Archive for the 'Support' Category

October 3, 2007: 12:00 pm: kfarPress, Support

By Pauline Dubkin Yearwood (09/28/2007) published in Chicago Jewish News
Since he founded Kfar Jewish Arts Center five years ago, Adam Davis says he’s been “living like a shul mouse” while he runs the organization on a shoestring.

Those days may soon be over. Donors are starting to recognize and support Kfar (the name means village in Hebrew), which produces musical and performance events designed for young Jewish audiences. Board members are signing up. And Davis is planning to reach out to more audience members in more demographic groups.

All this may come as a surprise to some observers since Kfar also suffered a major blow (as did the whole Chicago music scene) in the past year: the closing of the HotHouse, the Chicago world music club where the organization put on many of its shows. (continues after the jump)
(more…)

September 12, 2007: 8:08 pm: kfarSupport

On Yom Kippur, we fast until the Shofar sounds after sundown. The anticipation for the Tekiah Gedolah increases thorughout day with our hunger, and after we hear the long call of the ram’s horn, we can join friends for a festive meal.

But what if the sound never came? We might still break our fast, but somehow the experience would be incomplete.  Were Jewish music also silent during the year, or limited to fundraisers, our cultural life would be similarly bereft.

Tshuva, tzdekah and tfilah may be the order of the day, but KFAR Jewish Arts Center is the small voice that ensures our community has great music events the rest of the year. We depend entirely on your support; help KFAR do it with a tax-deductible New Year’s contribution.

Here’s another reason to make a gift today:  A generous donor, wishing to remain anonymous, has issued a challenge incentive, matching every dollar KFAR raises in the coming months and effectively doubling the impact of your contribution!

Sound that Shofar. Break our musical fast. Nourish our community with a donation to KFAR and help bring our signature brand of contemporary Jewish cultural vibrancy to Chicago again this year.

1. Make a check out to: Foundation for Jewish Culture
2. Jot KFAR Jewish Arts Center in
the memo line
3. Mail to: KFAR, 3921 N. Janssen #2s, Chicago IL 60613
4. A tax-lettter acknowledgement from FJC and KFAR follows

June 18, 2007: 5:44 pm: kfarSupport

From the outset, we’ve always thought of KFAR as more than a presenting organzation; we play a role in a larger trend of grass roots initiatives connecting Jews to their culture using the arts. Now, leading American Jewry Sociologists Ari Kelman and Stephen Cohen (The Jew Within) have published The Continuity of Discontinuity (Read it) supporting that proposition. The new study examines why young adults shape their Jewish identity through episodic, often cultural affinities rather than simply affiliate with traditional Jewish institutions .

“In short, the vast majority of young adult Jews have little reason and little interest in joining institutions filled with Jews who are somewhat older, somewhat more affluent, and decidedly more engaged in issues of marriage and parenthood. It comes as no surprise, then, that outside of Orthodoxy, most American Jews under 40 are institutionally unaffiliated.

But it may come as a surprise that many unaffiliated younger Jews are Jewishly engaged, expressing attachment to being Jewish in a variety of ways, generally outside of institutional settings, often with friends, both Jewish and not. Moreover, among them, some of those with especially strong Jewish backgrounds have been creating and organizing their own Jewish communities, experiments and experiences.” Stephen Cohen, The Forward

“In cities across the country they are creating their own minyanim instead of joining synagogues; they are writing and publishing their own journals instead of just subscribing to existing ones; they are playing their own music, putting out records, and producing their own concerts. They are hosting salons and movie screenings. They are involved in the creation of Jewish life that is thoughtful, popular, and exists largely on the margins of mainstream Jewish organizational life.

These new endeavors do not look like their predecessors because they are responding to the perception that the offerings of synagogues, federations, and JCCs are simply too narrow and do not adequately address the diverse needs of American Jews.” Ari Kleman, JTA/NJ Jewish News

The organizations used as case studies are KFAR’s counterparts elsewhere, and when read in conjunction with Kelman and Cohen’s earlier Young Adults and Jewish Cultural Events study for NFJC/HUC/JESNA, it becomes clear that KFAR is at the vanguard. We need your support to do it, though. Please donate and help KFAR Make Jewish Culture Happen.

