Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Yale Vaad Adventure 2013: The Best Extreme Trip Ever!

Thursday, August 29th, 2013
After barely any sleep, a week of outrageously fun and intense outdoor challenges, powerfully deep concepts, real character building, incredible bonding with incredible people, and outstanding meals - we were more than satisfied.

After barely any sleep, a week of outrageously fun and intense outdoor challenges, powerfully deep concepts, real character building, incredible bonding with incredible people, and outstanding meals – we were more than satisfied.

Check out the video here

Hollywood Writer David Sacks at The Vaad – Don’t Miss, Apply Now!

Monday, February 4th, 2013

David Sacks at The Vaad

Click here to apply

Where will you be May 21st?

Monday, December 24th, 2012

 Click here for details

Vaad II Crew Does Delicious Chesed for Stressed out Undergrads

Monday, December 24th, 2012

Stew & Brew kick-off at AEPI

Saturday, October 6th, 2012

Fully cooked stew, raw Judaism and cold brew. We’re technically sponsored by HeBrew (if you count subsidized cases as sponsorship), shmaltz.com and will be providing fine samplings of their glatt-kosher beer and our home-cooked cholent. But from time to time, our seasoned Rabbinic taste-buds may just get the best of us and a case of Hoegarten will find its way to your door. You bring the Jews, we’ll bring the rest. Any questions, any occasion, any issues you choose, we’ll turn it into a Jewish extravaganza of weiss-bier and wisdom, music and mysticism, delectables and depth, and the real meaning behind a “religious experience.”

Thursday, October 11th, 6pm at the AEPi house, 395 Crown St.

Disney Animator/Director Coming to The Vaad

Monday, September 3rd, 2012

Don’t miss Saul’s debut at The Vaad on October 22nd! Click here to apply.
Topic: Judaism as a springboard for a successful Hollywood career
Shmooze and Q&A

Saul has worked on many hit Disney films, including Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Mulan, Tarzan, Winnie the Pooh: Springtime with Roo and the hilarious Kronk’s New Groove, as well as the action-adventure series Spy Groove for MTV.

 

 

 

 

Rediscovering my Jewish identity. By Nava Winkler from Brown University

Sunday, January 8th, 2012

For a taste of how participants feel and reflect upon their Meor Israel experience, here is an article, originally published in The Jewish Voice & Herald, by one of our friends from last summer’s (2011) trip, when we partnered with Brown University. (This May we’re going for an all-Yale Israel trip which promises to be sublime in all its custom-made-for-Yale glory! Click here for more.)  Below is the original text of the article and a link to the original as well. Enjoy!

Click here to go to the original article

Rediscovering my Jewish identity
By Nava Winkler
Tuesday, 20 September 2011 02:48
Israel program reinforces desire for Jewish connections

This past summer, I was given the opportunity to take part in an amazing program in Israel called MEOR, which is Hebrew for “light.” My initial reasoning for participating in MEOR was its attractive cost ($500 for the entire program including roundtrip airfare), but by the end of the first week, I was thoroughly impressed.

For two-and-one-half weeks we were based in a four-star hotel in Jerusalem, only a 10-minute walk from the Old City. In the mornings, we heard lectures on different Jewish topics; in the afternoons, we traveled to different sites in Israel. Our speakers came from a variety of backgrounds and provided an atmosphere of open discussion. I was fortunate to be part of a group of bright students from Brown, Stanford, Berkeley, Yale and Northwestern universities. Although most of us were non-observant Jews, we all shared a sense of relief at having an outlet to discuss all of our deepest questions about Judaism.

Two years ago, I was 20 and exhausted; I had finished my military service in Israel and was eager to start a new chapter of my civilian life. Although I had just gone through a challenging period, I realized that I was as clueless about my identity as any other fresh face on campus. The question, “but who am I really?!” was the dominant theme of my first two years of college, and this struggle led me to courses with cliché titles, such as “On Being Human” and “Existentialism,” which I tackled with such urgency you’d think I was on death row. The feeling only increased after a friend of mine died. He had also been a former IDF soldier who moved to Rhode Island to study at Brown University. His tragic death caused me to reevaluate my life and what was truly important to me.

I focused my attention during this period on many different aspects of my identity, but there was one in particular that I had trouble figuring out on my own: my relationship to Judaism.

While growing up in Rhode Island, I would have called Judaism my most cherished association. It had characterized my set of values, provided me with a supportive community and gave me an outlet for my spirituality. But sometime during my travels, Judaism had lost its hold on me. For a while, I reveled in the relief of aimlessness, but by the time I returned to Providence from my military service in Israel, I had grown tired of feeling rootless. I felt less like a “free bird” and more like a “free balloon.”

During the MEOR trip, I was able to express this deep-seated urge to redefine what Judaism meant to me because there was a supportive atmosphere to ask all the questions for which I needed answers. Not only did MEOR successfully juggle Jewish learning with sightseeing, it was so carefully designed that it managed to hold the attention of 24 cynical students from several of America’s most prestigious universities. My fellow students impressed me; although we had diverse personalities and backgrounds, everyone was deeply curious and engaged in discussions of their Jewish identities. Some, like me, were already thinking about these issues before the program began, but for most, these concerns were newly revealed during the trip.

My desire to learn more about my Judaism stayed with me, even as I traveled back to Rhode Island. I plan to continue my Jewish learning throughout this fall semester and stay in touch with the friends I have made on the trip.

I am thankful to those individuals who designed the MEOR program and to the generous donors who make such a highly valuable trip affordable. I also owe much to the kind and supportive staff and to an amazing group of people who shared their insights and stories with me. Although I am still grappling with questions of identity, I am thankful to at least have Judaism back on the radar.

Nava Winkler, a junior at Brown University, is a resident of Pawtucket.

Contact her at nava_winkler@brown.edu.

Meor meets Matisyahu

Monday, September 12th, 2011

Meor at Yale and Yale Hillel partnered to bring Matisyahu for a Q&A before his show at Toad’s – it was lots of fun getting to know Matis a bit, especially after the Q&A where a few select Meor and Hillel members and friends joined Matisyahu for an informal vegan feast. Enjoy the pics. . .

Matisyahu Exclusive!

Monday, August 29th, 2011

Meor at Yale and Yale Hillel bring an exclusive Q&A to the Yale community! 4pm, Sunday, Sept 4 at Slifka – see you there!

At the Meadowlands: Meor at Yale vs. The Giants

Thursday, May 19th, 2011

Well, the Giants never showed up and we never found out why. We’re pretty confident though that it was just raw fear, cold feet ya know. So we had fun without them anyway just playing around on the field, kicking field goals, noshing on sushi, and listening to the Maccabeats live over a candlelit dinner. . .too bad for those Giants.