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B'nai B'rith Youth Organization

 
Education Encyclopedia: Youth Organizations: B'nai B'rith Youth Organization

The B'nai B'rith Youth Organization (BBYO) is an international organization whose purpose is to help young Jewish people achieve personal growth so that they may lead satisfying and socially useful lives in the Jewish community and in the larger community in which they live. The BBYO encourages its members to participate in a broad program of cultural, religious, community service, educational, human relations, athletic, and social activities.

Program

All BBYO activities are designed as learning experiences. The community-service program combines fund-raising and personal service. Each local chapter contributes to the International Service Fund. The money is used for leadership training activities within the BBYO and for such philanthropic organizations as the Leo N. Levi Memorial Hospital in Hot Springs, Arkansas; the B'nai B'rith Children's Home near Jerusalem in Israel; the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.; the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere (CARE); and many others. B'nai B'rith Youth Organization groups also participate in local Jewish Welfare Fund campaigns, local health drives, and other local community-service efforts. The BBYO operates two camps for members: the B'nai B'rith Perlman Camp in Starlight, Pennsylvania, and the B'nai B'rith Beber Camp in Mukwonago, Wisconsin. In addition, the BBYO sponsors summer exchange programs for members to study and work in Israel, with Israeli teenagers traveling to the United States and other countries.

In the area of personal service, the BBYO sponsors the Adopt-a-Grandparent Program, in which youngsters provide companionship to the aged in or out of institutions. B'nai B'rith Youth Organization groups also entertain and help children in hospitals, homes, and other institutions. BBYO members read to the blind and help the physically and mentally handicapped. Further BBYO activities include tutoring underachievers, taking disadvantaged children to museums and recreational events, and collecting books for use in economically deprived areas.

The BBYO also sponsors various interfaith initiatives and runs the College Ambassador Alumni program and the Holocaust Expression Theatre. Religious services and holiday celebrations, as well as contests in athletics, drama, oratory, storytelling, creative writing, sermon writing, music, and visual arts are held at the chapter level. Local winners proceed through chapter and regional levels to the international finals held at Perlman or Berber Camp.

The BBYO publishes numerous pamphlets about Judaism for use by teenagers. The organization also publishes adviser newsletters, various program guides and other program aids, and newspapers called Shofar and The Commish.

Organization

The BBYO is a federation of three youth organizations: the Aleph Zadik Aleph (AZA) for high school boys, the B'nai B'rith Girls (BBG) for high school girls, and the B'nai B'rith Teen Connection for middle school boys and girls. Each local chapter has a volunteer adviser who is supervised by the professional staff of social group workers. Chapters are united into regions, each of which has a youth structure, an adult policymaking structure, and a professional staff structure. There are thirty-seven BBYO regions in North America, which report directly to the BBYO International Executive Board. The international office is responsible for setting standards and goals, budget and staffing, and publications. Most programs and activities are organized at the local level.

Membership

Because Jewish aspirations are emphasized, membership is open only to Jewish youths. Parents of BBYO members need not be affiliated with the larger B'nai B'rith organization. By 2000 the BBYO had more than 50,000 members in over 1,500 chapters throughout the world.

History

The B'nai B'rith youth movement originated in 1924 in Omaha, Nebraska, with a single chapter of sixteen boys who opposed the exclusive high school and college social fraternity system. Three other chapters were formed during the same year, and the four groups held their first convention in July 1924. In 1925 the youth organization received official sponsorship by the B'nai B'rith organization. The first chapter of B'nai B'rith Girls was founded in 1927 in San Francisco, California. In 1944 the two organizations merged and became the BBYO. The Teen Connection was established later to meet the needs of younger boys and girls.

Internet Resource

B'NAI B'RITH Youth Organization. 2002.

www.bbyo.org.

— EDITH M. LERRIGO, Revised by, JUDITH J. CULLIGAN

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Wikipedia: B'nai B'rith Youth Organization
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The B'nai B'rith Youth Organization (BBYO) is an independent Jewish youth group for teenagers in high school.