September 21, 2006: 4:48 pm: kfarSupport


Dear friend:

I’ve just returned from an exciting trip to New York, where I spoke at Last week’s Sidney Krum Conference, on the state of cultural and the arts in American Jewish life. While there I attended many of the dozens of exciting performances part of the 3rd annual Oyhoo! New York Jewish Heritage and Music Festival.

I sat in on the NFJC conference unveiling the findings of its study on Jewish Arts Events and Young Adults, which indirectly places KFAR at the vanguard of the field. At the same meeting, New York UJA-Federation announced a $1 million grant toward an exciting incubator for NYC Jewish artists. These are vibrant times for Jewish arts and culture, especially if you live in New York City.

But we live in Chicago, where for four years KFAR Jewish Arts Center has worked to foster a similar cultural renaissance by stimulating, promoting and producing the next generation of Jewish creative expression.

In an age when we can live without suppression or fear, we have a rare opportunity to infuse our community with a creativity that makes Jewish life more vibrant and exciting for all; we can express ourselves openly and artistically as Jews. This is not a phonomenon we take lightly, and since its inception four short years ago, KFAR (which is the Hebrew word for “village”), has been working hard to ignite the relationships between audiences and artists, to create alternative conduits to Jewish culture, and give voice to new perspectives on our heritage.Both Chicago’s arts community and Jewish community are thriving, vibrant, and diverse, and what makes our job unique is that we are bridging the two in ways most brick-and-mortar religious and communal institutions only struggle with. Our programs bring Jewish people together in culturally inspiring settings that were unavailable not too long ago, and the result is astounding. Some of these programs include:

  • Tzitzit: Voices from the Jewish Fringe a concert series of contemporary Jewish music in Chicago’s best live venues
  • Artistic Associates engages Jewish artists through their craft and stimulates community, collaboration and new works
  • Synagogue Hosting Initiative for Renewal In Music (SHIRIM) assist congregations presenting concerts
  • Semitic Cinematic a new screening series of Jewish feature, documentary and short films.
  • Jewish Arts Regional Touring Service (J-ARTS) creates regional touring routes to assist both artists and institutions
  • Public Celebrations include holiday specific Hard Rockin’ Hamentashen, Knishmas and Yom Haatzma’Art exhibition

As a leader in our community, we want you to be a part of this. In fact, we rely on you to make it happen. None of these concerts and arts events happen by themselves. Securing artists, venues and promotion is an expensive undertaking, and unlike the exciting events I witnessed in New York City, KFAR receives no central allocation or funding from ANY organization. We have survived on ticket revenue to date, but it hardly covers all our expenses. Advertising, talent travel , sound equipment, phones and other services cost money, even without buildings to operate or salaried employees to pay.

The KFAR model is the wave of the future, and the Jewish expressive force of the iPod generation. Clearly, there is a strong demand for KFAR in our community, and community members like you find our work to be as valuable as we do. But unfortunately, that alone is not enough. By donating to KFAR, you are ensuring that the Jews of Chicagoland will have a creative voice that will be heard unlike ever before. Take pride in our unique heritage and give our community an eye for what is to come. Express yourself.

On behalf of everyone here at KFAR, thank you, and have a happy and healthy new year.


Adam Davis, Director

Donate by check to our fiscal agent:
National Foundation for Jewish Culture
(write KFAR in note) and mail it to:
KFAR Jewish Arts Center
3921 N. Janssen #2s
Chicago IL 60613

A tax letter will come from NFJC.

Or donate directly online using secure

July 18, 2005: 8:16 am: kfarPast Events, Support, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

The fourth installment of Tzitzit: Voices from the Jewish Fringe, KFAR’s contemporary Jewish music concert series is our most ambitious series to date. Eight concerts in all, we’re presenting a string of world-class Jewish Rock, Jazz, Sepharidc music and hip hop. We hope you’ll join us as a season subscriber and save up to 20% in the process.

