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Arts & Culture Using Libraries and Web, Group Hopes to Shape Generation of Jews

July 24, 2003
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Julie Sandorf recalls her immigrant grandparents telling her that they learned to be Americans at the public library, where they improved their English and learned more about American culture.

Now Sandorf wants this generation of Americans to use the public library to learn to be Jews. Sandorf is the director of a new organization called Nextbook, a nationwide campaign dedicated to promoting Jewish cultural literacy through gateways such as the Internet and public libraries.

Replete with extensive reading lists, a daily cultural news digest and information regarding local library activities, Nextbook’s Web site — www.nextbook.org — has been up since early June.

“There’s an interest here in this being a gateway for disengaged Jews to learn about their culture, history and tradition,” Sandorf says.

Part of the program’s appeal is that it is not rooted in any particular denomination or synagogue, Sandorf says.

Reading lists have been a huge project for Nextbook. Books are listed in four separate categories: Discovering Myself, Portraits of the Artist, Sense of Place and Struggle & Justice.

Authors range from Isaac Bashevis Singer and Chaim Potok to Grace Paley and Amos Oz.

Books include “Open Closed Open: Poems” by Yehuda Amichai, “Ideas and Opinions” by Albert Einstein, “Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number” by Jacobo Timerman, and “The Classic Cuisine of the Italian Jews” by Edda Servi Machlin.

“By nature, the book lists are very eclectic,” Sandorf says. “They offer a broad, eclectic view of Jewish life that is consistently high quality.”

Nextbook is a project of Keren Keshet-The Rainbow Foundation, a philanthropic organization formed by the Zalman Bernstein estate to enhance the religious background of Jews in the United States, Europe and Israel.

Nextbook currently has a “multi-million dollar budget,” with no set end date, Sandorf says.

As a result, “there are no dues, no membership, no test; you can just go in and learn,” Sandorf says.

Robin Cembalest, executive editor of ARTNews Magazine, says she uses Nextbook’s Web site to stay abreast of the latest Jewish cultural news.

“I often end up sending articles to friends and family,” says Cembalest, who says she has been checking the Web site virtually every day since its creation.

Library sections devoted to books donated by Nextbook, and including information on upcoming events, have been installed in three libraries in Chicago and seven in the city’s suburbs.

Pilot library programs also should begin soon in the greater Seattle area and the Washington metropolitan area, Sandorf says.

Amy Eschelman, director of development and outreach at the Chicago Public Libraries, says it’s a “terrific idea to use libraries as an access point” because they’re free and open to everyone.

Eschelman says she has been “pleasantly surprised” by the swift success of Nextbook’s implementation in the libraries.

“The only difficult thing is that we have too many ideas,” she says.

Sandorf intends to employ a “library fellow” in each of the locales where Nextbook programs can be found.

Abigail Pickus, one of two Nextbook library fellows based in the Chicago area, says part of her job is “to work as a liaison between the New York Nextbook headquarters and participating libraries.”

Beyond installing an extensive Nextbook literary section in the libraries, there are plans to “engage the public at large in Jewish literature and culture,” Pickus says.

Events are in the works at venues ranging from libraries and other cultural institutions to coffee shops and book stores, Eschelman says.

Eschelman and Pickus are working to integrate literature with culture, music, art and dance, aiming to attract the 20- 40 age group.

“We’re just hoping that Nextbook will have a universal appeal,” Sandorf says.

Nextbook advisory committees have been set up in the Chicago and Seattle areas.

Nextbook’s official launch isn’t planned until September. But with its Web site up and books already being checked out of libraries, it already has proven a success for user Carol Glazer.

“It’s so important for unaffiliated Jews like me,” says Glazer, who says she “got hooked on the Web site” and now checks it “on a pretty regular basis.”

Glazer was raised in the 1950s in the Borough Park neighborhood of Brooklyn, where “family was really important growing up, but religion wasn’t.”

“As I approached 50, I found myself wanting to reconnect to parts of my heritage and the culture that I had never learned about,” Glazer says.

A single mother of two who works full time, “my ability to read novels, biographies or historical accounts of my heritage is non-existent — my time is very limited,” Glazer says.

As a result, it’s critical for her “to have quick reading materials, whether it’s for pleasure, work or current events,” she says.

“This is the perfect media for me,” she says. “I think it’s a fabulous venture.”

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