Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Honey, Can you Fix the Sink Again?

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Do you have some skills in home repair? Tired of just using them to do repairs around the house? Want to use them to truly make a difference in someone’s life? Join us as Richard Feldman of Feldwood Construction teaches you how to use your skills to make a difference.

Yachad is looking for a few good men and women who are interested in being trained on how to lead our volunteer projects. Come join us on Sunday, October 3, 2010
from 11am-3pm at Refuge of Hope Church at 10 P St, NE, Washington, DC (Near NY Ave. Metro). You will learn how to lead volunteers to repair the homes and community spaces of low-income DC area residents and new DIY home skills that you can apply to our Handyman program as well.

All are welcome. It’s free and brunch will be served! It will be hands-on and fun. RSVP to Kendra@yachad-dc.org by September 29th.

News Release for Our City Film Festival

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

For Immediate Release

For more information, contact:
Kendra Rubinfeld
Office: 202-296-8563; Cell: 240-462 -6587
www.ourcityfilmfestival.com

Local Film Fest Wants to See Your DC
Fourth Annual Our City Film Festival Offers Three Ways to Participate

WASHINGTON, D.C. (August 30, 2010) – The Our City Film Festival is only festival that showcases DC-focused films, encouraging filmmakers and film students to make films that will bring our communities together and celebrate the rich cultures, stories and scenes that make up our city. In order to encourage more creativity and see more DC residents’ perspectives, the festival is offering three ways to get involved and win prizes and audiences.

For the main film festival in February 2011, the festival is currently accepting film submissions. Narratives, documentaries, experimental, animation, shorts and features are all welcome as long as they take place in or are about someone or something in DC. Early submission deadline is September 1, 2010 and regular submission deadline is November 1, 2010. Cash and product prizes awarded to winners, and films are screened for nearly a thousand. Find out more online and to download a submission form.
Link to information on submission process: http://www.ourcityfilmfestival.com

For those social-media-inclined creatives, Our City is also hosting a video contest online for DC-focused films. This contest is being sponsored by The Washington City Paper and the winner of the online contest will be screened at the Opening Night Party at R.F.D.’s and receive product prizes and a $100 gift certificate to Penn Camera.
Link to information on submission process: http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/articles/39530/submit-your-film-about-dc-to-the-4th-annual-our

For those who prefer the still type of documentation, an online photo contest is also available and easily accessible through Flickr. Any photo of DC that is not of the mall or a monument is acceptable, and the winners receive two free tickets to the film festival’s screenings and the Opening Night Party.
Link to information about submission process: http://www.flickr.com/groups/yourdcphoto/
Photos Available: http://www.flickr.com/photos/organize/?start_tab=sets

“DC is more than monuments, politics and traffic and the Our City Film Festival is here to prove it,” says Festival Director, Kendra Rubinfeld. “This year we are trying to get even more people involved in showing us their DC. We know there are stories out there that deserve to be told.”
###

The festival is run by Yachad, a nonprofit for affordable housing and community development. Yachad means “together” in Hebrew. The organization helps neighbors help neighbors by mobilizing skilled and unskilled volunteers to work side-by-side with those they serve, to repair the homes and neighborhoods of low-income DC residents. Yachad started The Our City Film Festival to further their efforts of uniting communities outside of house repair.

Presentation to the Board

Monday, August 30th, 2010

Push the forward arrow to engage the screen. If you would like to watch it in full screen, on the bottom right corner of the presentation box, it should say “more”. Click on that and a drop down menu will show an option for “full screen”. To make the slide show go forward, just push the arrow pointing to the right. If you want to get out of the full screen, push either escape on your keyboard, or the “more” drop down again and select “full screen”. Enjoy.

B’nai Mitzvahs Can Make a Difference

Monday, August 16th, 2010

If you or your child is a B’nai Mitzvah and looking for a tzedakah opportunity, you have come to the right place.

Yachad, the Jewish nonprofit for affordable housing and community development, mobilizes the Jewish community to repair the homes and communities of low-income Washington, DC residents side-by-side with those being served.  With Yachad, you can help to assure that people of all races, economic stature, and religious beliefs can remain in their homes affordably and comfortably and help to bring communities together through tikkun olam.

