CJP works with and supports many organizations across the community to provide services and programs, and ensure the inclusion of people with disabilities in all aspects of Jewish life. Please browse our page to discover a variety of services and opportunities for people with disabilities and their families:
Where to start
Education
Services for Families
Services for Adults
Programs for the Deaf and hearing-Impaired
Advocacy
Where to start...
The Disabilities Resource Network at Jewish Family and Children's Service (JF&CS) provides access and information to the wide range of services available in the community. Please call Sandra Slavet at 781-647-5327 x 1941 or sslavet@jfcsboston.org for more information about Jewish and secular programs for people with disabilities.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
Yesodot maximizes potential and builds community foundations ("yesodot") for Jewish children and young adults with disabilities by empowering their families. Yesodot provides a varied menu of family-centered, family-directed services and programs to families whose loved ones have developmental, physical or learning disabilities, autism, mental illness, or other disabilities. Over 175 families from 35 cities and towns in Greater Boston currently benefit from Yesodot's services. Yesodot provides parent and sibling support; family recreational outings; presents educational workshops; disseminates information and develops resources; offers programs for young people transitioning from high school, and runs an assistive technology project. Yesodot participates in public awareness activities and collaborates to foster community inclusion. Yesodot also has a project with the Greater Boston Jewish community's sister city, Haifa, Israel. Yesodot is a service of JVS. For more info contact Leah Abrams at labrams@jvs-boston.org or 617-399-3299 and visit the website at http://www.yesodot.org.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
CJP's Initiative for Day School Excellence: Special Education Services provides significant funding to enable our day schools to support the learning of students with special needs by providing additional special education staff and offering extensive training (professional development) for special educators, classroom teachers, administrators, and the community. Additional information about grants, workshops and speakers can be found on BJE's website (www.bje.org). The site also has an extensive listing of websites for those interested in Jewish special education.
In addition to working with schools, our Special Education Services supports a Shabbat minyan for people of all ages with special needs. Held at the fully accessible Congregation Kehillath Israel, Brookline, about once a month, Minyan Me'YOUchad is highly interactive. The entire KI congregation joins the minyan for kiddush following services. An innovative program, TeenAde, prepares teens (grades 10-12) to work as aides with children with special needs individually, in small groups or in inclusive classrooms in congregational/community schools. Teens attend monthly Sunday seminars to learn Jewish views on disabilities and strategies for working with children with special learning needs; these seminars support their work in the classroom. This program received national recognition and is being successfully replicated in other cities. Sherry Grossman, the Director of Special Education Services, can be reached at sgrossman@bje.org or 617-965-7350, ext. 229.
Gateways: Access to Jewish Education is the new organization formed by the merger of Etgar L'Noar and the Jewish Special Education Collaborative (JSEC). The mission of Gateways is to enable students in Greater Boston with special needs to become participants in the Jewish community.
Through its Jewish Special Education Collaborative (JSEC) program, Gateways enables students with special educational needs to attend and succeed in a day school environment, by providing on-site special education services that go beyond what the day schools generally offer. Students in the nine participating day schools receive in-class and out of class assistance from JSEC speech-language pathologists, occupational therapists, physical therapists, behavioral and vision consultants, inclusion aides, and reading and learning specialists. JSEC works with students, teachers and school special education staff, to help students generalize developmental, academic and social skills and strategies to the classroom. In addition, JSEC assists teachers with curriculum modifications and provides teachers with professional development including weekly coaching.
The Gateways Etgar L'Noar programs provide a Jewish education for children with moderate to severe disabilities, such as autism spectrum disorder, hearing and visual impairments, developmental delay, cerebral palsy, and genetic disorders. Etgar offers a Sunday program for ages 4-16, a Bar/Bat Mitzvah class, a teen program called "Mitzvah Mensches" and a monthly program for 2-4 year olds with disabilities and their parents.
For more information contact Arlene Remz, Executive Director of Gateways at 617-630-9010, Arlene@jgateways.org or Sue Schweber, JSEC Program Director at 781-784-8201, sue@jgateways.org or visit our website at www.jgateways.org
(Program financially supported by CJP)
The Gan Yeladim day care center in Newton, a program of the JCC's of Greater Program, provides early assessment and assistance to families, including student observation, developmental assessments, parent workshops, and individualized educational planning.
Gesher L’Limud is a religious school program for post Bar/Bat Mitzvah aged teens with Developmental Disabilities or other cognitive/learning challenges. It is held monthly at Temple Beth David of the South Shore in Canton, MA (Sundays from 10:30-12:00). Synagogue affiliation not required (the program is cross-denominational). For more information, contact Sandy Slavet at (781) 647 5327 x1940.
