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The Tisch Center for Jewish Dialogue
ANU Museum’s Intergenerational Family Seder Guide
ANU Museum’s Intergenerational Family Seder Guide
Why is this seder different from all other seders? And why is it the same? To help families navigate the pain and complexity surrounding this question, the Tisch Center developed an intergenerational family seder guide for Jewish parents, grandparents, community leaders, and beyond to build family resilience and practice hope through family narratives at the upcoming Passover seder.
The guide was developed in partnership with Emory University psychologists Dr. Robyn Fivush and Dr. Marshall Duke. It is based on Duke and Fivush’s decades of research, which shows that through family stories, children develop a sense of their multi-generational self, and the personal strength, moral clarity, and resilience that come along with it. In dark periods, they can call on that expanded sense of self to pull themselves towards the light.
The guide encourages families to focus on the core in a year full of high political tension and an overwhelming number of communities and individuals who are suffering and experiencing loss – inside and outside of the Jewish people. It explains the benefits of focusing on family stories at the Passover seder, and touches upon key moments in the Haggadah, with suggested prompts to generate the sharing of family memory and create new ones.
*Register at the top of this page to get your downloadable copy
We Are The Tisch Center for Jewish Dialogue
We Are The Tisch Center for Jewish Dialogue
In a period of high tension and low touch between Israel and global Jewry, The Andrew H. and Ann R. Tisch Center for Jewish Dialogue is the singular space that brings together Jewish people for meaningful conversations around identity and their individual and collective narratives. We work with students, participants, educators, and leaders across tribes, generations, and geographic divides – to tell and receive a new story – about ourselves, those who came before us, and those who will follow. The Tisch Center activities have the power to spark a sense of mission and connectivity in Israel and across the Jewish world.
Organize yourself and your community in this ongoing Jewish Crisis. Build hope in your team and community in order to generate Global Jewish Resilience.
The Tisch Center for Jewish Dialogue‘s ”Hope Kit,“ provides a series of relevant tools for Jewish professionals, leaders, and educators through defining, teaching, and generating the five elements of Global Jewish Resilience: Thick Jewish Solidarity, Leadership, Smart Trust, Narrative, and Hope for the Future.
Hope Kit
Hope Kit
The Tisch Center has created a unique methodology for building Jewish-identity based resilience. Global Jewish Resilience is the ability to preserve Jewish identity, sense of purpose, and continuity during dark crises in Jewish history. Global Jewish Resilience is built through exercising a narrative around this moment that offers hope. This narrative is the foundation to help face heightened levels of antisemitism and internal questions of identity reverberating around the world due to the escalating violence in Israel and Gaza.
Find our Hope Kit here: https://dev.anumuseum.org.il/tisch-hope-kit
We are here for you
We are here for you
The Tisch Center is providing these offerings free of charge to educators, teachers, and leaders to train students and constituents who are facing antisemitism in their schools, campuses, workplaces, and communities. This is based on our broader mission to build a Jewish peoplehood mindset.
To learn more, book a consultation, or receive any of the materials, reach out to:
Tracy Frydberg at tracy@anumuseum.org.il