JGEN - Jewish Global Environmental Network
The Jewish Global Environmental Network was formed in 2004, to develop partnerships and collaborative initiatives through which Jewish environmentalists in Israel and around the world work together toward a sustainable future for Israel.
According to the Jewish tradition, all Jews share responsibility for the Land of Israel. It is therefore natural and appropriate that Israeli environmentalism should be the concern not only of Israelis, but also of Jews the world over. As Israel’s environment becomes less and less viable – as pollution grows, as beachfronts and green spaces disappear, as public health threats multiply – the need for Diaspora and Israeli Jews to join together and protect the Promised Land from degradation and destruction has become imperative.
The environmental movement offers a unique and important address for the meeting of Israeli and Diaspora Jews. Environmentalists often see themselves as part of an international community. Joint Diaspora-Israel environmental initiatives can serve, therefore, as both a means and an end; a means to bringing together often marginally affiliated Jews in a common endeavor critical to the Jewish people; an end, because the future of the land of Israel as a sustainable ecological, and as a result, social and economic, landscape is dependent on immediate action.
Since its inception, JGEN, with limited budgets, has:
- Organized two environmental leadership trips for American Jewish environmentalists, resulting in a host of cooperative ventures between Jewish-American and Israeli environmentalists;
- In cooperation with the Jewish Agency, instituted an internship program, allowing a dozen university-age students from abroad to work in Israeli environmental organizations;
- Hosted high-profile environmentalists on lecture tours in Israel, including: Jaime Lerner, former mayor of Curitiba, Brazil; Jerome Paulson, United States government environmental health expert; and Deborah Kaufman and Alan Snitow, the Directors of the award-winning film Thirst, about privatization of water resources in Bolivia; Joshua Arnold, international sustainable building expert (see a film of his lecture online here); Louis Fox, founding director of Free Range Studios, which has created ground-breaking and influential award-winning web-films such as The Meatrix and The Story of Stuff.
- Created a Birthright program, which in spite of limited marketing resources, succeeded in bringing over a small group of highly motivated university students;
- Developed a website which serves as a portal for those interested in Israeli environmentalism;
- Began the incubation of joint project initiatives
For more information, please visit the JGEN site: jgenisrael.org
JGEN is made possible by the generous support of The Nathan Cummings Foundation




