It appeared to me that this Philanthropic Resources summary was culled almost completely from a paper that Eric Levine, then the professional leader of FRD at JFNA, prepared (and shared with me at the time) at least five years ago -- and that piece was itself culled from the real work of UJA some 15 years ago. Listed in the JFNA piece are some 97...that's right 97...programs in which its Philanthropic Resources Department is "engaged." And that preposterous number doesn't even include the subset of programs under a given individual heading. Susie Stern reported that the Department is working with 107 Federations -- another preposterous number. This at a time when the Department has been deconstructed to such a great extent -- leaving behind some excellent professionals to be sure. Surely not even the few of them left would claim that, e.g., they have "loaned" a JFNA "executive" to a "federation in urgent situations," since, maybe, David Saginaw, long since moved on to Birthright, when he assisted San Francisco three years ago, or that they are engaged in, horrors, "fund raising."
Then there's the claim of an "invigorated national Missions program." Take a careful look at this example of the shell game. There is no budget for Mission subsidies; the shocking lack of continental participation in the 2011 Prime Minister's Mission was a direct result of the failure by JFNA leadership to recruit and an apparent disinterest in doing so; the scheduling of multiple Missions to South America at almost the same time was self-defeating; and so on, and so on.
Then, again, it's easy to ratchet up the "program count" if you're going to include the "NYL Cabinet Shabbaton at the GA" as a program or "Boutique Missions" of which there have been none, or Festivus as a "Philanthropic Resources" program. Or throw in, as an example, I guess, of "Consulting Services, the "...integration of the Collaborative Model, an interdisciplinary approach" or the Large City Investment Program as a Philanthropic Resources program.
This is the sorry state of JFNA today: in overstating what you claim to be doing, you just destroy the credibility of what you might actually be doing. Instead of being a center of excellence with priorities clear, JFNA is a center of nothing, without purpose or goals. Fantasyland.
Rwexler
It was very interesting that at the very time that JFNA was having it's fantastical meeting in Orlando, JCCA was having one with it's Executive Directors.
ReplyDeleteThe halls were filled with conversations of JCCs that had to save their Federations (drastically falling campaigns paired with successful JCCs).
The ED Development Seminar made many in attendance wistful for the CJF of old-there were deliverables, inspirational speakers, and action items that each person took with them.
Oh, for the Olde Days
When our federations and their national organization fail in comparison with the JCCs and their national umbrella,we have a new measure of failure.
ReplyDeleteRichard you are so right on. For every successful JCC there is one under water. And the difference between the federation movement and the JCC movement is that most federations know they are being taken for a ride.
ReplyDeleteJFNA Fact of the Week:
ReplyDeleteThere is no link between Campaign and Communications at JFNA.
The campaign does not have input into the work of the communications area.
Communications is fully independent.
Why is that the fact of the week? It seems to me that campaign doesn't have input into anything at JFNA. For those of us around a long time this is old news.
ReplyDeletePerhaps they need a consultant to get them all working together --you know like the one who developed GPT or maybe JAFI's person who decided that building a Jewish state wasn't an important enough mission.
ReplyDeleteGet Kathy. She can get a trained pediatrician to do a study then systemically eliminate isolate and terminate anyone that speaks out and says anything truthful that she doesn't want to hear!
ReplyDelete