The Lexington B'Yachad Program, a collaboration between Temple Emunah (Conservative) and Temple Isaiah (Reform) in Lexington, offers religious school programming for children with special needs as well as support to their families. Students who are unable to participate in a regular classroom setting are served in self-contained classes at both temples. The program also helps students with special needs learn alongside their peers in an inclusion model. While the inclusion model is open only to Temple Isaiah and Temple Emunah members, the self-contained classes are open to all families in the Greater Boston area, whether or not they are affiliated with any synagogue. For more information, please call Temple Emunah at 781-861-0300 or Temple Isaiah at 781-862-7160.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
The Newton Area Special Needs Program offers special education opportunities at Congregation Mishkan Tefila and Temple Emanuel in Newton. For more information, please call Congregation Mishkan Tefila at 617-332-7770 or Temple Emanuel at 617-558-8100.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
The South Area Regional Center (Temple Beth Emunah, Brockton; Ahavath Torah Congregation, Stoughton; Temple Beth Am, Randolph; Temples Beth Abraham and Beth David, Canton) provides students with an appropriate learning environment to teach the skills needed to become a B'nai Mitzvah and to lead active Jewish lives. Students range in age from 7 to 14 and are taught in a small, self-program on Sundays with support provided during the week in inclusive settings. There is also a class for teens with mild retardation. For more information, please contact Sherry Grossman at 617-965-7350 x229 or sgrossman@bje.org
The Sudbury Valley Jewish Special Education Initiative (SVJSEI) (Beth El and B'nai Torah in Sudbury, Beth Elohim in Acton, Kerem Shalom in Concord, and Or Atid and Temple Shir Tikva in Wayland) is a collaborative committed to helping all children in the six congregations participate in Jewish education and practice. For more information, please contact Sherry Grossman at 617-965-7350 x229 or sgrossman@bje.org.
Temple Beth Elohim, Wellesley has an inclusive program directed by a special educator who observes children in classrooms and makes suggestions to the teacher for curriculum modifications and instructional accommodations. Sometimes children are directed to other educational settings, including tutors who are supported by the special educator. For more information, please call (781) 235-8419.
TeenAde was developed by the Bureau of Jewish Education (BJE), in collaboration with area synagogues and institutions engaged in expanding their special needs services. TeenAde trains teens in the necessary skills to support and tutor children with special needs currently in community day schools and congregational resource centers. For more information, please contact Sherry Grossman at 617-965-7350 x229 or sgrossman@bje.org.
Services for Families
The CJP Disabilities Trust was established as a vehicle for families with children who have a disability (cognitive, psychiatric or physical). The Trust provides for current and future financial protection as well as lifetime personal advocacy. For more information, contact Ilana Gordon-Brown at JF&CS at 781-647-5327 x 1966.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
K'Sharim: Connecting People with Disabilities to Jewish Life is designed to involve people with disabilities in all facets of Jewish life. K'Sharim is for teens and adults with disabilities, their families and caregivers, as well as for the host synagogue communities. Newcomers are always welcome to any and all K'Sharim activities. For more information, contact Jan Klein at Jewish Big Brothers Big Sisters at 617-558-6548 or Judy Pearl at the JCCs of Greater Boston at 617-558-6508.
Refuah is a grass-roots organization offering support, advocacy and educational programs for the families and friends of people with chronic mental illness. For more information, please visit http://www.refuahboston.org.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
Special Needs Services at the Jewish Community Centers of Greater Boston The JCC offers a wide variety of direct service programs, community education seminars, and Jewish enrichment programming for people with disabilities of all ages. The Ledgewood Special Needs Program provides early identification and intervention for children aged 3-5. Camp Grossman offers a special needs component. Some of the programs the JCC provides for children include adapted aquatics, martial arts, climbing wall and teen friendship group. Programs for adults include activity groups, adapted aquatics, social groups and Jewish learning. The JCC works with advocates and families on inclusion issues through its "Beyond the Ramp" conferences and committees. For more information, please call Judy Pearl at the JCCs of Greater Boston at 617-558-6508 or visit http://www.jccgb.org
(Program financially supported by CJP)
JCC Maccabi Camp Kingswood's Zohar Program provides adolescents with a unique Jewish experience of overnight camping in Bridgton, Maine. The Zohar campers, ages 11-15 are fully integrated into all recreational, social and community-building activities of camp life, with the support and supervision of specially trained staff. For more information contact Judy Pearl 617-558-6508 or jpearl@jccgb.org
Minyan Me’Youchad is a Shabbat Minyan for People with Special Needs. All families are welcome (regardless of synagogue affiliation). It is held monthly at Congregation Kehillath Israel Landers Hall, 384 Harvard St, Brookline, MA.