Option 1:  Give-a-Share Program-(For Anyone, Anywhere)

Through the Give-a-Share Program, B’nai Mitzvahs can make a true difference in a family’s life by sponsoring a house’s repair.  With the collected tzedakah from the simcha, repairs can be done on a family’s roof, walls, electric, plumbing and more, making a house a home again.  Yachad has the ability, through their partnerships with local contractors, to leverage a donation by 2 to 3 times its value.  B’nai Mitzvahs will receive photos and video testimonial from those they have helped so that they can fully understand the impact they have made in the lives of others.  Find out more here.  Or contact us at Kendra@yachad-dc.org, or call at (202) 296-8563.

Option 2: Mitzvah Parties-(For DC Metro Area Residents Only)

If the B’nai Mitzvah lives in Washington, DC, he/she can host a mitzvah party at the one year anniversary of his/her Bar/Bat Mitzvah. The B’nai Mitzvah will be paired with a low-income family living in Washington, DC. With the tzedakah collected from the simcha, the B’nai Mitzvah will sponsor the cost of supplies needed for the repairs to be done by volunteer contractors. Then, friends and family* of the B’nai Mitzvah are invited to paint and do small carpentry in the home, side-by-side with the family, to put the finishing touches on the home. From beginning to end, this project gives B’nai Mitzvahs a greater understanding of how fortunate they are, home repair knowledge, and a chance to see how they can truly make a difference. Find out more here or contact us at MitzvahParty@yachad-dc.org or call at (202) 296-8563.

*Volunteers must be 14 years-old or older. Yachad prefers to have an even amount of children and adult volunteers to ensure family involvement and quality work.

Press Release for Mitzvah Party

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

Nonprofit’s Program Offers Nontraditional Party Option

Those Celebrating Can Make Real Difference in Families’ Lives by

Repairing Homes in Nation’s Capital

 August 4, 2010 (Washington)  If you have seen ABC’s Extreme Makeover Home Edition, and ever wanted to be part of it, here’s your chance.  Yachad, the Jewish nonprofit for affordable housing and community development, has launched their Mitzvah Party program.   For those with special occasions coming up such as a Bar/Bat Mitzvah, birthdays, work-functions, anniversaries, weddings, etc., this program allows the honoree to sponsor the repair of a low-income homeowner’s house.   As a sponsor, the honoree will organize their friends and family to come together with the homeowner and their family and paint and repair the home in need.  Under the supervision of a trained construction manager, the volunteers will learn how to paint and do small carpentry, all the while repairing a family’s life by repairing their home.

“Yachad volunteers and donors are surprised time and time again when they realize that their neighbors-people living just 20 minutes from their comfortable home-are living in conditions similar to those who were hit by Hurricane Katrina,” Kendra Rubinfeld, Yachad Program Director says.  Families are living without functioning roofs, electricity, plumbing, ovens and fridges.  The Mitzvah Party program is set up so that the honoree pays a sponsorship fee ranging from $1000-$2500.  This fee will pay for the professional repairs needed inside the home before the volunteers are able to do the painting and small carpentry.  It also pays for the materials and supplies used on the day as well as the time of the construction supervisor. 

A Mitzvah Party host says, “When I spend money on a birthday party, my friends and I have a good time, but at the end of the day, there is food to throw out, places to clean up, and a feeling of sadness that the celebration is done.  Yachad’s Mitzvah Party program creates a memorable day that keeps giving and my friends and I can change a family’s life.  You can’t put a price tag on that!” 

Mitzvah Party volunteers must be at least 14 years-old.

To find out more about Yachad and the Mitzvah Party program, you can go to www.yachad-dc.org or www.yachad-dc.org/MitzvahParty.php, or contact Kendra Rubinfeld, Program Director at Kendra@yachad-dc.org or 202 296-8563. 