08.20.05:
Blue Fringe and
Heedoosh

MP3 Sample: Kacha Lo    MP3 Sample: Lev Tahor

Blue Fringe is one of the hottest Jewish rock bands around, having just released their second album, 70 Faces. Their style incorporates influences such as the Dave Matthews Band, Coldplay and John Mayer, and their popularity has seen them tour all across North America and in Israel and Australia, regularly performing for sellout crowds of 1,000 and up. Influenced by Stone Temple Pilots, Radiohead, Coldplay and Oasis, Heedoosh plays a mix of brit-rock and Hebrew lyrics that doesn’t compromise on either front.@ Martyrs Live, 3855 N. Lincoln 21 + showbuy ticket:
Event Tickets
$15 advance tix via ticketweb.com


09.18.05 World Music Festival:
Balkan BeatBox & Golem

MP3 Sample: Bulgarian Chicks
      MP3 Sample: Grine Kuzine
Balkan BeatBox is an inspired madness that is a mish-mosh of Jewish, Mediterraneam Southern Slavic, Balkan and Gypsy sounds for an infectious non-stop dance party. Ori Kaplan and Tamir Muskat lead and ensemble of fellow Israeli expats Itamar Zieglar, Dana Leong and Vocalist Tomer Yosef for a magical semi-circus atmosphre that’s part Gypsy caravan, part performance-art collective and all dance party.

Golem’s raw material lies in Yiddish theater songbooks, shtetls and bandleader Annette Ezekiel’s field recordings from Lower East Side locales like bagel shops staffed by Turkmen Jews. She reconstructs these songs much the same as the 16th-century legend of the MAHARAL of Prague. who fashioned a golem monster out of clay.

@ Wild Hare, 3530 N. Clark 21 + show
buy tickets:
Event Tickets
$12 advance tix via ticketweb.com

KNISHMAS 2005
Lineup and location TBA

Our X-mas alternative falls during Hanukah this year. Last year sold out, and this year will be bigger and better than ever, featuring a mix of acts that will bring an infectious fusion of musical styles incorporating rock, reggae, hip-hop, and disco with traditional Jewish content. STAY TUNED AND SAVE THE DATE

February 20, 2004: 5:20 pm: kfarPast Events, Press, S.H.I.R.I.M, Support, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

By WENDY MARGOLIN
Staff WriterFebruary 20, 2004–Adam Davis, founder of Chicago’s KFAR Jewish Arts Center, presented the first concert in the concert series Tzitzit: Voices from the Jewish Fringe and hoped it would attract 50 people. When 150 showed up to hear YIDCore–a group that Davis describes as “a weird little punk band”–he knew he was onto something.

Now, after two years of single-handedly founding and building KFAR, an endeavor to bring arts and culture to the Chicago Jewish community, Davis will present the Rabbinical School Dropouts as a Purim festival at The HotHouse. Past KFAR concerts at this venue have garnered so much interest that Davis has had to turn people away. The “esoteric space klezmer” band that mixes klezmer, jazz, funk, rock, and more is expected to attract a large crowd, many of them loyal to the endeavor that Davis describes as more of an adventure than a business.

KFAR is part of a growing movement of Jewish arts and culture organizations that are helping to fuel what Davis calls a “Jewish Renaissance.” A loose network of similar organizations is emerging, seeking ways to collaborate on major, national-scope Jewish cultural events focused on engagement through arts and music.

“We need these programs not just to reach people, but to reflect on and contemplate who we are as a people, where we’ve come from and where we’re headed in the future. I guess you’d call that ‘KFAR for art’s sake’,” says Davis.

Davis says his love for music is rooted in his childhood at Congregation Bnai Tikvah in Deerfield, where the rabbi and cantor believed the congregation should be the chorus. “On Shabbat I would go to services and sing along. When everyone was sitting in the back giggling, I was one of the kids who would sit up front. So from an early age I was harmonizing, and I was interested in not just music, but Jewish music,” says Davis.