BBYO is the world's only independent, international, pluralistic Jewish youth group for high school teenagers. Formerly associated with B'nai B'rith, the youth group split with its parent organization but its name still contains the words "B'nai B'rith."

BBYO is unique amongst its peers in its organization into local fraternity- and sorority-like chapters. Male chapters are known as AZA chapters, and female chapters as BBG chapters; AZA and BBG began independently before being united as brother and sister organizations under B'nai B'rith. In smaller communities where there is not a sufficient Jewish population to support both AZA and BBG chapters, there may exist just a single BBYO chapter which borrows traditions from both organizations.

Membership to BBYO is open to any high schooler in high school who identifies as a Jew. BBYO's mission is, "More Jewish teens, more meaningful Jewish experiences." The organization's uniqueness stems from its youth leadership model, in which teen leaders are elected by their peers on a local, regional and international level, and are given the opportunity to make their own programmatic decisions.

Contents

History

Early days of AZA

The Aleph Zadik Aleph (AZA) originated in 1923 as a young men's Jewish fraternity in Omaha, Nebraska. The group was formed by 14 college students in response to their rejection by a school fraternity, the Alpha Zeta Alpha, because they were Jews. AZA was founded in part to protest the Greek letter societies community, and so Hebrew rather than Greek letters were used for the name of the organization. Two years later, when B'nai B'rith began sponsoring the group, the letters were interpreted to stand for its motto: the first Aleph stood for Ahava, brotherly love; the Zadik stood for Tzedaka, benevolence; and the second Aleph stood for Achdoos, or harmony.

AZA's original adviser, Nathan Mnookin, soon left Omaha for his hometown of Kansas City, where he started a similar group with the same name. The Omaha group selected a new adviser, Sam Beber, who soon laid out his plans for an international youth group based on the local AZA model. In 1924, the Aleph Zadik Aleph for Young Men, now an international Jewish fraternity, was formed according to Beber's plan, with the Omaha and Kansas City chapters receiving the first two charters. Four chapters were in attendance at the first convention in June 1924, and ten at the second convention the following summer.

By 1925, AZA had expanded east with dozens of chapters across the country. At Beber's urging, B'nai B'rith took up the issue of officially adopting AZA as its junior auxiliary at their national convention in 1925. Supported by Henry Monsky, who himself was vying for the B'nai B'rith presidency, the convention adopted a committee report affirming its approval of the organization under B'nai B'rith's jurisdiction. Immediately following the convention, B'nai B'rith Executive Committee met and officially adopted AZA, which then became known as the Aleph Zadik Aleph of B'nai B'rith.

BBG beginnings

In 1944, after a few past failed attempts to begin a Jewish youth group for young women, B'nai B'rith Girls (BBG) became officially recognized and adopted by B'nai B'rith. Anita Perlman is credited with the development of BBG as Sam Beber is credited with the AZA. For the first time, AZA and BBG were united under a single organization, officially cementing their relationship and brother and sister organizations. Combined, the two youth groups were called the B'nai B'rith Youth Organization, and BBYO was born.

From past to present

Although the organization has changed greatly behind-the-scenes over the years, its original tenets still remain true: dedication to Jewish life, a pluralistic approach, commitment to community service and social action, and a youth leadership model. BBYO continues to be open to all teenagers that identify themselves as Jews, without exception. Members participate in meeting rituals and sing pep songs that date back to the organization's earliest days. The organization continues to maintain and contribute to its International Service Fund, initiated at the very first international convention. Although the number of professional staff has risen dramatically, BBYO continues to maintain democratic youth leadership at every level.

Just as the organization changed greatly in its first few years, starting as a local youth group to being adopted as the official youth auxiliary of the world's largest Jewish organization, it likewise has undergone drastic changes in recent years. After more than 75 years of a general prosperity, B'nai B'rith began a massive restructuring at the turn of the 21st century in response to the changing face of North American Jewry. As a result, the B'nai B'rith Youth Organization split from B'nai B'rith in 2002 and was re-formed as BBYO, Inc., an independent non-profit organization. The new organization received substantial funding from the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation and is chaired by Lynn Schusterman.

