiences are not often the case.

“I have experienced some great examples of inclusion for my kids within the community,” said Hill Werier, a co-founder of the Jewish Ottawa Inclusion Network (JOIN). “I feel embraced and welcomed by my synagogue, our schools, and camps. It’s not always that way, however, and it never fails to shock me when exclusion or discrimination does occur.”

JOIN is collaborating with the Jewish Federation of Ottawa, Tamir, Jewish Family Services of Ottawa and Kehillat Beth Israel to sponsor Jewish Disability Awareness, Acceptance and Inclusion Month in the city.

Hill Werier says that although those negative moments “temporarily stun and sting,” they also “inspire and drive us to put the daily hours into our JOIN endeavours. Being there for other families when they have those moments is another rewarding part of this work.”

Hill Werier, Rabbi Deborah Zuker and Ruchama Uzan, all mothers of special needs children, founded JOIN in December 2017.

The self-described “inclusion enthusiasts” created JOIN to advocate, network and develop programs for the inclusion of children with diverse abilities in Ottawa’s Jewish community.

“We all had children who attended Ganon Preschool at the Soloway Jewish Community Centre and knew each other,” said Hill Werier. “Rabbi Zuker and I have children with similar issues and noticed there was an opportunity to fill a gap in our community. Ru seemed like a good third person and she was very enthusiastic.”

Rabbi Zuker, associate rabbi at Kehillat Beth Israel, has two children, Uzan has four and Hill Werier has two. The busy mothers took a bit of time to figure out what would be most “impactful” and the best use of their time.

“We all have different professional experience,” said Hill Werier. “We’re not social workers or psychologists, we’re parents. The best way for us to be useful is to connect people to other people, and to be a constant and positive advocate for inclusion whenever our energy and schedules allow.”

“The purpose of JOIN is to create a network of mutual support for families dealing with the joys and challenges of raising exceptional children,” said Rabbi Zuker. “Too often we come up against roadblocks for our children and can feel quite alone. Knowing others who have been there before, and who have insight to share, builds power and makes us each better parents and advocates. Our children belong in our shared Jewish spaces as much as any children do, and those spaces – not the children – can make this happen by committing to deep principles of inclusion.”

“JOIN also seeks to raise the profile of disability inclusion for people of all ages in our Ottawa Jewish community,” said Rabbi Zuker. “We have seen that while most have good intentions, there is too much ‘old thinking’ about what is possible, who belongs, and how to make that happen.”

“Our kids inspired us to do this, but our work doesn’t have to always be about our own individual children,” explained Hill Werier. “We’ve all had experiences, positive and negative, that have lit the fires for advocacy and volunteer work.”

“We have had to advocate for inclusive placements for our son in both public school and private schools,” said Uzan, owner of A Dashing Pinch, a kosher caterer. “We have advocated for camp and extracurricular activities. JOIN has helped as a place for support through the processes. A place where it is OK to not be OK with the status quo. Where ideas are shared in a proactive and supportive way.”

While Uzan says JOIN’s advocacy has had productive outcomes, there is still “a long road ahead to take the advocacy from basic permission to systems and institutions inviting and welcoming our kids and families.”

JOIN has held several workshops – including “Disability Rights 101” with Harvey Goldberg, which was held January 30 at Jewish Family Services of Ottawa. Among the attendees at their workshops are parents, teachers and educators from the community, as well as therapists and others both inside and outside the Jewish community.

They have also arranged social events that included children of all abilities and participated in events like Mitzvah Day where their “Sensory Squad” provided sensory break stations at busy community children’s events, and community education about sensory sensitivities. The quiet area lets kids regroup and then return to the activities.

JOIN has a Facebook page and is in the process of forming a board of directors.

“Experiencing discrimination or exclusion in a faith community, especially concerning one’s child, is profoundly hurtful and devastating,” said Hill Werier. “Using our shared lived experience and engaging other families in our community, we are creating positive change in our community. It’s a gradual shift but it is happening. JOIN has participated in some wonderful collaborations and is continuing to find community partners who share our desire for inclusion. It is a beautiful thing.”

Monday, November 18, 2019

Jewish Family Services celebrates 40 years at AGM

(From left) Jewish Family Services Co-Chairs Steve Morgan and Mark Luden with Past-Chair Jack Shinder at the JFS annual general meeting, October 30, at Bayview Yards.

By Matthew Horwood

Jewish Family Services of Ottawa (JFS) celebrated 40 years of serving Ottawa’s Jewish community at its annual general meeting, October 30, at Bayview Yards.