Davis went on to receive a degree in musical theater and established a successful career in Chicago. But when it came to Jewish life, he was disconnected. “I was unable to connect to the Jewish community the way I wanted, because I didn’t have my Friday and Saturday nights free. I wanted to meet other young Jews that were like me.”

Though Davis left the theater scene, it was not until a marketing stint made him dissatisfied that he found his niche in the Jewish community. “I found myself working at a job that I wasn’t happy about and I said, ‘How did I get from doing what I love to doing this?’ I wanted to get back to it [the arts] and I wanted to do something that really involved something about being Jewish.”

At the same time, Davis says the Jewish music scene was growing on the coasts and there was nothing that mirrored it in Chicago. “I thought, this is a great town with a great arts scene and a sizeable Jewish population. There is no reason that we shouldn’t have something interesting going on here in terms of Jewish music and Jewish theater.”

Davis founded KFAR Jewish Arts Center by e-mailing a few friends information about Jewish cultural events. The list and events grew, and today KFAR presents a season of concerts featuring local bands and bringing in groups from around the country. Though the bands range in style, Davis has a good sense that if he likes the sound of their music, there are others who will appreciate it too. The center is working on expanding to include other cultural events, including theater and poetry readings.

Davis says KFAR has tapped into a population that previously was not being reached by the Jewish community. Many of the concertgoers are unaffiliated young people who, for various reasons, never set foot in a synagogue or a JCC, says Davis, who asks people about the other Jewish events they attend. “There’s a mix of people who are unaffiliated and affiliated. There are some people who are purely interested in music and some who are more spiritually motivated but looking for a connection through music. Among those who are “affiliated” it runs the gamut from all of the movements. There are people from West Rogers Park and Wicker Park.”

Realizing that the larger Jewish community strives to engage this unaffiliated population, Davis offers synagogues throughout Chicago an opportunity to have a second concert featuring the bands KFAR brings to town. KFAR subsidizes the events that would otherwise be too difficult and expensive for synagogues. “There’s a need to do the same kind of programming within the established Jewish world. Synagogues don’t know which acts to book and they can’t afford it,” says Davis.

Davis says the most difficult part of his endeavor is financial. KFAR is financed through Davis’s own pocket and ticket sales.

Still, he hopes his one-man operation will grow to include more help and financial assistance in the coming years. “I hope it’s heading toward a community that is further enriched by Jewish music on a regular basis. One that has access to different programming in a variety of different places and levels–from youth programs, to synagogue programs, to programs that take place at traditional arts venues like I’m already doing.”

As for the Purim concert, attendees can count on hearing some good music and enjoying hamentashen. Davis says no one should worry though, “We won’t be reading a megillah or anything.”

Rabbinical School Dropouts will play at 8 p.m. Sunday, March 7 at The HotHouse, Chicago $15 at the door, $12 in advance. More information is at the KFAR website.

Posted: 2/20/2004

Related links…

KFAR website

October 23, 2003: 5:17 pm: kfarPast Events, Press, Support, Tzitzit: Jewish Fringe

Coast to Coast, Fringe Voices Are Finding Their Way Into the Fold

By NACHA CATTAN

Adam Davis was frustrated with the Jewish singles scene in Chicago. Gatherings organized by the Windy City’s local federation and Hillels were either too pricey or populated by the same circuit of clean-cut urban professionals taking reckless advantage of the events’ only entertainment — an open bar.

“You’d see the same faces every time,” Davis said. “There’d be a lot of business cards changing hands, the latest cocktails mixed with the highest-end vodka. It was a sort of dress-up-and-see-who’s-doing-what event.”

