Youth Centered Mental Wellness for Today's Jewish World

In-Person: 334 Amsterdam Ave at W 76th St
From $50.00
Dates & Attendance Options:
Day 1: March 15, 2026 at 2:00 pm - 8:30 pm EDT
Day 2: March 16, 2026 at 9:00 am - 4:00 pm EDT
Days 1 and 2: March 15, 2026 at 2:00 pm - March 16, 2026 at 4:00 pm EDT

Fee: $50 for one day or $75 for both days*. Includes dinner on Sunday and breakfast and lunch on Monday.

Join us for one or both days!

 

Jewish youth today face unprecedented challenges to their mental, emotional, social, and spiritual well-being. As professionals who care deeply about young people, their growth and resilience, we want to respond with knowledge, compassion, and action. Join professionals from across the Jewish youth-serving field for two impactful days of learning and community focused on the mental wellness of Jewish youth.

Featuring keynotes:

SUNDAY

Mattering: The Secret to a Life of Deep Connection and Purpose

Keynote with New York Times bestselling author Jennifer Wallace in conversation with Dr. Betsy Stone, Ph.D.

Jennifer Wallace examines how feeling valued—mattering—is essential for the mental health of caregivers and educators and, in turn, the children they support. She offers practical strategies for strengthening adult well-being as the foundation for nurturing healthier, more resilient young people.

 

OTHER: A Dramedy About The Anxious Art Of Belonging

Performance and facilitated talk back with Tony Award winner Ari’el Stachel

A raw, humorous, and deeply personal performance exploring Stachel’s OCD, ADHD, anxiety, and experiences as a Yemeni‑Jewish American navigating belonging. His story highlights persistence through mental health challenges, identity conflicts, and the pressure to hide parts of oneself to fit in. The performance invites participants to reflect on struggle, resilience, identity, and compassion.

 


MONDAY

Beginnings, Creation & Openings: How We Explore Our Stories

Experiential and connective plenary with Jewish Studio Project’s Avital Krifcher and Rabbi Adam Lavitt

Explore how stories shape our understanding of ourselves and the young people and families we serve. Through the Jewish Studio Process—integrating art‑making with reflective Jewish learning—participants engage with curiosity, authenticity, and openness.

 

Youth Centered Mental Wellness for Today's Jewish World will feature expert-led workshops and learning sessions to help you help young people thrive. Whether you work in camps, congregations, JCCs, youth groups, or other Jewish spaces, this event is designed for you. Experience:

  • Two full days of programming (or join us for one!) with deep dives into mental, emotional, social, and spiritual well-being
  • Learning with leading experts in mental health and Jewish education
  • Building community with colleagues who share your commitment to youth wellness to build supportive professional networks

 

Facilitators and experts include:

Pamela Barkley, LMSWRabbi Daniel BrennerJonah Canner, MA | Dr. Melissa Carter, EdDAnna DubeyDrew Fidler, LCSW-CErica Frankel | Laura Hemlock-Schaeffer | Eliana Hiam | Rabbi Adam Huttel, LCSW | Avital Krifcher | Rabbi Arielle Krule, LCSW | Rabbi Adam Lavitt | Beth Lipschutz, MSW | Dr. Julia Kolodny Pearlstein, Psy.D., NCSP | JessAnn Smith, LMSW, CASAC-TAri'el Stachel | Dr. Betsy Stone, Ph.D. | Rabbi Yali Szulanski, MA | Julian Voloj | Jennifer Wallace | Jeremy Wernick, LCSW | Dubbs Weinblatt  | Dr. Laura Wood, LMHC, RDT/BCT

 

Leave with practical, actionable strategies to take home to strengthen mental wellness in your programs and organizations.

All youth-facing professionals are invited to attend, including, but not limited to, those working in camping, campus life, congregations, day schools, community centers, education, mental health, schools, synagogues, and more!

 


Select sessions will offer NYS Continuing Education (CE) credits for social workers, thanks to a partnership with UJA-Federation of New York.


 

If you plan to stay overnight in New York City, we recommend the following reasonably priced hotels just blocks from the JCC: Hotel Belleclaire Central Park or Arthouse Hotel.

* Special rate for Yedid Nefesh participants; email Jill@JewishCamp.org. Email LAmer@JewishEdProject.org if our fee is an obstacle to your participation. 

 

Join us for one or both days and be part of a movement to prioritize mental wellness in Jewish life!