According to JFS Executive Director Sarah Caspi, “none of this would have been possible without the support of our innovative, dedicated and resilient staff.”

When the organization was created in 1979, Caspi said, it was located in the basement of the Jewish Community Centre on Chapel Street, with just three staff and a budget of $42,000. Today, JFS has over 80 staff, offices that occupy two floors at 2255 Carling Avenue, and a budget of over $6 million.

JFS serves 8,300 clients with more than 65 programs and services, including its Tikvah Program to support vulnerable and low income Jewish residents of Ottawa, Shalom Bayit Services for women experiencing abuse, settlement support for newcomers from various cultural, ethnic and linguistic backgrounds, and a variety of counselling services for people of all ages.

“We continue to grow in size and scope, but we stay true to our mission to serve our community,” Caspi said.

“Whether we are providing case management to an aging Holocaust survivor, offering trauma counselling to a vulnerable newcomer, creating a safety plan for a woman leaving an abusive relationship or providing short-term counselling to someone struggling with mental health issues, our staff are there to help,” Caspi said.

Jack Shinder, whose three-year term as chair of the JFS board ended at the AGM, said JFS’ corporate leadership has “never been stronger.” However, Shinder said, the organization’s capacity to serve its clientele requires more human input, and so he encouraged the audience to consider working alongside JFS with “empathy, expertise and understanding.”

Shinder was succeeded by Mark Luden and Steve Morgan who now serve as co-chairs of the JFS board.

Morgan said JFS is “working from a position of great strength” as a result of the skill, talent and dedication of its staff and laid out the JFS board’s priorities for the coming year: to “take stock of where we have come from and where we want to be in the future”; to ensure the organization has the proper structures in place to reflect its size and maturity; and to leverage JFS’ volunteers to build upon the knowledge and experience of its board members.

Luden quoted from the fourth chapter of Ecclesiastes, “two are better than one – but pity anyone who falls and has no one to help them up.” Luden said this passage is a commentary on a person’s fear of isolation and disconnection, which JFS has been working to decrease for 40 years. Luden also wished for “increased connections between all of us” in the New Year.

Keynote speaker Jackie Holzman (left) with Jewish Family Services Executive Director Sarah Caspi at the JFS annual general meeting, October 30, at Bayview Yards.
Jackie Holzman, Ottawa’s mayor from 1991 to 1997, was guest speaker at the AGM. JFS was founded following a review of the social services available to Ottawa’s Jewish community that was conducted by Holzman. The study found that despite what many thought at the time, there were problems in the community.

“When we talked about alcoholism, poverty or the unemployed, people would say ‘not in our community,’ but there was a need,” Holzman said. “Our community is so much better when people work together, and that’s what [JFS] is all about.”

Holzman is currently vice-chair of Compassionate Ottawa, a volunteer-driven organization created to “support and empower individuals, their families and their communities throughout life for dying and grieving well.”

Holzman said in 2017, when Compassionate Ottawa was being created, they found that JFS was the “go-to agency” when it came to the multicultural community. That is why Compassionate Ottawa has partnered with JFS to “help people in their own environment, with their own language and culture, to be able to decide how they want to live.”

(From left) Andrea Gardner of Jewish Family Services presents the Elaine Rabin Social Service Award to Rabbi Deborah Zuker, Ruchama Uzan and Madelaine Werier, founders of JOIN – the Jewish Ottawa Inclusion Network, at the JFS annual general meeting, October 30, at Bayview Yards.
The Elaine Rabin Social Service Award, given annually to “an individual who has stood up for a cause or on behalf of a group that struggles to stand on their own” was presented by JFS Assistant Executive Director Andrea Gardner to Madelaine Werier, Rabbi Deborah Zuker and Ruchama Uzan, founders of JOIN – the Jewish Ottawa Inclusion Network, an organization that facilitates and advocates for inclusion for children with special needs in the community.

Shelli Kimmel receives the Jewish Family Services Volunteer of the Year Award from George Sladowski at the JFS annual general meeting, October 30, at Bayview Yards.
George Sladowski presented the Volunteer of the Year Award to Shelli Kimmel, and Caspi presented the Long Service Awards to dozens of JFS staff, to celebrate work milestones of 10-15 years, 15-20 years and 20+ years.

Jewish Federation of Ottawa President and CEO Andrea Freedman, said the hallmark of any great community is not how it treats its “kings and queens,” but how it treats its most vulnerable. Freedman credited JFS’ “inspiring leadership team and tireless and dedicated volunteers” for helping to make Ottawa’s Jewish community “extraordinary.”