Traditionally, BBYO was a conglomeration of many largely independent regions. This was the result of the modification of B'nai B'rith's long-standing "district" model. As new forms of communication have brought the members and staff of BBYO in closer contact, and as the differences between geographic regions continue to deteriorate, BBYO has become much more of a top-down organization, with standardized marketing materials and directives. BBYO has reached into the online market with its b-linked.org website, into the middle school market with its Teen Connection programs, and into the adult market with its alumni chapters.

Structure

BBYO operates at four different levels, each one of which has its own elected teen leaders: international, regional, council and chapter. Depending on the size of and geography of a particular region, it may or may not contain the council level. (Typically, regions that are large in population or spread out geographically are likely to contain councils.) All members are assigned to a chapter, which is part of a region (and sometimes a council). The combined regions make up the international organization.

International

On the international level, BBYO organizes large-scale programs and offerings for its members, both during the school year and the summer. These programs bring together members from all over North America, and all over the world. Despite the fact that BBYO focuses mostly on activities taking place or originating in North America, the organization nonetheless maintains a presence on five other continents as well. Some of these are affiliate chapters that ascribe to the traditions of BBYO but are not technically under the control of the international office. BBYO programs are known to current be run in Israel, UK & Ireland, France, Thailand, Bulgaria, Curacao, South Africa, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and most recently Turkey.

Districts

Districts were a now-defunct organizational unit, that were mostly replaced by regions in the 1980s. The last remaining international districts were disbanded and renamed in 2005 at International Convention.

Regions

At the regional level, chapters are brought together on a regular basis for inter-chapter programming and regional programs. All regions have at least one weekend-long convention every year (with some offering as many as a half-dozen). Regions that do not contain councils elect a regional board on a yearly basis. The regional board helps to plan regional events, and supervise their counterparts on the chapter level. There are currently 43 regions in North American. Regions are supervised by professional staff in a regional office.

Councils

Larger regions are sometimes split into councils, which operate much the same as regions, with their own council-wide events and elected council boards. A region that has councils will typically have both council events and regional events (encompassing all of the region's councils) over the course of the year. Councils elect a council board on a year basis; these boards function in the same fashion as do regional boards. Councils are supervised by professional staff, which may be in a regional office or a separate council office depending on the size of the council and region.