Video also available at http://www.youtube.com/user/OurCityFilmFest#p/u/3/MrMDT07hxiY

###

Yachad is the Jewish nonprofit for affordable housing and community development.  By mobilizing the Jewish community’s skilled and unskilled volunteers and generous donors, they ensure that Washington, DC can remain a city for all people, regardless of race or economic stature.  Find out more at www.yachad-dc.org

What David Learned…

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

As part of Yachad’s Ramp it Up! summer program, we asked our students to write a short essay on what they have learned from their hard week of building an access ramp for a person in need. Here’s what David Greenberg, a senior at Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School, had to say. For another great esay, click here.

Before I attended Ramp It Up!, I read the required packet and learned what the camp did. At the camp, high school students build ramps to make houses handicap accessible. I didn’t fully understand how important Ramp It Up! was to the community and to the individual tenants. This all changed when Kendra put me in a wheelchair and simulated what it would be like for someone to be in a wheelchair in a room that isn’t built to support someone with a disability. I could barely maneuver the wheelchair on the carpet; I couldn’t open up the weighted door by myself; I couldn’t fit the wheelchair into the bathroom easily and once I pushed my way into the bathroom, there was nothing in the bathroom to facilitate a handicapped person to use that bathroom. When I returned to my work, I had a new appreciation for what we were making. When I saw a lip in the deck that would be tough for a wheelchair to get over, I immediately grabbed a sander and made sure that the deck became more accessible to someone in a wheelchair. Through my experiences at Ramp It Up! camp, I learned how important it is for a handicapped person to have a living area that is built for them.

Here’s a video about David’s experience…

Who Cares? We Do!

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

Yachad and Greater DC Cares held a meeting today to discuss ways of partnering on projects that will rebuild our communities. Both partners are thrilled to have in the works several co-sponsored projects. Check out Yachad’s calendar for more information. One of the co-sponsored projects will take place on Monday, October 11th, Columbus Day, and will be part of Yachad’s We the People program. We will be planting and landscaping around the recently built access ramp on to the 2nd Street Coop, located near the Ft. Totten Metro in NE, DC. If you are looking to participate, you can sign up for that project and others here.

Mitzvah Party Press Release

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

For Immediate Release-August 4, 2010
Kendra Rubinfeld, Program Director
w-202 296-8563, c-240 462-6587
Kendra@yachad-dc.org
www.yachad-dc.org

Nonprofit’s Program Offers B’nai Mitzvahs Opportunity to Make Real Difference in Families’ Lives By Repairing Homes in Nation’s Capital

August 4, 2010 (Washington) If you have seen ABC’s Extreme Makeover Home Edition, and ever wanted to be part of it, here’s your chance. Yachad, the Jewish nonprofit for affordable housing and community development, has launched their Mitzvah Party program. For those with special occasions coming up such as a Bar/Bat Mitzvah, this program allows the honoree to sponsor the repair of a low-income homeowner’s house. As a sponsor, the honoree will organize their friends and family to come together with the homeowner and their family and paint and repair the home in need. Under the supervision of a trained construction manager, the volunteers will learn how to paint and do small carpentry, all the while repairing a family’s life by repairing their home.

“Yachad volunteers and donors are surprised time and time again when they realize that their neighbors-people living just 20 minutes from their comfortable home-are living in conditions similar to those who were hit by Hurricane Katrina,” Kendra Rubinfeld, Yachad Program Director says. Families are living without functioning roofs, electricity, plumbing, ovens and fridges. The Mitzvah Party program is set up so that the honoree pays a sponsorship fee ranging from $1000-$2500. This fee will pay for the professional repairs needed inside the home before the volunteers are able to do the painting and small carpentry. It also pays for the materials and supplies used on the day as well as the time of the construction supervisor.

“After spending nearly 10,000 dollars on my son’s Bar Mitzvah, the sponsorship seemed a bit steep. But then I realized that this program will truly change a family’s life and teach my son how fortunate he is, and there is no price tag for that,” says a recent Mitzvah Party and B’nai Mitzvah parent.

Mitzvah Party volunteers must be at least 14 years-old, so many B’nai Mitzvahs interested in the program collect tzedakah from their Bar/Bat Mitzvah gifts and hold the Mitzvah Party one year after their special day. This allows them to celebrate the anniversary of their event, and fully engage in the program with their friends and family, after all of the excitement of their Bar/Bat Mitzvah dies down.