 

Youth Centered Mental Wellness for Today’s Jewish World is a project of The Jewish Education Project, Foundation for Jewish CampMarlene Meyerson JCC Manhattan, and BeWell, an initiative of the Jewish Federations of North America, in partnership with the Network. With UJA-Federation of New York.

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YCMWfTJW Partners
Setting
  • After School Programming
  • Educator Training
  • Camp
  • Congregational Learning
  • Family Engagement
  • Teen Engagement
Topic
  • Character Strengths
  • Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI)
  • LGBTQ+ (Sexuality and Gender) / Belonging
  • Mental Health
  • Positive Psychology
  • Well-being
Photo of Ari'el Stachel
Ari'el Stachel

Ari’el Stachel is a Tony Award® and GRAMMY® Award–winning actor, singer, and writer. His new solo play OTHER comes Off-Broadway after acclaimed runs at Berkeley Rep and Berkshire Theatre Group. Stachel received the 2018 Tony Award® for Best Featured Actor in a Musical for originating the role of Haled in The Band’s Visit on Broadway, a performance that also earned Lucille Lortel and Drama Desk nominations. On screen, he stars in the upcoming feature Death Do Us Part and has appeared in Olivia Wilde’s Don’t Worry Darling (Warner Bros.) and A24’s Zola. His television credits include Law & Order: SVU, Billions, Jessica Jones, Blue Bloods, and The Night Agent.

 

Photo of Jennifer Wallace
Jennifer Wallace

Jennifer Breheny Wallace is an award-winning journalist and bestselling author who explores the power of mattering in everyday life. Through research and storytelling, Wallace examines the hidden forces shaping modern life, from the crisis of meaning in achievement culture to the essential role of mattering in personal, workplace, and societal health.

She is the author of two instant New York Times bestsellers: Never Enough: When Achievement Culture Becomes Toxic — And What We Can Do About It — an Amazon Best Book of the Year —, and Mattering: The Secret to a Life of Deep Connection and Purpose.

Wallace is the founder of The Mattering Institute, whose mission is to create cultures of mattering in workplaces and communities, and co-founder of The Mattering Movement, a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating cultures of mattering in schools. She is a maternal mental health advocate at Calm, the mental health app, a consultant at Netflix, and a BCG  BrightHouse Luminary. She has also partnered with The LEGO Group on its global "Play Unstoppable" campaign, aimed at addressing perfectionism and fostering confidence through play.

Wallace serves on the board of the Coalition for the Homeless in New York City, where she lives.

Photo of Avital Krifcher
Avital Krifcher

Avital Krifcher (she/her) is the Training Manager at Jewish Studio Project, a national organization whose mission is to build creative capacity across the Jewish community. She manages JSP's professional development programs, which focus on spreading JSP's core methodology, the Jewish Studio Process, to Jewish professionals and laypeople interested in bringing more creativity into their lives. She has an academic background in disaster studies and community building, and brings authenticity, joy, and creativity to her work and collaboration. Avital lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Photo of Rabbi Adam Lavitt
Rabbi Adam Lavitt

Rabbi Adam Lavitt (he/they) is a spiritual companion, educator, and creative facilitator committed to helping people connect with their inner wisdom and explore what matters most. Drawing from his background in pastoral care, education, and chaplaincy, Adam creates transformative spaces where people can deepen their connection to themselves, each other, and Jewish tradition. Adam has served as a spiritual leader in congregations, college campuses, and healthcare settings. Ordained at Hebrew College, where he earned a Master’s in Jewish Education and the school’s first certificate in Pastoral Care, Adam also completed training as a Spiritual Director and became a Board Certified Chaplain (BCC). An alumnus of CLAL’s Rabbis Without Borders Fellowship and the JOIN for Justice Clergy Fellowship, Adam now works with the Jewish Studio Project as Director of Learning, guiding educators, spiritual leaders, and seekers in integrating creativity and spirituality as pathways for growth and discovery.

Betsy Stone
Dr. Betsy Stone

Betsy Stone is a Yale-educated retired psychologist who lectures internationally on issues of psychological wellness, trauma and post-traumatic growth, generational differences and many other topics. She consults with clergy, leads Scholar in Residence weekends and supports Jewish professionals. Her work is published in eJewishPhilanthropy and the Times of Israel. She is engaging, knowledgeable and approachable. 
 

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