A theater actor, Davis, now 31, wanted more from his Jewish nightlife. So in 2001 he started Tzitzit: Voices from the Jewish Fringe. A concert series that bills itself as an “alternative cultural conduit,” Tzitzit features musicians who splice together klezmer and funk, Yiddish melodies and reggae, Ladino folk and American blues. The sponsor of Tzitzit, Davis’s Kfar Jewish Arts Center, is also planning a Jewish theater project.

Nearing the West Coast, the pickings for alternaJews were just as slim — until recently. So says Jason Ruby of Denver, Colo., a longhaired, 27-year-old drummer for Trash Can Fetus, a local hard-core metal band. That’s right, Trash Can Fetus. At Sabbath potlucks and “Matzah Ball” parties, Ruby had little to say to the single women floating past him.

“I remember attempting to hold a conversation at one of these events with a woman,” said Ruby, who is also a freelance architect. “I mentioned hard-core music. It didn’t last that long.”

Ruby took matters into his own hands. Last year he rallied some friends and founded Jews on the Edge. A thinly veiled attempt to meet a like-minded woman, Jews on the Edge fills a void for artist types overlooked by the organized Jewish community. As many as 50 people now gather for the group’s jaunts through Jewish cemeteries, art-house screenings, architectural tours of Denver and even dumpster dives for trash-art materials.

Voices from the Jewish Fringe and Jews on the Edge are just two examples of what appears to be a coast-to-coast explosion of self-styled Jewish fringe activity. Whether a testament to the acceptance enjoyed by Jews in American society or a protest against the mainstream community’s stodgy image, this proliferation of cultural collectives has spread beyond the hubs of New York and San Francisco. Loud, young and often irreverent, these trendsetters proffer Jewish culture to the disengaged, distinguish themselves from their parents’ Judaism and, to varying degrees, eschew establishment Jewry.

The Atlanta-based webzine Jewsweek.com offers a healthy dose of Jewish movie-star gazing, oblique looks at religious practice and spiritual thought and snappy coverage of envelope pushers. Benyamin Cohen, now 28, founded Jewsweek.com after being lulled to sleep for years reading about “shul politics” in his father’s Jewish newspaper, he told the Forward.

Paul Zakrzewski of Brooklyn has culled the works of 25 writers in the anthology “Lost Tribe: Jewish Fiction from the Edge” (HarperCollins). Billed as an exploration of sexual fetishes, conflicted identities and the troubled legacy of the Holocaust, the anthology includes stories and excerpts by Nathan Englander, Gary Shteyngart, Jonathan Safran Foer and Ellen Umansky. Zakrzewski is also joining the team working on Nextbook, an ambitious national campaign to boost “Jewish cultural literacy” using the Web, public libraries and museums.

Then there are the veterans: Heeb magazine, whose fourth issue is due out this month; Hub, a pan-ethnic art program in San Francisco; StorahTelling, a traveling Jewish ritual theater, and Jewcy, a clothing line and Jewish comedy night in Manhattan, to name a few.

“Being Jewish in and of itself no longer makes us on the outside,” said Zakrzewski, who is also an editor at Heeb. “When you have a very wealthy Jew running the city of New York, when you can’t go a day without hearing a Jewish reference, it’s the opposite. We’re as mainstream as you get.”

“There’s a fearlessness,” Zakrzewski continued. “You could have something like Heeb magazine come out, and you know there won’t be a pogrom down the street because of it.”

“What we’re seeing here is a natural evolution,” said Cohen of Jewsweek. “Jewish culture has gotten so narrow and cheesy that when you see something like Heeb or Jewsweek or ‘Lost Tribe’ crop up, nothing else could’ve happened. It’s not the same gefilte fish and Catskills your parents came up with.”

But a larger American trend may also be responsible. At a time when social and artistic boundaries are being pushed to extremes, it’s no wonder that young, intrepid Jews are experimenting with their own culture. On the flipside, radical elements are often absorbed into the mainstream. Bat-biter Ozzy Osbourne has somehow made his way into the living rooms of middle America; indie rock is often bought out by major labels and the Nodance Film Festival — an alternative to SlamDance, itself an alternative to Sundance — has become a major media event.

