About
Eighteen:22 seeks to transform the world — for LGBTQ Jews and for the communities around us.
What is Eighteen:22?
Launching in August 2015, with a three-day think tank in Salzburg, Austria, Eighteen:22 is a global network of today’s emerging and established Jewish LGBTQ and ally visionaries who share a passion for advancing positive change and have demonstrated a profound commitment to LGBTQ issues across a variety of areas in LGBTQ Jewish life and beyond.
More
Riding a wave of popular support for LGBTQ human rights worldwide, and taking its name from Leviticus 18:22 in an act of reclamation and defiance, Eighteen:22 launches 11-13 August, 2015, in Salzburg, Austria, with a three-day think tank that brings together today’s next generation of international emerging and established Jewish LGBTQ and ally influencers at the Schloss Leopoldskron, home of the Salzburg Global Seminar — a world-class, global conference center that holds both Jewish and LGBTQ connections.
Through a combination of inspirational speakers, leadership and practical skills-building workshops, and peer-led case-studies, Eighteen:22 will cultivate a global network of visionaries who are actively pursuing positive change in a variety of disciplines — across the public and private sectors — and have demonstrated a profound commitment to LGBTQ issues in Jewish life and beyond.
Participation in Eighteen:22 is subsidized by the Schusterman Family Foundation and others.
Applicants to Eighteen:22 spanned a diverse array of professions and concentrations, and represented nearly 30 countries from around the globe. Each applicant was vetted by a panel of established thought leaders in the LGBTQ and Jewish worlds. Finalists were selected based on a number of criteria including:
-Demonstrated commitment to and impact in some area of LGBTQ Jewish life and/or beyond.
-Established in a decision-making position, or a position that consults with or counsels the decision-makers.
-A stand-out as an expert, leading talent, or other general star of their community or initiative.
-Currently active in work that targets the intersectionality of LGBTQ and Jewish life, in any field, through their paid profession or through dedicated service/unpaid activities.
Given the way many Jewish LGBTQ people have been excluded from cultural and religious communities in the past, and vice versa, Eighteen:22 continues to be particularly aware of, and sensitive to, the issues of representation. With this in mind, our goal is to create a gathering that reflects the diversity of LGBTQ and ally Jewry from the Global South and North.
In addition to evaluating each applicant based on the aforementioned criteria, our recruitment and selection process considered the following areas of representation: Jews of color, Jews by choice, person with a mobility issue, person with accessibility issues/special needs/invisible illness, non-Ashkenazi background, interfaith family, other identity.
Eighteen:22 only exists today, because of the many decades of activism, advocacy, and organizing that has helped make visible the stories and struggles of LGBTQ Jews, giving rise to the many flourishing LGBTQ Jewish communities around the world. We owe a great debt to all those individuals and initiatives that came before us, and to those that continue to make the world a
better place.
Their leadership and perseverance continues to inspire us as we set off on this next chapter.
Eighteen:22 is organized by Robert J. Saferstein and Halley Cohen, in partnership with The Schusterman Family Foundation, a global organization that seeks to ignite the passion and unleash the power in young people to create positive change for themselves, the Jewish community and the broader world.
For general questions, press inquiries, and/or to learn more about Eighteen:22 and how you can become involved, please email us at info@eighteen22.com.
Our Vision
Eighteen:22 addresses several needs that have emerged — and continue to emerge — as cultures and attitudes concerning LGBTQ individuals across the global South and North are constantly shifting — often for the better, but in some places, for the worse.
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After decades of fighting to be seen and counted as equals, the importance of LGBTQ human rights has catapulted to the forefront of global consciousness with cries for justice, and calls to action. Through a combination of grassroots activism and the work of established national and international advocacy organizations, this ever-growing wave of popular support has helped pave the way for governments around the globe to institute laws and protections thought impossible only a few years ago.
Jewish communities, which have often been ahead of local cultural norms, have even seen moves towards LGBTQ acceptance and inclusion in the most unexpected corners of traditional observance and Jewish life. Along with similar advances in the world’s many faiths, the realization of an entirely equal and just society seems more achievable now than ever before.
Yet, in far too many places, the persecution and oppression of LGBTQ individuals continues under the veils of religious dogma and the preservation of societal values. In these locales, agents of intolerance remain steadfast in promoting cultures of hatred and violence — in some cases, reversing protections previously granted — against those different than themselves.
