Webinar: Hope, Resilience and A New Jewish Narrative
November 16, 1pm EST \ 8 PM IL
Jewish professionals, leaders and educators from around the world are invited to engage in how to generate internal hope and resilience with ANU’s Naama Klar, director of The Koret International School for Jewish Peoplehood, and Tracy Frydberg, director of the Andrew H. and Ann R. Tisch Center for Jewish Dialogue, along with Emory University psychologist, Dr. Marshall Duke.
The online event will offer a new framing of the post-October 7 period and its global Jewish implications. The event will conclude with useful tools and resources to find hope and build resilience through the stories we tell.
Participants will learn how to utilize our newly launched “Hope Kit,” which includes a playbook, webinar, workshop lesson-plan and training. Finally, we will share how to participate in a one-month daily mindset-harnessing journal for participants across the Jewish world.
Speakers:
Naama Klar is Director of The Koret International School for Jewish Peoplehood, at ANU – Museum of the Jewish People. In her previous role, Naama was Deputy CEO of the Reut Group, an Israeli think-and-do tank that diagnoses and tackles strategic threats ignored by Israeli leadership. Before Reut, Naama worked at the Israeli Mission to the UN in New York. Naama holds a M.A. in International Political Economy from the Hebrew University. Naama serves as Chairman of the Board of Latet-Pe, an organization focusing on preventing sexual crimes against minors.
Tracy Frydberg is the Director of the Tisch Center for Jewish Dialogue, at ANU – Museum of the Jewish People. She previously served as a senior advisor to two of Israel’s Ministers of Diaspora Affairs. She worked as an analyst with the Reut Group on the Israel-world Jewry relations team. Tracy’s Israeli military service included two years as a representative to Palestinians in the West Bank. Tracy holds a Master’s degree in Jewish Peoplehood from the University of Haifa.
Marshall P. Duke is the Charles Howard Candler Professor of Psychology at Emory University, where he has served as Director of Training in clinical Psychology and as Chair of the Department of Psychology. As a member of Emory’s psychology faculty and as a core faculty member with The Emory Center for Myth and Ritual in American Life (MARIAL), he has studied a variety of family issues, most notably the development of a child’s intergenerational self and how family narratives—or knowing the ups and downs of one’s family story—can help build resilience in children and teens.