Not Locked Up During Lockdown: Appreciating the Value of Volunteers

Not Locked Up During Lockdown: Appreciating the Value of Volunteers

Rising Trustee of the Mayberg Foundation Yacova Mayberg explains why she, as part of a group of Israeli and international participants on a preparatory gap year program, went door to door in an Arab village during the climax of the global pandemic, offering support. The answer lies, she relates, in the “culture of the state of Israel and the value it places on volunteering.”

“I feel blessed to be involved with the Mayberg Foundation, which values collective effort and foundational Judaism,” she continues. “This means having an impact on communities we care about and on the world through our instilled Torah lens. I have had some incredible, expansive volunteer opportunities this past year, which further shape my understanding of philanthropy.”

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Sparks of Service

Sparks of Service

At my synagogue before the High Holidays three women with busy lives take on the annual task of putting name labels on the appeal cards that worshippers use to indicate how much they will contribute to the synagogue for its own and community needs.

The labels must be printed by the synagogue office staff before the volunteers can put them on the cards and often the printing isn’t done until the last minute, waiting for the last congregants to sign up for seats. Yet despite the mad rush at the end, every year the three women set aside the time to complete the work. Asked how they could give up precious hours when so much is needed to be done for their jobs, in their homes and for their families before the holidays, the women all said it was a task they took on delightedly each year knowing that “just a bit of peeling and sticking” would result in needed funds. “It’s my service to the synagogue and community,” said one.

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