Given these cultural shifts, and understanding the value of interfacing in person in a world where increased interconnectivity has led to fewer opportunities to do so, Eighteen:22 recognizes that the need for a global network of Jewish LGBTQ and ally influencers — one that works in concert with Jewish and secular efforts — in order to find solutions that drive social impact and global change is more important now than ever before.
Together, we have the opportunity to facilitate the next wave of positive change by supporting and contributing to the great work already underway, and also, to be a model for LGBTQ inclusion for other faith groups and distinct cultural traditions.
Taking our name from Leviticus 18:22 in an act of reclamation and defiance, Eighteen:22 launches 11-13 August, 2015, in Salzburg, Austria, with a three-day think tank that brings together today’s next generation of international emerging and established Jewish LGBTQ and ally influencers at the Schloss Leopoldskron, home of the Salzburg Global Seminar — a world-class, global conference center that holds both Jewish and LGBTQ connections.
Eighteen:22 only exists today, because of the many decades of activism, advocacy, and organizing that has helped make visible the stories and struggles of LGBTQ Jews, giving rise to the many flourishing LGBTQ Jewish communities around the world. We owe a great debt to all those individuals and initiatives that came before us, and to those that continue to make the world a
better place.
Their leadership and perseverance continues to inspire us as we set off on this next chapter.
Eighteen:22 is organized by Robert J. Saferstein and Halley Cohen, in partnership with The Schusterman Family Foundation, a global organization that seeks to ignite the passion and unleash the power in young people to create positive change for themselves, the Jewish community and the broader world.
For general questions, press inquiries, and/or to learn more about Eighteen:22 and how you can become involved, please email us at info@eighteen22.com.
Impact
Through the creation of a vibrant, comprehensive global network, Eighteen:22 seeks to:
Meet Our Fellows
Hebro Travel
Twilight People
Prealth
National Center for Lesbian Rights
IMAX Corporation
*Not all fellows are displayed.
Location
With 55 modernized rooms in the Meierhof, 12 suites in the historic palace, and two townhouses, Schloss Leopoldskron is an exclusive and discreet hideaway just 10 minutes from the Salzburg Airport (SZG) and less than 5 minutes from the Old Town of Salzburg.
Eighteen:22 is excited to provide participants with accommodations of two people per room. We will do our best to honor all roommate and other requests taken on the registration form. Single rooms will be available for an additional fee.
Salzburg in August is a magical time of year, with the Salzburg Festival in full bloom. The average temperature ranges from 73-86 degrees Fahrenheit (23-30 degrees Celsius), so we’ll try to spend as much time outside as we can.
We highly encourage participants to arrive early and stay after our gathering to truly enjoy the sites!
By this time the palace was in urgent need of repair. With the work of local artisans, Reinhardt spent twenty years renovating the palace. Besides restoring the staircase, the Great Hall, and the Marble Hall, he created the Library, the Venetian Room, and a garden theatre. Reinhardt brought life to Schloss Leopoldskron in literal terms, with his theater productions, audiences, and friends. In the plays produced here Reinhardt put the Schloss to full use, moving audiences from one room to another, employing the magnificent rooms as sets in and of themselves. During the Reinhardt years, Schloss Leopoldskron was an important gathering place for theatrical producers, writers, composers, actors, and designers from Europe and abroad.
World War II brought an end to the Reinhardt era: in 1938 the Schloss was confiscated as “Jewish property.” Reinhardt, who escaped to the United States as actions increased against the Jews, and found work in Hollywood, never returned to Schloss Leopoldskron. He died in New York City in 1943. In 1945, after the war, the property was returned to the Reinhardt estate. The following year, Helene Thimig, the widow of Max Reinhardt, offered use of the palace to Clemens Heller, who founded the Salzburg Seminar, a “Marshall Plan of the Mind,” together with Scott Elledge and Richard Campbell, all Harvard graduate students.
Seminar lore has it that Thimig, who seemed to have had no intention of taking up residence in Salzburg again, had encountered Heller on the subway in New York, where she then resided. After listening to Heller’s idea with rapt attention, with a grand gesture of enthusiasm, she exclaimed, “Why you must hold it at Schloss Leopoldskron!” From this legendary exchange in a New York City subway, the bond was forged between Schloss Leopoldskron and what was to become Salzburg Global Seminar.
