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The Center for Cultural Judaism was established in New York in 2003[1] to serve all secular Jews. The center focuses on implementing educational, and outreach programs designed to reach Jews who do not find meaning in Judaism as a religion, but for whom Judaism as a culture is meaningful.

Posen Project

The Center for Cultural Judaism provides grants through the Posen Project for the study of secular Jewish history and cultures. These grants are intended to cultivate and support the interdisciplinary study of secular Jewish history and cultures within already well-established university programs and departments of Jewish studies, history, philosophy, sociology, anthropology, and other related disciplines. Grants are awarded to support the teaching of two to four courses per year in the origin, history, development, texts, philosophy, writings, and practices of Jewish secularism.

Over thirty institutions in North America and Europe are associated with the Posen Project for the study of secular Jewish history and cultures. New institutions joining the project recently include Brandeis University, Goucher College, Harvard University, Lehigh University, Rice University, Sorbonne - School of Graduate Studies, University College London, University of Kansas, and University of Wroclaw.

Similar programs are underway in Israel at the University of Haifa, Tel Aviv University, Ofakim Teachers' Program at Tel Aviv University, the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya, and the Open University, among others.

Journals

Secular Culture & Ideas

Secular Culture & Ideas is a journal that explores how secular Jews connect to their heritage through Jewish art, history, languages, literature, philosophy, foodways, folklore, and politics. The journal offers a range of articles on subjects including Roots of Jewish Secularism, Secular Thinkers, Holidays, and Life-Cycle, as well as past issues and a blog, Secular News & Notes.

Contemplate

Since its debut in 2001, Contemplate: The International Journal of Cultural Jewish Thought has published three volumes of essays, articles, and poetry about secular Jewish culture and progressive Jewish politics. Its contributors include Amos Oz, Ilan Stavans, A.B. Yehoshua, and Robert Pinsky. It is published annually.

On-Site Resources

A central library of books, articles, and videos on secular, Humanistic, and cultural Judaism is being created at the center, which sells books as well.

The site also functions as a meeting space and hosts cultural Jewish celebrations, services, and rites of passage aimed towards non-religious, secular, cultural, and Humanistic Jews.

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Center for Cultural Judaism Opens". pluralism.org. Retrieved 2023-07-30.