We invite you to join Cycles of Rest, Release, and Liberation: Antiracism and Shemitah as Spiritual Practice - a free, transformative, contemplative learning journey that will combine Jewish text, antiracism teaching and opportunities to reflect. Over six months, we will help you connect your inner essence to the journey from Hefker to Hekdesh - the reassignment of human value from being rooted in commodities and ownership to the potential for individuals and communities to be rooted in shared power, shared resources, and deepened connectivity. 


Four Free Webinars Led by Yavilah McCoy

Sessions will be recorded and are open to all.

Optional: Free Caucus Groups

Due to an extraordinary response, we have closed registration for the Caucus Group for Jews who identify and/or present as White.

Please note: The Caucus Group for Jews who identify as Jews of Color is open only to Jews who identify as Jews of Color, including Sephardi/Mizrachi Jews who hold JOC or non-white racialized identities.


To determine if this Caucus Group might be appropriate for you, please consider the following questions:

  1. When asked, how do you identify racially?
  2. When not asked, how are you perceived racially “on the street”? (Put differently, how others perceive you will influence how you experience and navigate systems.)
  3. In an antiracism learning group, where would you go to be challenged by others without overburdening them? Where would you go because of a shared affinity/lived experience/identity with others?
  4. Which learning track feels most aligned with your answers to 1-3?


Optional Caucus Group Meetings take place on Wednesdays from 6:30-8:00 PM ET on the following dates: January 19, February 2, February 23, March 9, April 6, April 27, May 18, and June 1


Optional Donation

Suggested Amounts
$0.00

1) We welcome you in the fullness of who you are and invite you to both presume and extend welcome to others, as well.

2) Respect difference. Notice judgment, and practice experiencing it with compassion rather than conviction. (Remind yourself that other people are not failed attempts at being you!) Cultivate curiosity.

3) Know that there is genuine freedom in this program. Every invitation to speak and participate is just that: an invitation. Passing or staying quiet is perfectly acceptable. You know best what you need.

4) We do not engage in “fixing, advising, saving or correcting” (Parker Palmer). Each of us is here to refine our ability to listen to the still, small voice inside. Trust that we will each find our own way.

5) When in a group, give your full attention to the person speaking. Do not engage in side conversations. You can trust and learn from silence, as well. Use “I” statements when speaking, and be mindful about the space you are taking. We acknowledge that different people have been given different access to space and voice and we encourage you to make space for all voices.

6) Each person commits to deep confidentiality; not speaking to anyone outside the group about what is shared and also not raising a vulnerable issue again with a group member at a later time, without the invitation of the person in question.

7) To assure each participant that they have the opportunity to know directly their own experience, we each commit to respecting each other’s boundaries in all areas, including the physical, emotional, intellectual and spiritual. Further, retreats are inappropriate settings to initiate any new romantic or sexual relationships. Uninvited touching, commenting on another’s appearance, sexually or emotionally suggestive remarks and the like undermine our safety, and will not be tolerated. We commit staff and participants to these limits for the sake of our shared wellbeing.



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