The “Salzburg Seminar in American Studies” (as it was first known and is still labeled on the front door of the Schloss) was founded as an international forum for those seeking a better future for Europe and the world. The first session offered not only education on American literature, art, history, and culture, but also a beautiful, calm setting, and nourishing food, enormously appreciated by those from countries long at war. This was later transformed into a “global forum.”
In 1959 the Salzburg Global Seminar purchased the palace, and in 1973 the adjacent Meierhof, which was part of the original Firmian estate. Since its first session in 1947, more than 400 sessions of the Seminars have been held on a wide variety of issues.
For more info on the Schloss visit: http://www.schloss-leopoldskron.com/en/history.html
The mission of Salzburg Global Seminar is to challenge current and future leaders to solve issues of global concern. To achieve this, they design, facilitate and host international strategic convenings and multi-year programs to tackle systems and challenges critical for the next generation.
Originally founded in 1947 to encourage the revival of intellectual dialogue in post-war Europe, Salzburg Global is a game-changing catalyst for global engagement on critical issues in education, health, environment, economics, governance, peace-building, and more. Salzburg Global works with carefully chosen partners to drive social change in the areas of imagination, sustainability, and justice.
They connects the most talented people and the most innovative ideas, challenging governments, institutions and individuals at all stages of development and all sectors to rethink their relationships and identify shared interests and goals.
Eighteen:22 is proud to hold our inaugural convening at the Schloss Leopoldskron, home of the Salzburg Global Seminar.
For more info, visit: http://www.salzburgglobal.org
Shortly after Max Reinhardt’s son, Wolfgang, bought the film rights from Maria von Trapp in 1956, the story was made into a German film. The musical version also enjoyed a huge success on Broadway, yet the worldwide breakthrough didn’t occur until Rodgers & Hammerstein’s film version was produced.
Schloss Leopoldskron was considered by the location-scouts as a filming venue most likely due to Wolfgang Reinhardt’s contacts. At that time a white music pavilion stood in the palace park and played an important role in the film’s romantic scenes. Since the number of tourists increased tremendously after the release of The Sound of Music, the pavilion was moved to Schloss Hellbrunn in order to reduce the congestion in the park at Schloss Leopoldskron.
Schloss Leopoldskron has been dubbed the “Sound of Music” palace for more reasons than its outdoor movie scenes: one of the main rooms of the palace, the Venetian Room on the first floor, was completely replicated in order to be used as a film setting. The magnificent handcrafted, gold wall panels and mirrors served as a model for the ball room scene in the film. It was also the backdrop for the private performance of the marionette theater.
In 1987, a special production called The Sound of Christmas was filmed at Schloss Leopoldskron, starring Julie Andrews, John Denver and Placido Domingo, thus re-establishing the connection to the movie. In 2015, The Sound of Music film celebrated its 50th anniversary.
Our Team
Robert J. Saferstein
Founder & Co-Chair
Interested in the interfacing of ritual, experience, technology, and culture, Bobby has used his background in the arts and media to broaden the definition of what ‘Jewish’ can look like by building community and realizing new points of engagement across multiple platforms.
Halley Cohen
Co-Chair
Halley is Director of GLOE – The Kurlander Program for GLBT Outreach & Engagement, which connects GLBT Jews at the Washington DCJCC. She considers it an honor to help make space for those who’ve never seen their whole selves represented in the Jewish community.
Beth Glick
Coach
Beth is Partner at ChangeCraft, a boutique consulting firm based in Vancouver, British Columbia. Having worked with organizational clients in over 15 countries on 3 continents, Beth’s expertise lies in working with organizations to maximize their strategic and operational impact in times of change, using a variety of techniques including coaching and consultation, training and facilitation.
Marcus Frieze
ROI Staff
As Program Officer for ROI Community, Marcus currently oversees various ROI/Schusterman programs including the ROI Summit and Connection Points. He also leads the team in training and use of various technology systems.
Seth Cohen
Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation
As part of the senior leadership team of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, Seth serves as its Director of Network Initiatives, leading the Foundation’s efforts to identify, connect and support global networks of young Jewish adults to enable them to create Jewish experiences and communities for themselves and their peers.
