Jews Out West

4th BiannualÌýEmbodied Judaism Symposium & Exhibit


Black and white photo of a group of children camp-goers reading from their prayer books. In the right corner, a man in all white appears to be leading everyone.

Confronted by the aftermath of the Holocaust and the establishment of a Jewish State after WWII, Jews found new ways to think of themselves as Jewish Americans in the American West. Summer camps founded in the post-war years played a significant role in this expression – shaping children’s identities through outdoor western-themed activities such as horse riding, archery and shooting practice, and arts and crafts.Ìý

In Colorado, the founding of the Maurice B. Shwayder Camp of Temple Emanuel in 1948 and the J Bar Double C Ranch in 1953 demonstrates the response of Denver’s Jewish communities to the new popularization of American camping. As in many American summer camps, appropriation of Native American cultures played a role in the outdoor experience.

This same generation would come of age in the cultural revolutions of the 1960s to organize Jewish retreats in the American West to seek their own revolutionary sense of identity, solidarity, and spiritual expression. Movements such as Jewish Renewal and the Mosaic Jewish Outdoor Club are part of this continuum of experiential Judaism as it manifested in the natural beauty of Western landscapes.

Drawing on archival materials housed in the , the biannual symposium and accompanying exhibit explores the historical and contemporary ways in which Jews have married their religious identities with their sense of belonging to the independent spirit and physical beauty of the American West.

The interactive, multidimensional exhibit will be on display on the second floor landing of Norlin Library on the CU Boulder campus from November 4, 2019 for two years. The exhibit features archival photographs, relics, audio recordings and a poetry installation.Ìý

About the Embodied Judaism Series

series explores embodied Jewish life and experience through public gatherings and multimedia exhibits aimed at academic and non-academic audiences, drawing on materials in the held at CU Boulder. This year, the symposium and exhibit will explore the historical and contemporary ways in which Jews are part of the American West.ÌýIt is a partnership between the Program in Jewish Studies,ÌýRare and Distinctive Collections, and cosponsors.


Sarah ImhoffSarah ImhoffÌýis Associate Professor in the Department of Religious Studies and the Borns Jewish Studies Program at Indiana University. She writes about religion and the body with a particular interest in gender, sexuality, and American religion. She is the author ofÌýMasculinity and the Making of American JudaismÌý(Indiana University Press, 2017). Her current book project,ÌýA Queer Crippled Zionism: The Lives of JessieÌýSampter,considers the question of what it means when our embodied lives do not match our religious and political ideals.

Addison KramerAddison KramerÌýis an author from Colorado. As a child, Kramer won various short stories and poetry awards from local papers, community organizations, and school competitions. She paused her creative writing career to earn a degree in History Honors and International Relations from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, developing her expository writing style in the process. Kramer has continued to write, drawing inspiration from her family, life in Colorado, and her extensive travels and volunteer work abroad. She now lives, works, and writes in Glastonbury, Connecticut.ÌýKramerrecently self-publishedÌý,a book about the history of JCC Ranch Camp as told through the memories of previous directors.

Juli KramerJuli KramerÌýhas aÌýPhDin Curriculum and Instruction with a cognate in Counseling Psychology. She also has an MA in Psychology and a BA in History and Political Science. She was the director of JCC Ranch Camp from 1994-1995, and again from 1998-2002. Dr. Kramer’s expertise focuses on developing student creativity, critical thinking skills, and feelings of self-efficacy and positive identity. She regularly presents at international conferences on using holistic learning experiences to enhance positive youth development in both formal and informal educational settings. Dr. Kramer was most recently the Director of Curriculum for Soong Ching Ling Schools Shanghai, Multicultural Division Middle SchoolÌýandHigh School.

Marc SolowayMarc SolowayÌýhas been the Rabbi of Congregation Bonai Shalom in Boulder, CO since 2004 and serves on the boards of Ramah of the Rockies and Hazon, the largest faith-based environmental organization. He loves sailing, skiing, and mountain biking. He has been very involved in the local food and sustainability movement and he milks goats every Sunday morning as part of Boulder's Jewish goat co-op. Rabbi Soloway was a student of Reb Zalman Schachter-Shalomi and was the last person to receive a private secondary rabbinic ordination from Schachter-Shalomi before he passed away in 2014.

Pheobe YoungPhoebe YoungÌýis an Associate Professor of History at the ÀÖ²¥´«Ã½ Boulder where she teaches environmental and cultural history of the U.S. and the American West.ÌýShe currently serves as the History Department’s Director of Undergraduate Studies and holds a Boulder Faculty Assembly Award for Excellence in Teaching and Pedagogy.ÌýHer books includeÌýCalifornia Vieja: Culture and Memory in a Modern American PlaceÌý(2006) andÌýRendering Nature: Animals, Bodies, Places, PoliticsÌý(2015, co-edited with Marguerite S. Shaffer).ÌýShe is currently completing a new book project entitled,ÌýCamping Grounds: Public Nature in America from the Civil War to Occupy (forthcoming, 2021). Ìý


The 2019 Embodied Judaism Symposium & Exhibit are hosted by CU Boulder’s Program in Jewish Studies and the University Libraries' Rare and Distinctive Collections. It is part of the Jewish Studies’ Community Talks Series, made possible by a grant from the Rose Community Foundation, andÌýcosponsored by The Center of the American West and additional university cosponsors at CU Boulder. Jews Out West also uses archival materials from the Beck Archives at the University of Denver, Shwayder Camp – Temple Emanuel, and the JCC Ranch Camp.ÌýPhoto Credit: JCC Ranch Camp.