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   2002-02-01: Camp


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  United Jewish Federation


 

 A camp of our own

153-acre site tops UJF¹s agenda for community¹s future

San Diego Jewish Press-Heritage, Feb. 2, 2002

By Donald H. Harrison
 
Ask any Jewish communal worker what are the three most effective ways of
guaranteeing that a child will grow up with a strong Jewish identity, and he
or she probably will answer: ³Jewish day school, Jewish summer camp and a
trip to Israel.²
There are four Jewish day schools in San Diego County, while a variety of
programs to send teenagers to Israel long have been in place. But summer
camping used to be beyond the community¹s reach ‹ until now, say officials
and volunteers of the United Jewish Federation.
On Jan. 23, the UJF opened escrow on a 153-acre sleep-over camp in Mountain
Center, Calif., about three miles from Lake Hemet. Purchasing the property
will cost $2.5 million; to develop it into a first-class, 200-bed camp and
retreat center will cost another $5 million to $7.5 million.
The camp will be one of the major new initiatives of the United Jewish
Federation during the coming fiscal year. Other important new programs will
include a pilot transportation project to ferry seniors from their
residences to doctors¹ offices and activity centers; enhancement of the
Shalom Baby program, which introduces the services of the Jewish community
to expectant parents and to families with newborns, and expansion of
co-programming with the Sha¹ar Hanegev region in Israel.
Ed Samiljan, a UJF volunteer who has been chairing the effort to develop a
sleep-over camp, said he envisions two camp sessions per summer, ³which will
mean we will impact 400 kids.²
³This is a major community-building activity,² he said during an interview
at UJF¹s Joseph and Lenka Finci Building. ³We will be able to grab ahold of
kids, perhaps from the age of 10 on, and involve them in a
community-building process which doesn¹t exist right now. So as these kids
grow up and mature in the San Diego community, it is very likely that they
are going to know each other, and it will be a much tighter community than
it ever was before.²
Samiljan said that the camp will be the only such Jewish facility south of
Los Angeles. ³There is nothing in Orange County, nothing in Riverside, San
Bernardino, San Diego or Imperial counties, so this will be the first
Jewish.community camp in this particular part of Southern California.²
With such a vast area for the camp to draw from, ³we don¹t expect any
trouble filling beds,² Samiljan said.
Typically, camps make money during the summer when there are campers, but
lose money when the children they serve are in school. Therefore, Samiljan
said he hopes to incorporate into the camp¹s design the capability of
serving as a ³retreat center for the boards of directors of the various
Jewish agencies, for youth groups, nature study groups² and the like.
Nadine Finkel, the UJF staff member who helps to develop communal programs,
said an Elderhostel site is one of the off-summer uses of the facility that
are under active consideration.
³We are so close to Idyllwild,² she said. ³One of the things that we can do
is art and music programming. There are great resources up in Idyllwild, so
there are lots of opportunities.²
The facility, which will bear the name of a major donor if one steps
forward, is expected to open for business in the summer of 2004, although
Samiljan would like to provide the grounds for a positive Jewish youth
experience even before that.
³I would like to set it up on an experimental basis as a Œkibbutz¹-type
activity,² he said. ³Maybe we could call it ŒKibbutz Diego¹ and invite teens
to come out and help us prepare the camp, work in the camp, in some modest
fashion for weeks at a time for an extraordinarily modest cost,² he said.
³We¹d make it very inexpensive just so the kids could get some exposure, and
so that the camp would get some exposure to the community.²
Finkel suggested that teens who participate in the kibbutz-style work camp
probably would be able to make meaningful suggestions about how the camp
should be developed prior to its formal opening.
Once the camp does open, Samiljan said, he envisions it would serve 100 boys
and 100 girls, ages 8-16, during each four-week session, with two regular
sessions scheduled per summer. If any group wanted to use the fully-kosher
facility for its own programming before or after those eight weeks, such an
