Super Sunday will ring in an array of opportunities

Federation fund-raiser offers taste of merger with Central partner

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Teens were among the volunteers making calls at UJC MetroWest Super Sunday last year. This year several hours will again be designated for teens to make phonathon calls.  Photo by Johanna Ginsberg+ enlarge image

Teens were among the volunteers making calls at UJC MetroWest Super Sunday last year. This year several hours will again be designated for teens to make phonathon calls.  Photo by Johanna Ginsberg

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Cooperation is the buzzword for this year’s Super Sunday, the annual one-day fund-raising phonathon of United Jewish Communities of MetroWest NJ.

When hundreds of volunteers and community members gather at the Aidekman campus in Whippany on Dec. 4, it will represent the latest step in an anticipated merger between UJC MetroWest and the Jewish Federation of Central New Jersey, which covers Union County.

UJC MetroWest aims to raise some $2 million toward its annual campaign goal of $21 million, while sharing aspects of planning, marketing, and programming with Central.

The Central federation will hold its own Super Sunday — on the Wilf Jewish Community Campus in Scotch Plains, where it is headquartered — but the two events will be carefully aligned. They will each include a children’s program run by PJ Library, which promotes Jewish literacy among young families. Both will include Israel advocacy training at lunchtime. Each location will include a large screen with a video feed from the other.

The Community Relations Committee of MetroWest and Central NJ, an early product of the merger that took place last July, has a specially coordinated schedule for Super Sunday (see sidebar).

Lay and professional leaders of UJC MetroWest and the Central federation have been in merger discussions for much of the year. No date for the official merger has been announced.

‘Heightened energy’

“It’s exciting to be part of this year’s Super Sunday, the first Super Sunday that will be produced in collaboration with the Central federation,” said Greg Russo of Randolph, cochair of MetroWest’s Super Sunday together with Mindy Kahn of Randolph and Mark Glajchen of Livingston. “It’s rewarding for us to work together to enhance our ability to help others and build community.

“This year the cooperation between the Central and MetroWest federations is heightening that sense of energy,” said Glajchen.

Hundreds of families are expected to join between 450 and 600 volunteers at the phonathon. They will staff a phone bank, calling donors and urging them to make a gift to the annual UJA campaign. UJC MetroWest supports a range of Jewish communal activities, from nutrition and recreation programs for local needy seniors, assistance for Jewish schools and camps, and funding for a host of programs in Israel.

The biggest challenge facing this year’s overall campaign is the weak economy, according to MetroWest’s chief marketing officer, Shelley Labiner.

“For Super Sunday, it is getting enough volunteers out to make the calls, which ties into people’s discomfort with the state of the economy,” she said. “So many organizations are asking people these days to volunteer and make calls that people are being pulled in a lot of different directions and are tapped out.

“On the other hand, we are seeing a great response and enthusiasm from the community about the programming and shared activities with Central federation that we have planned for the day.”

“Super Sunday is always such a time of energy and renewal for me,” said cochair Mark Glajchen. “Being part of a spectacular community event that has as its core mission support for Jews in need around us always leaves me believing we can do anything when we all have the same goal.”

This year the phonathon will run from 9:30 a.m. until 8 p.m. The day includes a canned food drive, tzedaka can drop-off, Gift of Life bone marrow registry drive (10 a.m.-3 p.m.), and a blood drive (11 a.m.-4 p.m.). Vendors selling Hanukka gifts will be offering their wares in the campus atrium from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

A training session from 1 to 2 will teach participants how to advocate for Israel, and programs for children will include an interactive story time at 10:30, featuring PJ Library books and music.

Families can rock out to a Powerhouse deejay while wrapping donated presents — attendees are asked to bring new unwrapped gift items appropriate for any age — that will be distributed by UJC MetroWest partner agencies. Teenagers and college-age volunteers will have their own special session, from 5 to 8 p.m., to make phone calls.

Asking community members to join the corps of volunteers at Super Sunday and to give generously when asked, cochair Mindy Kahn said, “Super Sunday is a day for celebrating the strength and vibrancy of our Jewish community.”

For more information, or to sign up as a volunteer, visit www.ujcnj.org/supersunday or contact supersunday@ujcnj.org or 973-929-3010.

 


CRC makes it a ‘twofer’ Sunday

With merger talks progressing between United Jewish Communities of MetroWest NJ and the Jewish Federation of Central NJ, organizers of the two federations’ Super Sunday fund-raising phonathons and community gatherings have been exploring ways to share resources and ideas, both to cut costs and to maximize their outreach.

As director of the joint Community Relations Committee serving Central and MetroWest, Melanie Roth Gorelick has been rallying lawmakers to attend both venues — Central’s on the Wilf Jewish Community Campus in Scotch Plains, MetroWest’s on the Aidekman Jewish Community Campus in Whippany.

Both events will draw a parade of local and state politicians.

Sen. Frank Lautenberg will appear in the morning on the Aidekman campus, and members of the entire NJ congressional delegation are “honorary Super Sunday chairs” in MetroWest. As of press time, other legislators who had confirmed they would attend included Representatives Rodney Frelinghuysen and Scott Garrett; State Senators Richard Codey and Tom Kean Jr.; Assembly members Jon Bramnick, Alex DeCroce, Mila Jasey, John McKeon, and Gary Schaer; Freeholder Pat Sebold; and a lineup of area municipal leaders.

“I think that dealing with our joint CRC has simplified things for some of the politicians,” Gorelick said. “There are so many different Jewish organizations, and while we’re familiar with their different identities, it can be confusing for lawmakers. Now, they only have to deal with one person to make arrangements instead of two.”

Gorelick has also been overseeing Israel advocacy activities planned for both venues.

The MetroWest program will be led by Elliot Matthias, executive director of the campus advocacy organization Hasbara Fellowships and chair of Step Up For Israel. His presentation will cover techniques for dealing with tough questions and the assault on Israel’s legitimacy.

In Central, a panel of speakers will provide an introduction to the Step Up For Israel initiative, aimed at countering assaults on Israel’s legitimacy. There will also be an introduction to the five-part mini-film series on the subject, and a presentation by young people who participated in the Gesher program, which links local teens with their counterparts in Israel.

Shelley Labiner, chief marketing officer for UJC MetroWest, said, “We met in August with lay and professional leadership from both MetroWest and Central to share ideas, find ways to collaborate, create a unified look and feel, and create greater efficiencies.”

Debbie Rosenwein, the director of planning and allocations for the Central federation, said, “The collaboration with MetroWest is exciting. Super Sunday is an all encompassing, community-wide event and the collaborative work between MetroWest and Central makes the day that much stronger.”

— ELAINE DURBACH

 


Gift of Life

The Gift of Life Bone Marrow Foundation will hold a recruitment drive to register potential bone marrow donors for its worldwide registry during United Jewish Communities of MetroWest NJ’s Super Sunday on Dec. 4, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Aidekman campus in Whippany. The drive will benefit patients suffering from blood cancers and diseases who are in need of a bone marrow transplant.

For many patients suffering from leukemia, lymphoma, and other cancers and genetic diseases, there is hope of a cure through a bone marrow transplant.

Individuals between the ages of 18 and 60 who are in general good health are eligible for screening, which involves a simple swab from the inside of the cheek.

Visit www.giftoflife.org or call 800-9MARROW to learn more about Gift of Life.

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