Services for Adults
The CJP Disabilities Housing Initiative CJP is working with JF&CS and other partners to expand the number of supportive housing units for people with disabilities through its CJP Disabilities Housing Initiative. For more information on the Housing Initiative, contact Elizabeth Sternberg at 617-457-8593 or elizabeths@cjp.org. Families and people with disabilities who are interested in registering for housing or residential services now or in the near future, please contact Sandy Slavet at the DRN at 781-647-5327 x1940 or email at sslavet@jfcsboston.org
CHAI (Community Housing for Adult Independence) of Jewish Family & Children's Service provides housing and residential services for adults with disabilities. If you or family members would like to register for residential services, contact Sandy Slavet at JF&CS at 781-647-5327 x 1940 or sslavet@jfcsboston.org and describe your housing needs.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
Chaverim Chaim: Friends for Life is a program of JF&CS, JCCGB and JBBBS provides monthly activities for adults with developmental disabilities that enhance Jewish identity and foster connections to the Jewish community. For more information, contact Sandy Slavet at 781-647 -5327 x 1940 or sslavet@jfcsboston.org.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
Chaverim Shel Shalom at JF&CS connects people with chronic mental illness to the Jewish community, offering holiday celebrations and opportunities for socialization. The annual Passover seder is always a powerful and moving community event. For more information, contact Breanna Robinson at 781-647-5327 x 1913.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
Jewish Vocational Service (JVS) located in Boston, provides a wide range of employment and training-related services to individuals with disabilities, including identification of educational opportunities, vocational assessment, computer skills training, employer based training, job search techniques, job development, job placement, on-site job coaching, post-placement/educational support services and career ladder advancement opportunities. For information, please contact Rebecca Pyle at 617-399-3204 or rpyle@jvs-boston.org
http://www.jvs-boston.org/
Jewish Big Brothers Big Sisters (JBBBS) Friend 2 Friend Program matches volunteers and adults with disabilities (18 and older) in one to one friendships. In the traditional program model, our matches meet 2-4 times per month doing fun community activities of their choosing. In the MAGIC model, matches meet one weeknight each month to enjoy a variety of events with other pairs of friends. In both programs the experience can add an important dimension to the lives of adults with disabilities by enhancing self-esteem and independence, strengthening Jewish identity, and laying the groundwork for enhanced social skills and interaction. http://www.jbbbs.org/
(Program financially supported by CJP)
Yachad /National Jewish Council for Disabilities is a group that meets twice monthly and provides social and Jewish learning opportunities for older teens and young adults with developmental disabilities. Shabbatons are held on college campuses and in communities in New England, and a social skills course is also offered. The group is affiliated with the Orthodox Union, but is open to any Jewish person with cognitive limitations regardless of affiliation. For more information, contact Nechama Cheses, M.Ed, New England Coordinator at 617- 412-9599 or Yachad@nerncsy.org
Yom Sport is an annual sports day for adults with disabilities. Volunteers and athletes from throughout the Greater Boston community are invited to participate in non-competitive sporting events. Yom Sport was conceived by the Young Leadership Division (YLD) of Combined Jewish Philanthropies, is organized by the Friend 2 Friend Program of Jewish Big Brothers Big Sisters, and sponsored by a consortium of Jewish agencies For more information, contact Jan Klein 617-558-6548 or jan@jbbbs.org
Healing Partners is a program of JFS of Metrowest which provides individual consultations to Metrowest synagogues that want to become more inclusive and welcoming to all members of the Jewish community. For more information, contact Malka Young at 508-875-3100 or myoung@jfsmw.org http://www.jfsmw.org/
Programs for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
Jewish Signing Families of Massachusetts, in collaboration with Jewish Family Service of Metrowest, sponsors events linked to Jewish holidays during the year. The programs include morning workshops for Deaf children ages 8-15. Afternoon programs include classes, group celebrations and exchange of resource information among the families. For more information, please call JFS at 508-875-3100.
Jewish Signers of Massachusetts, in collaboration with the JCCs of Greater Boston, is a group of Deaf adults who come together as a social group and plan educational and recreational programs that strengthen their Jewish identities and knowledge and provide connections to the Jewish community. For more information, please call Judy Pearl at 617-558-6508.
(Program financially supported by CJP)
Temple Beth David of the South Shore provides programs and services for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. For more information, please call 781-828-2275. Other synagogues offer ASL interpreted services at various times during the year. For more information, contact Sandy Slavet at 781-647-5327 x 1940 or sslavet@jfcsboston.org
(Program financially supported by CJP)
Financial assistance for Interpreters for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing for community events and synagogue-related services may be available through the JCCs of Greater Boston. For more information, please contact Judy Pearl at 617-558-6508.
Advocacy
The Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC) advocates with the state and federal government for adequate funding and services for people with disabilities. For more information, please contact Irit Tamir at 617-457-8658 or visit www.jcrcboston.org.