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| Camp Ramah | |
|---|---|
![]() Interactive map of Camp Ramah | |
| Location | United States, Canada, and Israel |
| Operated by | National Ramah Commission |
| Established | 1947; 78 years ago (1947) |
| Website | www |
Camp Ramah (Hebrew:מחנה רמה) is a network ofJewish summer camps affiliated with theConservative Movement.[1][2][3] The camps operate in the United States, Canada, andIsrael. All Ramah camps servekosher food and areShabbat-observant.[4]
During the 1940s, theJewish Theological Seminary established Camp Ramah as a tool for furtheringJewish education. The founders, including RabbiRalph Simon of Chicago, envisioned an informal camp setting where Jewish youth would reconnect with thesynagogue and Jewish tradition, and a new cadre of American-born Jewish leadership could be cultivated.[5] The founders of Ramah camps were inspired byCamp Massad andCamp Cejwin.[6]
The first camp opened inConover, Wisconsin in 1947. The program was drawn up byMoshe Davis andSylvia Ettenberg of the JTS Teachers' Institute. In October 2007, Ettenberg was awardedPras Ramah (the Ramah Prize) as part of Ramah's 60th anniversary celebrations.[7] Many of the early staff were ex-Camp Massad people andJTS students.[6] In 1950, the second Ramah camp opened in the Poconos and in 1953, the third Ramah camp opened in Connecticut (this camp was later moved to Massachusetts).[6]
In addition to typical summer camp activities, Ramah camps offer an educational program focusing on Judaism,Zionism, andHebrew-language instruction on different levels. Camp Ramah offers sleep-away camps with an option to stay for either two, four, or eight weeks,day camps with busing, an Israel summer tour program for teenagers, a day camp inJerusalem for American and Israeli children, and a variety of high school programs in Israel. In addition to its university-aged American counselors, specialists and educators, the staff of each camp is joined by a corps of emissaries from Israel known as the "mishlachat/מישלחת" (delegation).
ATrinity College researcher, Ariella Keysar, documented a significant impact of Ramah on college students: She found that Ramah graduates were three times more likely to date only Jews, four times more likely to attend synagogue services, and three times as likely as the general Jewish population to spend significant time in Israel.[8]
According to theJewish Agency for Israel, Camp Ramah "is not just a camp, it’s a lifestyle." Among North Americanolim, one finds communities of former Americans who attended Camp Ramah and reconnected later in life.[9] Many spiritual leaders, social justice advocates, educators, and community board members in North America trace their strong Jewish values and commitment to Judaism to their summers at Ramah.[10] An educational initiative by Camp Ramah producedSiddur Lev Yisrael,[11] one of the only Conservative siddurim without anEnglish translation. This is done in support of Ramah's educational mission to emphasize and spread the use ofHebrew.


Camp Ramah in the Berkshires (Wingdale, New York) is located on Lake Ellis, 90 minutes north of New York City by car. It opened in 1964 and serves the metropolitan New York/New Jersey area.[12]
Camp Ramah in California (Ojai, California) is located in the mountains ofOjai, California, 90 minutes north of Los Angeles by car. It opened in 1956 and aims to serve California and much of the western United States.[13]
Camp Ramah in Canada (Utterson, Ontario) is located in theMuskoka Region of Ontario, two hours north of Toronto, onSkeleton Lake.[14] It opened in 1960 and serves Canada and parts of the northern United States.
Camp Ramah Darom (Clayton, Georgia) is located in 122 acres (0.49 km2) in theAppalachian Valley nearClayton, Georgia, 2 hours north ofAtlanta.[15] It opened in 1996 and serves the southern United States.
Camp Ramah in New England (Palmer, Massachusetts), also known as Ramah Palmer, is located approximately 1½ hours west ofBoston and 45 minutes east ofAmherst andNorthampton.[16] It opened in 1953 as Camp Ramah Connecticut and serves the New England area as well as DC, Virginia, and parts of New York.[17] Camp Ramah New England also operates the Ramah Day Camp of Greater Washington, DC, a day camp located in Germantown, MD.[18]
Camp Ramah in Northern California (Bay Area nearSan Francisco), also known as Ramah NorCal or Ramah Galim, opened in 2016. Ramah NorCal is a specialty camp with three tracks, ocean exploration, performing arts, and adventure sports. Camp Ramah in Northern California also hosts a Tikvah program for campers with special needs.[19]
Camp Ramah in the Poconos (Lakewood, Pennsylvania) is located in the mountain region ofWayne County in Northeastern Pennsylvania, three hours driving time from both New York City andPhiladelphia.[20] It opened in 1950 and serves parts of the northeast United States.
Ramah in the Rockies (Sedalia, Colorado) is located in the Rocky Mountains, a 360-acre (1.5 km2) camp site 1½–2 hours by car fromDenver andColorado Springs.[21] Ramah Rockies opened in 2010 and is the first Ramah specialty camp, focusing its program on outdoors and environmental education, with a base camp covering 360 acres at 8,000 ft. elevation. In January 2018, BaMidbar Wilderness Therapy launched their 40-day-wilderness program for adults struggling with mental health.[22]
Ramah Sports Academy is located inFairfield,Connecticut, on the campus ofFairfield University. The location offers campers top-level collegiate athletic fields and facilities including gymnasiums, an indoor pool, fitness and conditioning facilities, and more. RSA offers three two-week sessions over the course of the summer.
