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Whether your community has been working thoughtfully on issues of racial justice and inclusion for a long time, or if you are just starting out, this cohort will support you in the work of becoming more diverse, aware, and impactful in your activism.

The Brit Olam work encompasses multiple ways to join a network of congregations working together toward a common goal.

Your congregation or community may choose to join a RAC state project, an issue-based cohort, or both.

In this way, each individual action can amplify and increase the impact of all others. We are doing things together.

Jewish Values

In the Torah, Jews are taught to accept others, without prejudice or bias. The Torah states "You shall not hate your kinsfolk in your heart. Reprove your kinsman, but incur no guilt because of him. You shall not take vengeance or bear a grudge against your countrymen. Love your fellow as yourself: I am the Eternal" (Leviticus 19: 17-18). For more on racial justice and Jewish values, check out:

  • Reflect, Relate, Reform - a framework designed for synagogues and communities to spur learning and conversation about racial diversity, about the deep racial disparities that afflict our society, about how we as Reform Jews can join the struggle for racial justice.
  • Reform Movement Resolutions - The Reform Movement and the RAC work together across lines of difference to fight the structural racism that is embedded in our society and to advance justice for all people, regardless of race or ethnicity.

Resources and Educational Opportunities

Dismantling Systemic Racism

Becoming Antiracist Congregations

  • Jews of Color (JOC) Educational Resource Module - This toolkit is designed to help us think through how we can proactively create a community fully supportive to all members, including Jews of color, proactively and equally.
  • Audacious Hospitality Pilot Toolkit – Download the Audacious Hospitality Pilot Toolkit which is to support congregational and Jewish communal leaders to embrace the diversity that is the reality of modern Jewish life.

What's New

Bearing Witness at "Alligator Alcatraz"

Just over an hour from where we live, a migrant detention center was built in the swamps of the Everglades. People quickly nicknamed it “Alligator Alcatraz.” It is a place where men, women, and children — many fleeing violence or poverty — are confined behind barbed wire, without adequate food, water, medical care, or access to family, friends, or lawyers.

RAC-NY Update

Two climate bills that RAC-NY helped to drive were the "talk of the town" in the final days of New York's legislative session.