List of BBYO Regions/Councils

Name of Region/Council Area Covered Regional/Council Godol Regional/Council N'siah
Big Apple Region #12 New York City Reid Packer Ari Kovics
Central Region East #34 Eastern Pennsylvania (excluding Philadelphia), Delaware, and Elmira and Binghamton, NY Bar David Dana Solge
Central Region West #45 Northern California Ofek Lavian Elise Dvorochkin
Connecticut Valley Region #17 Connecticut and Central Massachusetts Nicholas Ginsberg Erin George
Cotton States Region #72 Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Arkansas (Memphis, Nashville, Knoxville, Birmingham, and New Orleans) Leor Reef Mara Hahn
Eastern Region: North Carolina Council North Carolina and Roanoke, Virginia Joshua Kipnis Sarah Seldin
Eastern Region: Virginia Council Richmond and Tidewater, Virginia Jacob Fratkin Jenna Cantor
Eastern Canada Region Montreal and Ottawa Nathaniel Mayer-Heft Hilary Hendin
Evergreen Region #46 Washington, Oregon, Montana, Idaho, Alaska, and British Columbia Sam Miller Nadia Hecker-O'Brien
Gold Coast Region #51 Palm Beach and Broward Counties, Florida Sam Levine Erica Sobel
Great Midwest Region #61 Greater Chicago Jacob Grossman Arielle Solomon
Greater Jersey Hudson River Region: Central Council Central New Jersey Cory Bolotsky Rachel Blumenthal
Greater Jersey Hudson River Region: Northern Council Northern New Jersey and Albany, NY Alex Freeman Marissa Merker
Kentucky Indiana Ohio Region #27 Kentucky, Indiana, and Southern Ohio (Columbus, Cincinnati, Dayton, Louisville, Indianapolis, and South Bend) Jeff Goodman Jenna Samuelson
Keystone Mountain Region #33 Western Pennsylvania and West Virgina (Pittsburgh Metro and Charleston) Maurice Notkin Rebecca Smith
Lake Ontario Region Greater Toronto Michael Gallowitz Michelle Covant
Lonestar Region #73 Southern Texas (Houston, San Antonio, and Austin) Samuel Strum Hilary Cohen
Miami Region #53 Miami-Dade County, FL Max Kohrman Leah Chakoff
Michigan Region #63 Detroit, Ann Arbor, and Windsor, ON Josh Lowenthal Marissa Horn
Mid-America Region: Cornbelt Council Omaha, Nebraska and Sioux City, Iowa Colin Belmont Anna Grossman
Mid-America Region: Kansas City Council Greater Kansas City Avi Sonnenschein Rebecca Berger
Mid-America Region: St. Louis Council Greater St. Louis Ethan Heller Erica Diamond
Mountain Region #47 Arizona, Nevada, and Utah (Phoenix Metro, Tucson, Las Vegas, and Salt Lake City) Adam Bongiorno Sarah Rosenberg
Nassau-Suffolk Region #19 Long Island, NY Aaron Iovine Rachel Orfinger
New England Region #18 Eastern Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Maine Harry Pesce Jenny Travis
North Florida Region #52 Northern Florida (Orlando, Melbourne, Sarasota, and Tampa) Zak Seed Marissa Kotzin
North Star Region #65 Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota (Minneapolis Metro) Ari Hillman Hannah Berc
North Texas Oklahoma Region #74 Northern Texas and Oklahoma (Dallas Metro, Fort Worth, and Tulsa) Ari Butbul Emily Tanser
Northern Region East: Baltimore Council #59 Baltimore and Howard Counties, MD Josh Meliker Michelle Butler
Northern Region East: DC Council #54 Washington, DC, and Montgomery County, MD Ira Rickman Laura Epstein
Northern Region East: NOVA Council #50 Northern Virginia Jordan Albert Hannah Levy
Northwest Canada Region #87 Alberta and Saskatchewan (Calgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon, and Regina) Max Shilling Deb Lipton
Ohio Northern Region #23 Northern Ohio (Greater Cleveland, Akron, Toledo, Youngstown, and Canton) Sam Shiffman Kelly Ginsburg
Pacific Coast Region #43 Los Angeles, Ventura, North Orange and Riverside Counties, CA Bobby Dishell Tiffany Frank
Philadelphia Region #32 Philadelphia, Montgomery, Bucks, and Delaware Counties, PA Samuel Hoffman Carla Graff
Red River Region Greater Winnipeg Per Kraut Jona Frohlich
Rocky Mountain Region #25 Colorado and New Mexico (Denver, Colorado Springs, Boulder, and Albuquerque) Joshua Siegel Jessica Green
South Jersey Region #35 Southern New Jersey Andrew Abrams Arielle Braude
Southern Region: Atlanta Council Greater Atlanta Ryan Jones Hannah Bock
Southern Region: Dixie Council Georgia (excluding Atlanta) and South Carolina Sean Lynch Rachel Lourie
Southwestern Region #42 San Diego County and South Orange County, CA Nathan Fleischer Shany Yeshanov
Wisconsin Region #64 Greater Milwaukee Michael Voloshin Natanya Russek

Chapters

Chapters are BBYO's most basic organizational level, functioning at a local level. There are currently over 600 chapters in operation (roughly 45% BBG, 40% AZA and 15% BBYO) across the world. These chapters contain about 18,000 registered members, and their programs reach over 40,000 teens every year

Programs

International Programs

BBYO each year offers programs in which all regions in the international order come together and gather for various purposes. Through the duration of the school year there are four main programs a member could attend.