To find out more about Yachad and the Mitzvah Party program, you can go to www.yachad-dc.org or www.yachad-dc.org/MitzvahParty.php, or contact Kendra Rubinfeld, Program Director at Kendra@yachad-dc.org or 202 296-8563.
###
Yachad is the Jewish nonprofit for affordable housing and community development. By mobilizing the Jewish community’s skilled and unskilled volunteers and generous donors, they ensure that Washington, DC can remain a city for all people, regardless of race or economic stature. Find out more at www.yachad-dc.org.

The Power of 20 Dollars

Wednesday, August 4th, 2010

Just watch this video. 

And the Winner Is…

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Tamar pictured on the far left.

 Tamar Gasko, a rising junior at Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School participated in Yachad’s Ramp it Up! Summer Program for teens where she built an accessibility ramp along side nine other local teens, for a low-income DC resident in need.  As part of an essay contest, she answered the question, “What did I learn from Ramp it Up?”  Here’s what she said…

Though one may think that Ramp It Up! is solely an opportunity to build a ramp for an underprivileged family or community, it was so much more for me. True, I learned how to cut a mean 180 degree line with a circle saw and crazy lines with the jigsaw. I learned how to use a hammer correctly and to notch wood, how to change a drill battery and measure the length of something. I learned all these carpentry terms that were very satisfying when finally understood; level, flush, plumb, circle saw, jigsaw, sawhorse, “chalk it,” and ratchet. That was fun.

But I also really started to understand what the lower class goes through. I began to be able to fathom how someone who works full time and gets paid minimum wage might not be able to do something that I take for granted, like going to a museum or movie. It’s hard to not have money to spare. I get that now.

We had a discussion about the cycle of poverty during lunch one day, and it completely blew my mind. A simple thing such as your parents not having gone to college can put you at the bottom of the food chain, and, though you yourself haven’t done anything- heck, you were just born- you can’t have a life like everyone else. And you can’t change it, because your parents don’t have the money to go to school, which means a better job and more money. They can’t even send you to a good school, so when you grow up, it’s all going to cycle back and the same thing is going to happen to you. This is what blew my mind. I imagined myself in this scenario, and felt utterly helpless. I couldn’t do anything for myself. It was as if I was in a runaway train with no brakes. Then someone else mentioned that mental stress and depression is an outcome of being in this low-income situation, and being treated costs even more. That freaked me out even more, before I realized that thankfully, I’m not in that position.

But there are people in those positions who need help. After learning about the cycle of poverty, I learned that giving people on the street money occasionally won’t help them that much. It’ll buy food for the day, but it’ll leave them wondering, “Will I get food tomorrow?” If anything, this might stress them more. Handouts of money don’t lift them out of the cycle of poverty and put them on a new track. That’s where we come in. By building a ramp, we’re changing part of the cycle of poverty, and therefore changing somebody’s life. Someone out there will now have more independence, a job maybe, and be less stressed.

On the second to last day of ramp camp, I was riding home on the Metro with some other rampers, and one of them mentioned an article in the Times about the Somali pirates who’ve been hijacking boats. He said that, obviously, the pirates’ lack of money doesn’t justify what they’ve been doing, but it makes sense that unlawful actions are the only way they feel that they can improve their situation. They don’t have a way of improving other aspects of their life that would raise them out of the cycle. This insightful comment put what we’ve been talking about and working on all of ramp camp into a greater, if not a worldly context.

The only thing that still makes me frustrated is that it seems like there is no way for an impoverished person to help himself. I feel that if I was in a financial crisis, I’d want help, but I’d want to be capable of taking care of myself, and to not being able would bring me down. It must feel embarrassing or belittling to ask others to help you, either physically or financially. I still have not come to peace in regards to this predicament.

I realize that building a ramp and doing other such projects for the less fortunate is not the answer to our problems, but it is an indescribably important step forward, and I greatly appreciate that, and the opportunity to be a part of it.