Aviv Maman
Systems Manager
Ronny Slomovits
Logistics Manager
Devorah Rosenzweig
Operations Manager
Felix Bacher
Support Manager
Press
For general questions, press inquiries, and/or to learn more about Eighteen:22 and how you can become involved,
please contact us at info@eighteen22.com.
Frequently Asked Questions
Eighteen:22 refers to Leviticus 18:22, a verse that has been used against LGBTQ peoples for centuries. By taking this as our name in an act of reclamation, we can continue to transform this verse into a source of power and strength. In this way, Eighteen:22 denies others the authority to define who we are, and commands that we joyfully and steadfastly determine our future for ourselves and others excluded from the fullness of Jewish life.
Eighteen:22 is a first-of-its-kind convening that not only brings together today’s leading and emerging Jewish LGBTQ and ally influencers from around the world to address communal issues — including those working across disciplines, in both the for and non-profit sectors — but also interfaces Jewish and secular LGBTQ efforts in order to find solutions that drive social impact and global change.
Eighteen:22 can exist today, because of the many decades of activism, advocacy, and organizing that has helped make visible the stories and struggles of LGBTQ Jews, and has helped create LGBTQ Jewish communities around the world. We owe a great debt to all those individuals and initiatives that came before us. Their creativity and perseverance continues to inspire us.
There are so many of us working around the world at the intersection of LGBTQ and Jewish issues. Yet, we are all too often operating in our own silos, completely disconnected from one another. We don’t all know each other — and we should.
Eighteen:22 seeks to change this.
We understand the value of interfacing in person in a world where increased interconnectivity has led to fewer opportunities to do so.
We understand how important it is that individuals be included who don’t usually have the opportunity, because of political barriers, safety barriers, or a lack of financial resources.
We understand the necessity for a space where a plurality of voices can be expressed, and not only those that are the loudest or heard most often.
By placing primary emphasis on how we can best serve our fellows — i.e., through the creation of a global forum from the bottom up, that supports and bolsters the great work currently underway — Eighteen:22 can begin to facilitate the next wave of positive change for our Jewish, LGBTQ communities and for the world.
Then together, we create what comes next…
Yeah, we hate that too.
At Eighteen:22 we guarantee that you’ll have plenty of time to speak with, and learn from each other during and outside of the regular program. Also, we assure you that we’ll take full advantage of the beautiful rooms and surroundings at our hotel in Salzburg.
We know that in our line of work, there are long hours and few rewards. We at Eighteen:22, along with ROI Community, The Schusterman Family Foundation, and our group of donors want to show our appreciation by making sure you — who are so often focused on the needs of others — are taken care of yourselves. It’s just one of many ways we hope to say, “Thank You.”
- Since the conference was to be truly global, the locale had to be as well — i.e, not just in the United States of America or Israel.
- The space had to have both Jewish and LGBTQ significance — our selection of venue couldn’t be random.
- It was important to use this as an opportunity to build a relationship with an existing, global initiative working in the LGBTQ space.
With the Schloss Leopoldskron in Salzburg, Austria, home of the Salzburg Global Seminar (SGS), we found what we were looking for!
Not only has SGS demonstrated a profound commitment to LGBTQ human rights, including having created and hosted several conferences on global LGBTQ issues, but the campus holds Jewish ties as well.
Prior to World War II, the Schloss Leopoldskron was the former home of famed Jewish director, Max Reinhardt. During the Holocaust, the Schloss was confiscated by the Nazis, forcing Max to defect to the USA.
Following the war, the facilities were reclaimed, and turned into a global conference center whose mission would be to help facilitate conversations around important global issues, and launch initiatives that make the world a better place. Hence: The Salzburg Global Seminar.
As Jews, LGBTQ individuals, and a gathering with the name Eighteen:22, we couldn’t not be moved by this amazing story of reclamation!
If that weren’t enough, many scenes from the film, The Sound of Music (currently celebrating its 50th anniversary), were filmed on the premises. It doesn’t get much “gayer” than that, right?
If you are an ROIer or Schusterman program alumnus, you will need to use your Micro Grant to cover the costs of travel to Eighteen:22.
Other than travel-related costs and the participation fee, Eighteen:22 will cover all food, housing, and program costs for our attendees.
LGBTQ Jewish work can look like many different things. It could be:
- A community organizer at an LGBTQ nonprofit/NGO who brings people together on Jewish community issues.
