Thursday, August 7, 2014

Why I Go To Camp

We are back home from another wonderful summer at GUCI. Camp is something I look forward to each summer. Maybe it’s because I’m just a kid at heart and it’s fun to spend two weeks living at camp with lots of enthusiastic kids and staff and other rabbis and cantors and educators. Maybe it’s because I like being able to sit outside in the grass and have deep conversations with campers about God and Torah and what it’s like to be Jewish in a small town and how camp is the place where they feel most connected.  Maybe it’s because for two weeks I get to eat camp food (which is great because I don’t have to shop for food, prepare it, or clean up afterwards - that in itself makes it great). Maybe it’s because I get to sing songs I love after every meal and enjoy seeing the whole camp come alive in the Chadar Ochel (Dining Hall) as they sing and dance and jump and do shticks. 
Singing in the Dining Hall
At camp, celebrating Shabbat is cool. Being Jewish is fun and interesting and learning Hebrew is easy.  Campers meet and become friends with kids from all over the region and some from much further away, like Israel.  Some kids come from large congregations, and some from temples where there are very few students in the entire religious school.  Our kids spend time with dedicated counselors -college students who remember their own days as campers and are here to give something back.  Camp is staffed with wonderful specialists in art, sports, aquatics, Hebrew, music, and dance, among other things.  Our kids learns to canoe, climb the Migdal (Alpine Tower), Israeli dance, and camp out - all in a Jewish atmosphere with friends they'll have for a lifetime.

Welcoming Everyone on the Shabbat Walk
I've been fortunate to spend most of my summers since ordination at one of our URJ camps. As part of the rabbinic faculty, I am privileged to be a part of a community that grows our youth.  When I learn Torah with a camper who is preparing for her bat mitzvah, or talk with the Avodahniks (12th graders who are the work crew at camp) about challenging issues, I see every day that camp builds a sense of excitement in our kids that tells them that Judaism is valuable and something to be proud of.  Each day a different camp group leads the Tefillah (prayer) at our beautiful outdoor Beit Tefillah, and they share their thoughts on what a beautiful spiritual place this is. At camp Jewish community comes alive in a way that we cannot duplicate in the few hours we spend together in our congregational educational programs. It is an investment in our children’s future, whose reward is a child who develops self-confidence and who comes away from camp with a love for Judaism.

Shabbat Singing
Jewish camping is one of the most exciting, enjoyable programs we can offer our children.  It offers them a chance to live in a Jewish atmosphere, learning about themselves and their Jewish identity as they gain independence and discover their own strengths.  After the first summer, they return to camp eager to be with good friends and continue the personal growth that they have experienced at camp.  Perhaps most importantly, children who attend Jewish camps tend to retain their Jewish identity and commitment in their adult lives.

L’hitraot - See you next summer!

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