a. International Execs: A three day convention in which the top leaders of the regions: the two presidents, gather to discuss the goals and objectives of the upcoming programming year. b. International Convention: International convention is a five-day convention in which is open to all members of BBYO. It serves as a weekend to reconnect with those whom you’ve met over the summer, international execs for a second time, business meetings, elections of the new international board for the next programming year and the state of the order of the Presidents of the girls and the boys. c. March of the Living: This is a trace through the remembrance of the Holocaust. One week of the trip is spent in Poland and the other week in Israel. While in Poland the participants connect to their connection to Judaism. The participants then spend one week in Israel celebrating its independence day. BBYO never stops. It is also over the summer. BBYO offers a variety of different programs that appeal to anyone. There are programs that deal with leadership, Judaism, community service, the business world, and international travels to many different countries. These programs include: a. Chapter Leadership Training Conference (CLTC): This program is a twelve-day program in which members usually at the age of a sophomore or junior in high school to learn about the essentials of leading a chapter. b. International Leadership Training Conference (ILTC): This program is a two-week leadership program in which those on regional board learn how to expand what they knew about how to lead a chapter but now how to lead a region. It is part of the Pearlman summer. c. International Kallah: This program allows those seeking to find their Jewish identity to do so. It is three weeks of forming your own Jewish Self. d. Passport 2 Israel: A program in which teens travel through out Israel doing community service, learning about our culture, but most of all, having fun. e. Project Impact: Two weeks of community service in a chosen location to better make one city at a time. f. Project NYC: A ten-day business leadership program, which focuses on aspects of entrepreneurship in a constantly changing business world.

Local programs

Both AZA and BBG have a segmented programming model, with each proscribed programming area referred to as a "fold". For AZA, the five folds are social, athletic, community service/social action, Judaic and educational; for BBG, the six folds are sisterhood, creativity, recreation, Jewish heritage, community service, and social action. Programs can be any time, and can involve any number of chapters (including both AZA and BBG together).

Leadership model

The teen leaders elected to office by their peers at various organizational levels have their own set of office titles, derived from Hebrew. Elections are typically held on an annual or semi-annual basis. The titles are often similar for the equivalent AZA and BBG positions, varying slightly due to a word's gender.

Position AZA BBG
President Godol N'siah
Programming Vice President S'gan S'ganit
Membership Vice President Moreh Aym Ha-Chaverot (more commonly known as MIT Mom)
Secretary Mazkir Mazkirah
Treasurer Gizbor Gizborit
Judaic Vice President Shaliach Shlicha
Newspaper Editor Sopher Orechet

Exact board positions elected can vary slightly between regions and chapters, with some chapters electing additional board positions, and some electing multiple members to a single position (to work together). Additionally, chairmanships may be appointed on an as-needed basis at every organizational level.

BBYO chapters typically contain the same positions as would an AZA or BBG chapters, with the exact position name corresponding to the gender of the person elected to the position. Some BBYO chapters may also elect both a male and female officer to certain board positions (e.g., electing both a moreh and a aym ha-chaverot).

However, within BBYO in the UK and Ireland, the leadership positions work differently. Each chapter has an exec of about six people, who are voted on by all the members of that chapter. The positions are (in order):President, Vice-President, Administrator (sometimes split into Sectratry and Treasurer), Programmer, Judaism and Zionism Awareness Officer (Referred to as JZA) and Welfare. Each of these positions has a spesific role, but work together as a team to run the weekly meetings. On a larger scale, there is a National Executive, consisting of the positions listed above.

See also

More in-depth histories of AZA and BBG are available, as each organization developed independently before being united by B'nai B'rith. In addition, each organization maintains its own customs, traditions, and songs. Likewise, customs, traditions and program vary greatly from region to region, and more information is available on each.

  • Aleph Zadik Aleph for additional background and history on AZA, BBYO's fraternity for young men.
  • B'nai B'rith Girls for additional background and history on BBG, BBYO's fraternity for young women.
  • BBYO International Programs for more information on BBYO's various program offerings at the international level, both during the summer and the school year.
  • B'nai B'rith for an overview of the organization that sponsored BBYO for over 75 years.
  • UK and Ireland BBYO for information on UK & Ireland BBYO

External links


 
 

 

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