Search
Close this search box.

Sharing Ideas and History with Warsaw JCC

This week the Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh and Buncher Foundation gathered to celebrate 25 years of investing in an international leadership program for professionals and lay leadership through the  American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) that was launched in partnership with the Federation. In the past quarter century, hundreds of Buncher graduates in dozens of countries have helped build Jewish community.  One of the emerging communities is in Warsaw, where a JCC was created four years ago in a community that had been almost completely annihilated during the Holocaust.

Recently I had the privilege to meet Agata Rakowieck, the Director of the Jewish Community Center of Warsaw and take her around our JCC for an hour.  Her passion and drive to rebuild a JCC in Warsaw was contagious and she was so eager to adapt some of the things she saw in our JCC to her emerging community. We immediately connected.

At the end of our visit, I asked Agata for a favor.  A few years ago, I was given a copy of my grandmother’s high school diploma from an ORT vocational school in Warsaw.  I had no idea what it said since the diploma was in Polish.  Agata translated this for me and helped me unlock  a mystery.   My grandmother had studied to be a seamstress and graduated with the highest honors in 1927.  Two years later she immigrated to America with her remaining brothers and sisters and never again saw family members she left behind in Poland – nearly all of whom were killed during the Holocaust.  In 1987, I had the opportunity to see the historical remnants of the Warsaw ghetto, the Jewish cemetery and the transport station where Jews were sent to the death camps.

What a meaningful chance it was, 90 years after my grandmother’s graduation and 30 years after my experience in Poland, to see a new JCC open and the dynamism of young talent to make a difference.  As you look at the picture, you can see that we both left the meeting with something special.  For Agata it was an AgeWell packet and the chance for her to bring back our model to the Polish Jewish community.  For me, it was the ability to reconnect to a piece of my roots and the Jewish “sparks” she inspired in me during my childhood.

Two community professionals, each driven to serve and give back to make our community better.

Wishing you and your families a Shabbat Shalom,

Brian

Recent Posts

JCC State of Mind: April 10, 2026 – Transformative Programming

At the JCC, we often speak about the…

read more
A Framework for Reinforcing Our Frames: Bone Health

By Carolyn Kontos I realized something recently that…

read more
JCC State of Mind: April 1, 2026 – Passover

One of my favorite Passover stories, and one…

read more
JCC State of Mind: March 27, 2026 – Community

This past week offered a powerful reminder of…

read more
Scroll to Top
ATTENTION
Swimmers, please note that the Squirrel Hill pools will be closed from 11 am-3 pm on Sunday, March 29for the Jack Morris Invite swim meet.
Skip to content