extension could be arranged, he said.
Finkel said eventually the camp would become a separate Jewish agency and
have its own executive director and board of governors.
To underscore the importance of Jewish camping, Samiljan related two stories
from his own life:
³I have a granddaughter who lives in Wellesley (Mass.), with her parents. My
son-in-law is secular Jewish and my daughter has gone along with his ways.
My granddaughter was going to a Jewish day camp one summer, and she came
home and complained bitterly that all the kids knew all the prayers, and she
didn¹t know any of the prayers.
³She is a strong little girl, and the by-product was that they joined the
local Reform temple in Wellesley, and that this little girl has grown up to
be a member of the choir; she had her bat mitzvah there, and is now going
through her confirmation process.²
More recently, Samiljan said, he attended services at Temple Adat Shalom in
which there were both a bar mitzvah and a bat mitzvah. The girl who was
becoming a bat mitzvah told the congregation that ³she was the daughter of a
Catholic mother and a Jewish father.  This lovely-looking, beautiful young
girl, with a lot of presence, (also said that) her parents were divorced,
and that her mother wanted her to be raised Catholic and the father wanted
her to be raised Jewish.
³This became a matter of great conflict in her family,² Samiljan continued.
³The deciding moment in her life was attending Camp Swig in Northern
California, where she was so overwhelmed by the atmosphere that she made a
decision that she wanted to be Jewish. From there she proceeded to Hebrew
school and to bat mitzvah and a commitment to remain Jewish.
³At the ceremony, you could see the tears falling, people were dabbing their
eyes, the handkerchiefs were out.² Camps have ³access to children at a very
moving time of their lives.²
A study of the 153-acre site commissioned by UJF notes that the property
lies at an elevation of 5,000 feet and has scenery ³almost like New England
and is Alpine in appearance... From the highway (Route 74), there is a
well-kept tar road of about one-quarter mile that leads you to the site. The
setback is far enough so that there is no view or sound from Route 74. The
terrain upon entrance is rolling hills, well-treed with stone walls, parking
areas and buildings in a manicured woody setting.
³The entrance has a security gate that is opened by pressing a button that
signals the office. There are outdoor meeting areas with stone barbecues and
several Œmeditation¹ areas around the site.
³About one-third of the site is hilly and treed and the balance is open
meadow area,² the report continued. ³The site is enclosed on three sides by
a National Forest and on the fourth by a private party near a stable that
provides horses for rental, training. There are roads (some tarred and some
hard-packed earth) that encircle the complete perimeter of the grounds. At
one far end there are maintenance buildings which are out of sight and quite
a distance from the principal residences.²
Currently, the grounds include a 1,500-square foot administration building,
four residences, catteries and kennels, a filled-in swimming pool, and a
pool house.
Samiljan said part of the renovation program would include construction of a
new swimming pool and conversion of some of the pasture land into sports
fields. With a lake just five minutes away, boating activities also will be
a focus, he said.
During Heritage¹s joint interview with Samiljan, Finkel and Jodie Kaplan, a
volunteer who chairs UJF¹s Israel Center committee, Finkel noted that ten
years ago the United Jewish Federation surveyed Jews throughout San Diego
County to determine what were the community¹s needs.
From information gathered in that survey, Finkel said, UJF developed ten
programs over the next 10 years. These included: 1) Jewish and Single in San
Diego; 2) Community Teen Coalition; 3) Pathways to Judaism for intermarried
families; 4) Community Outreach Program; 5) Israel Center; 6) Melton Adult
Mini-School; 7) college internship for prospective Jewish communal workers;
8) community chaplain and Jewish Healing Center; 9) scholarship program to
send children to Jewish camps, and 10) Shalom Baby.
Shalom Baby is the newest program. ³Right now, what it does is outreach to
expectant parents and to those with newborns,² Finkel said. ³They get a
volunteer visit and a fabulous resource basket ‹ everything they might want
to know about raising a Jewish baby and about the Jewish community. All the