Camp Ramah in Wisconsin (Conover, Wisconsin) is located in the lake region of Northern Wisconsin, 18 miles (29 km) north ofEagle River, 350 miles (560 km) from Chicago, and 240 miles (390 km) fromMinneapolis, on the shores of Lake Buckatabon.[23] It opened in 1947 and serves the Midwest United States.
Ramah day camp in Chicago is located inWheeling, Illinois,Cook County, Illinois, northwest of Chicago.[24] It started in 2000 using the camp grounds purchased from Circle M Day Camp which opened in 1953.[25]
Ramah Day Camp Greater DC, which meets at the Wellspring Conference Center in Germantown, Maryland, offers a variety of programming. Ramah D.C. Day Camp is run byCamp Ramah New England.
Ramah Day Camp in Boston is located inWaltham, Massachusetts, inMiddlesex County, Massachusetts, about a 30-minute drive from Boston. Camp lasts eight weeks and campers can enroll for any number of the weeks. Ramah Boston is hosted atGann Academy in Waltham, and the campers swim atBentley University’s Dana Center pool. Ramah Boston is run byCamp Ramah New England.[2]
Ramah Day Camp in Nyack is located inNyack, New York, inRockland County, New York, approximately 45 minutes by car from New York City. An eight-week day camp at which the staff remains overnight, though the campers, ages 5–14, go home every day. Activities for campers include basketball, soccer, hockey, tennis, a low ropes course, a full high ropes course including four rock climbing walls and a zip line, art, woodworking, ceramics, and cooking. A hot kosher lunch is provided daily to the campers, and the staff receive three meals per day. Staff members participate in an intensive program of Jewish learning, leadership development, and social engagement in the afternoons and evenings.[26]
Ramah day camp in Philadelphia is located in the Perelman Jewish Day School inMelrose Park, Pennsylvania. It shares a pool with theJewish Federation Day Care Center and rents the Olympic-size pool of a nearby apartment complex. Activities include sports, swimming (twice a day – instructional and free), art, drama, nature, cooking, Judaic studies, music, and dance. Special events includeRick Recht concerts, Yom Yisrael (a carnival celebrating Israeli culture, history, and people), Maccabiah (color war), and Yom USA (July 3). Older campers go on overnights, while younger campers have 'undernights.' An arts festival is held at the end of the summer, combining drama, song, and dance.[27]
The Ramah Jerusalem Day Camp is intended for English-speaking children from abroad and Israel entering kindergarten through eighth grade. The camp is located at the Israel Goldstein Youth Village in the San Simon neighborhood of Jerusalem, surrounded by a security fence. Once each week campers go on outings to tour Jerusalem and its surroundings. The other days campers are involved in fun educational activities on the Goldstein campus, including sports, arts and crafts, music, drama and swimming. Hebrew language is incorporated through activities and songs. Daily Tefillot (prayer services), "Oneg Shabbat" (a culmination of the week) and activities related to the summer theme create an environment of Masorti Jewish tradition that is an important element of all Ramah programs.[28]
The Ramah movement’s Israel programs include Ramah Israel Seminar, Tichon Ramah Yerushalayim (TRY), Ramah Israel Institute, Ramah Jerusalem Camps and Ramah MITF (MASA Israel Teaching Fellows)[29]
When campers age out of the Ramah summer camping experience at age 16, they can sign up for the Ramah Seminar in Israel. The six-week program is devoted to exploring the north, south, and center of the country. It is based at two principal sites:Havat HaNoar HaTzioni in Jerusalem, and theHodayotyouth village, adjacent toKibbutzLavi near theSea of Galilee.[30] The seminar includes an optional ten-day trip to Poland to learn about Jewish life in Eastern Europe before theHolocaust. In 2010, Ramah Israel Seminar offered a second optional program, "Yarok," (Green) focusing on the environment.
Students in grades 10–12 may choose to come on a two-month track (USY High) or a four-month track (TRY) in the spring semester. The highlight of the program is the intensive Israel Core Course, an 18-credit-hour study of Israel from ancient times to the present, and which includes both fieldwork and engaging classwork. All studies are accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, with all AP courses certified through the College Board's AP Course Audit program.[31]
Ramah in New England and in Northern California offers inclusion bunks for special-needs and mainstream youngsters, stand-alone bunks, and a vocational training program for older children and adults. There are bunks with entrances that can accommodate motorized scooters, barrier-free bathrooms, and paved roads suitable for wheelchairs.[32]
Since 2003, theFriends of the Israel Defense Forces association has sponsored a summer camp program,Moreshet, for Israeli children who have lost a parent or sibling in a war or terrorist attack. The children spend the summer at Jewish sleep-away camps in the United States. In 2007, Camp Ramah in the Berkshires hosted 50 campers and staff members. The program continued in 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2016.[33]