Jews on the fringe are no different. Even though their monikers are cheeky and provocative, most of them frankly crave the widest possible audience. In fact, almost all of these groups receive support from a Jewish organization. After all, if they truly wished to be off the Jewish map, they wouldn’t splash their Jewish identity across their product. David Lee Roth would never have worn a Jewcy T-shirt.

“Even though we are not a religious magazine, people gravitate toward us with religious-like fervor,” said Joshua Neuman, Heeb’s publisher and editor, who took the helm when Jennifer Bleyer stepped down this month. “An alternative movement is tapping into something a lot more mainstream than one would originally expect,” said Neuman, 31.

Yet a debate is simmering among these innovators over the value of producing content that critics say is only tangentially Jewish and whether certain philosophies are beyond the pale.

Media critic Douglas Rushkoff dismissed many of these groups. “I don’t think there’s anything real going on here for the most part,” said Rushkoff, a communications professor at New York University and the author of, most recently, “Nothing Sacred: The Truth About Judaism” (Crown).

“When I look at efforts of people taking spray-paint imagery from the 1980s, black subway-graffiti-art culture or turntable culture or, whatever, black penises, they’re appropriating imagery and cool from other cultures because they don’t feel cool themselves.”

Declining to name names, Rushkoff contrasted today’s Jewish subculture to that of the past: “The alternaJew of the ’70s was pot-smoking at a Zionist sleep-away camp, which still seemed to be communicating Jewish culture, kibbutz culture, socialism, some sort of resonant Jewish values. This culture seems to be promoting not values but the surface conventions of MTV and hip-hop.”

Cohen of Jewsweek retorted with a critique of his own: “For Judaism to be special and important to me, I have to fit it to modern-day society.”

“The problem arises,” he added, “when you have people like Douglas Rushkoff, who is too far out on the edge, who says, ‘Who needs God?’ That’s jumping over the cliff and hitting the rock at the bottom. The Jewish fringe is about being proud of Judaism.”

Despite disagreement over what constitutes the Jewish fringe, it has nonetheless struck a chord with charities. Heeb has received a grant from the UJA-Federation of New York; Amy Tobin’s Hub is housed in San Francisco’s Jewish community center, and Jews on the Edge is advertised on an online Federation-supported singles newsletter, L’Chaim.

The most visible fringe funder is the Joshua Venture. The San Francisco-based organization seeds the innovative and offbeat projects of young Jewish “social entrepreneurs” between the ages of 21 and 35. A partnership of various family foundations, the Joshua Venture gave Heeb its start and counts the Hub and Storahtelling among its fellows.

But groups like Jewsweek and Tzitzit have been left out in the cold. Foundation officials say the community has yet to catch up with these groups. “We are only beginning to identify what is an absolute explosion of grassroots cultural projects created by American Jews,” said Roger Bennett, vice president of strategic initiatives at the Andrea and Charles Bronfman Philanthropies.

Bennett is a cofounder of Reboot, a series of Utah-based seminars that allow creative types to brainstorm about new ideas of Jewish belonging. He said the main challenge is putting mostly older funders in touch with these groups and convincing them to experiment with noninstitutional models.

“The organized community needs to wake up and smell the coffee,” Davis of Tzitzit said about fundraising practices. “These grassroots groups are achieving the results that the organized community wants. We’re reaching the unaffiliated, culturally savvy young adults who fall through the cracks.”

Davis organizes concerts from his home, attracting 200 to 300 people per gig. Last Chanukah he promoted a festival at a Chicago alternative-rock venue, the Hideout, in which local bands played original songs written for the holiday. Eric Roth and the Silver Shmateez performed “Don’t You Want to Touch My Hanukah” to a raucous crowd.

As for Ruby of Jews on the Edge, his ruse worked. He met Barb Segal, and they’ve been dating for a year now. Will he continue to gather fellow nonconformists for dumpster dives now that he’s found his match? Of course, he said, “there’s more out there that interests me.”