synagogues have brochures in the basket.
³What we want to do is expand that to a Jewish Lamazeltov program,² she
said, punning on the name of a popular birthing technique and the Hebrew
words for ³good luck.² Additionally, Shalom Baby could grow into ³play
groups, chavurot, grandparent groups ‹there is no end of things that you can
do,² she said.
The Israel Center program has been in place longer. One of its major
components is granting scholarships to teenagers interested in visiting
Israel on trips sponsored by the Federation or other synagogues and agencies
within the Jewish community.
³We gave $78,000 in scholarships the year before last for between 40 and 50
kids,² Kaplan said. ³Last year, with the situation in Israel, the number was
much smaller, trips were canceled, even some of the university programs.²
With fewer people traveling to Israel, she said, there has been some focus
on bringing Israelis here. Next April, for example, during ³Israel Month²
some artists from the city of Safed will stage an art exhibition at the
Lawrence Family JCC. A city associated with mystical Judaism, Safed normally
is a center for Jewish tourism, but now shops are closing because there is
so little tourist traffic, Kaplan said.
About four years ago, Yaacov Schneider came to San Diego from Israel to
serve as a shaliach, or emissary. Normally, shlichim stay in a community for
a minimum of two years, with an extension possible to three under the rules
of the sponsoring Jewish Agency for Israel.
Federation was able to get Schneider¹s contract extended to four years, and
then to five, but agreement to the latter came only after UJF consented to
relinquish his services at the end of the fifth year, Kaplan said. In March,
a group of San Diego officials will begin the process of interviewing
someone to replace Schneider when his fifth year is concluded.
Schneider has become popular in San Diego, not only as someone who
encourages people to visit Israel, but also as the person who was
instrumental in creating the partnership between Federation and the Sha¹ar
Hanegev region of Israel, on the border with Gaza.
Under the partnership, Federation contributes $750,000 annually to support
the student village of Ibim, where newly-arrived students from immigrant
families study Hebrew as well as course work in their own fields while
acclimating to life in Israel. As Ibim is located within the Sha¹ar Hanegev
region, this support has a spillover effect on the rest of the area. Now
there are frequent cultural and educational exchanges between the two areas,
and Sha¹ar Hanegev¹s mayor, Shai Hermesh, is a frequent visitor to San
Diego.
For many years previously, UJF was a participant along with federations from
other cities of the United States in a program to support Kiryat Malachi,
the development town in the Negev from which Israel¹s President Moshe Katsav
hails.
Because the money went into a central fund, with limited opportunity for
direct input by San Diegans into how the money was spent, the local Jewish
Federation decided to gradually withdraw from the consortium supporting
Kiryat Malachi in favor of a direct 1:1 relationship with Sha¹ar Hanegev,
Finkel said.
The interview with Heritage concerning new UJF initiatives had one
additional program to cover: the intended start-up of transportation
programs for seniors.
Finkel said transportation has long been identified as one of the major
problems facing not only Jewish seniors, but seniors of all religions and
backgrounds. A Federation task force met with various agencies dealing with
seniors to determine what needed to be done.
³Right now we are talking about getting them to JFS (Jewish Family Service)
centers, getting them to their doctors,² Finkel said. ³It is amazing, the
more you get into the subject. We learn there are such things as
Œdoor-to-door¹ programs for people who are ambulatory and
Œdoor-through-door¹ programs, for the ones who need assistance.
³Some people need a large bus; other seniors have special needs,² she added.
³We have made a list of what is available now in the Jewish community. What
we need to do is look at the whole picture. What do people need to go to
programs, or get out to lunch, or get to medical services? What we want to
do is develop a model program, a pilot program ‹ perhaps in one or two Zip
code areas ‹ and see if we can get a transportation program going and go
from there.²
Finkel said the program probably will involve ³a combination of a shuttle
service and volunteer drivers.²