- A singer-songwriter who shares their own LGBTQ life in their songs, but actively frames it through a Jewish lens.
- An individual who works in entertainment, research, health, law, government, etc., whose Jewish values strongly inform the nature of their work.
- The coordinator of an all-volunteer organization, who gathers LGBTQ Jews for social events.
- Someone who works at a Jewish advocacy organization, who has helped their organization to pay attention to LGBTQ issues.
Not sure if your work qualifies? Email us at info@eighteen22.com.
Matrilineal, Patrilineal, Part-Jewish, Jews by choice, Crypto-Jews, etc. — we don’t adhere to a single definition of who is a Jew. If you have any questions as to your eligibility regarding your Jewish background and identity, please contact info@eighteen22.com.
If you are not Jewish and feel deeply that this gathering applies to you and your work, please contact info@eighteen22.com.
If you are outside of this age range and still feel deeply compelled to apply, please contact info@eighteen22.com.
For further questions or concerns, please contact us at info@eighteen22.com.
We are looking for strong representation from leaders coming from all over the world, as exciting and challenging work is occurring globally. In addition to those coming from North America, Western Europe, and Israel, we look forward to receiving applications from those working in the global South, Russia/FSU and Eastern Europe, and other locales not often represented at these gatherings.
First and foremost, we are looking to bring together those change-makers who are dedicated, passionate, and making a real difference with work that is both interesting and innovative — and of course, those who want to connect with their peers from around the world!
Second, we are working hard to have a gathering that reflects the diversity of our community — participants from world-wide locations, Jews of color, Jews by choice, people with mobility issues, people with accessibility issues/special needs/invisible illnesses or conditions, Jews of non-Ashkenazi backgrounds, interfaith families, and more.
Other than demonstrating a commitment to, and impact in some area of LGBTQ Jewish life and/or beyond, there is no single most important factor that we are looking for when selecting finalists. Rather, we will be balancing a variety of factors with every application. Simply show us who you are!
With only 60 spots, selecting those who will attend this first gathering will be no easy task. We definitely won’t be able to take everyone we would like. Please know that if you are not selected, this is just the beginning for Eighteen:22, and that there will be many ways you can be involved in the future.
Our hope is that this inaugural gathering will be the first in a long line of ways by which Eighteen:22 can help support and facilitate positive change around the world for LGBTQ Jews and the communities around us.
We want to create connections and develop skills that will last for years (and future initiatives) to come. That means we want to engage in what you’re doing now, and invest in who you are personally.
Contact Us
Partners
Connection Points
Connection Points is a series of local and thematic peer-led gatherings designed to empower participants to work in partnership to create new, and strengthen existing, avenues of Jewish experiences for themselves and their peers. Connection Points is an initiative of the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation.
In 2015, ten Connection Point gatherings will take place on five continents with themes ranging from education to the arts, community building to international development, inclusivity, social justice and more.
For more info, click here.
Schusterman Family Foundation
The Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation (Schusterman) is a global organization that seeks to ignite the passion and unleash the power in young people to create positive change for themselves, the Jewish community and the broader world. Schusterman pursues its mission by working collaboratively with others to support and operate high-quality education, identity development, leadership training and service programs designed to help young people cultivate their growth as individuals and as leaders.
For more info, click here.
Keshet is a national grassroots organization that works in the United States of America for the full equality and inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) Jews in Jewish life.
Keshet is proud to fiscally sponsor Eighteen:22.
For more info, click here.
Friday Night Lights produces world class, experiential events for gay Jewish professionals that offers new access points into the Jewish community and fosters long-term involvement in both Jewish and LGBTQ life.
For more info, click here.
GLOE – The Kurlander Program for GLBT Outreach & Engagement – connects queer Jews (and our friends!) at the Washington DCJCC. As the only full-time LGBTQ program at any Jewish Community Center, GLOE is proud to serve as a resource and a model for organizations building their own queer Jewish communities.
For more info, click here.
Eighteen:22 would also like to thank the Lippman Kanfer Family Philanthropic Fund, Stuart Kurlander, Alex Greenbaum, and others for their generous support.
For general questions, press inquiries, and/or to learn more about Eighteen:22 and how you can become involved, please contact us at info@eighteen22.com.