Bronfman youth fellowships

Bronfman Youth Fellowships
Motto A vibrant network of 1,000 young Jewish leaders grounded in Jewish learning and a commitment to pluralism
Location
Co-Directors
Rebecca Voorwinde and Rabbi Mishael Zion
Staff
13
Website Bronfman.org

The Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel (BYFI) is a non-profit educational program for young Jews in Israel and America.[1]
It was founded in 1987 by philanthropist Edgar M. Bronfman, and is funded through his foundation, The Samuel Bronfman Foundation.
The Bronfman Fellowships selects 26 outstanding North American teenagers and 20 Israeli teenagers for a rigorous academic year of seminars including a free, five-week trip to Israel between the summer of Fellows’ junior and senior years of high school. The program educates and inspires exceptional young Jews from diverse backgrounds to grow into leaders grounded in their Jewish identity and committed to social change.[2]
Its network of over 1,000 alumni include writers Jonathan Safran Foer, Dara Horn, and Daniel Handler aka Lemony Snicket; journalists Anya Kamenetz, the youngest person ever nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for her Village Voice series “Generation Debt: The New Economics of Being Young”; Adam Davidson, NPR business correspondent and NYT Magazine Columnist, and Jonathan Tepperman, Managing Editor of Foreign Affairs; and influential Jewish leaders such as Idit Klein, Executive Director of Keshet; Angela Warnick Buchdahl, senior rabbi at Manhattan's Central Synagogue;[3] Rabbi Dan Smokler, of the NYU Bronfman Center and Hillel International; and Rabbi Rachel Nussbaum, from The Kavanah Cooperative. Bronfman Youth Fellowships alumni include 8 Rhodes Scholars, 4 Supreme Court clerks, 11 Fulbright Scholars, 25 Wexner Fellows and 21 Dorot Fellows.
Their 2011 applicant to fellow ratio was 12:1, whereas Yale’s was 14:1 and Harvard’s 16:1.[4] The Bronfman Fellowships has been listed by Chuck Hughes, former Senior Admissions Officer at Harvard, in his book, "What it Really Takes to Get Into the Ivy League and other Highly Selective Colleges" as one of the programs which "act as filters for admissions officers to validate candidates who have been similarly identified by other organizations for talent and promise."[5]

See also

External links

References

  1. "The Jewish Week". Retrieved 19 December 2013.
  2. Jacobson, Judie (2013-11-13). "The Bronfman Youth Fellowships in Israel". The Jewish Ledger. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
  3. http://forward.com/articles/182011/angela-buchdahl-first-asian-american-rabbi-vies-fo/?p=all
  4. "eJewish Philanthropy". Retrieved 2013-12-19.
  5. Hughes, Chuck (2003). What it Really Takes to Get Into the Ivy League and other Highly Selective Colleges. Mc Graw Hill. p. 45. ISBN 007141259X.


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.