The Teva Learning Alliance (formerly Teva Learning Center) is a Jewish-based environmental education 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that teaches about Judaism and the environment at Jewish day schools, summer camps and Hebrew schools. It is the only full-time year-round program dedicated to innovative, experiential Jewish education taught through the lens of the natural world.
History and mission
The Teva Learning Center was developed in 1994 by the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center and Surprise Lake Camp. Isabella Freedman has been Tevaâs fall home since its founding in 1994.
The Teva Learning Center's educational approach,
seeks to create awareness among Jews about their connection with and dependence upon the natural systems that support life. The Center seeks âto renew the ecological wisdom inherent in Judaismâ by âimmersing participants in the natural world.â
The director is Nili Simhai, who won the 2009 Covenant Foundation award for Excellence in Jewish Education "for making significant marks in their communities, and for designing and using innovative educational approaches to achieve dramatic and lasting impact." In 2014, Teva and its base, the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center, merged with the Jewish environmental organization Hazon.
Programs
The Teva Learning Center is a Jewish education group which engages in environmental education and activism through the context of Judaism. Teva's education centers on the preservation of the environment through the eyes of Judaism. Teva frequently, though not exclusively, caters to the educational needs of children in Jewish day schools and provides a hands on approach to environmental education. Teva also teaches synagogues, camps and youth groups.
Bring It Back To Our School
Teva provides workshops on the environment and outdoor experiences along the East Coast at 45 different schools. They work with about 4,000 students annually.
Part of this is teaching students that they are Shomrei Adamah ("Keepers of the Earth"):
Shomrei Adamah (âKeepers of the Earthâ), is for fifth- and sixth-grade day-school students who visit a retreat center for four days and make a âbrit adamah,â or covenant with the earth, to engage in environmental activity. The Center also runs a program for junior-high students, Achdoot (âTogethernessâ), in which the teens camp in the wilderness, usually a state campground
In June 2009, students from the Solomon Schechter Day School of Raritan Valley in New Jersey were presented with the "Kids for Clean Communities Award" for the recycling program they developed at their school after attending the Teva program.
Birkat HaChamah
Teva recently purchased a bus previously owned by Ben & Jerry's founder Ben Cohen (businessman) for use in environmental classes. The bus was incorporated into environmental awareness programs related to Birkat Hachamah or Blessing of the Sun. However, Orthodox Talmudic scholar Rabbi J. David Bleich of Yeshiva University, a specialist in Birkat Hachamah has been critical of the interpretation of Judaism as a notably environmental faith. He argues that environmental problems are "issues in and of themselves and are totally unrelated to the blessing of the sun," as the blessing is an occasion to acknowledge the wonder of God's creations, not a political statement. "I suppose you can connect anything," he says. "You can draw dots and lines; you don't have to be logical.".
Farm Fellowships
Teva offers a three month fellowship in environmental farming and Jewish values.
Teva Seminar
An annual four-day program designed to train over 100 participants to develop programs in their "home" institutions.
References
External links
- Teva Learning Center