Events

Upcoming Events

Save the Date for the ZRC's 4th Annual Conference in Washington DC, May 4 through 6, 2025

All Previous Events

Annual Conferences, High Holiday Seminars and Webinars

Highlights from the 2024 ZRC National Conference

Highlights from the 2024 ZRC National Conference

Conference Speakers and Presentations: Johnnie Moore: Evangelical Leader “We Are Not Alone: Voices of Support Outside the Jewish Community” Reverend Johnnie Moore opened the conference with an address covered live on C-Span in which he articulated the deep connections...

Rabbis As Witnesses

  Rabbis who have recently returned from solidarity missions to Israel share what they witnessed, including inspiring sermon-worthy stories of resilience and determination, along with practical tips on planning a...

Grappling with Israel’s Political Crisis with Haviv Gur

Exclusive conversation with Haviv Gur, followed by a conversation among rabbis about how we can respond and lead in the current crisis. https://youtu.be/fDD4x_LayP8 Sponsored by the Zionist Rabbinic Coalition, a grass-roots, broad-based multi-denominational coalition...

What You Need To Know About The Israeli Election with David Horovitz

What You Need To Know About The Israeli Election with David Horovitz, Editor of the Times of Israel. https://youtu.be/oGzV-sNOySo Sponsored by the Zionist Rabbinic Coalition, a grass-roots, broad-based multi-denominational coalition of rabbis committed to promoting...

2022 High Holiday Sermon Seminar with Rabbi Joseph Telushkin

The Zionist Rabbinic Coalition hosted a High Holiday Sermon Seminar on August 25, 2022, featuring Rabbi Joseph Telushkin, author of numerous books, who taught an inspiring session for rabbis with a number of stories, texts, anecdotes, and comments appropriate for the...

Anna Borshchevskaya on Putin’s invasion of Ukraine

Conversation with Anna Borshchevskaya, the Washington Institute’s expert on Ukraine, held on March 17, 2022. Sponsored by the Zionist Rabbinic Coalition, a grass-roots, broad-based multi-denominational coalition of rabbis committed to promoting Jewish unity....

2021 High Holiday Sermon Seminar

2021 High Holiday Sermon Seminar

"How to Speak about Israel", a High Holiday Sermon Seminar. featuring authors Yossi Klein Halevi and Rabbi Avi Weiss, on Tuesday, July 27, 2021. https://youtu.be/4LaoiG31Ipw Greetings and Reflections from Nahman Shai, Israel’s Minister of Diaspora Affairs....

The 2021 War with Gaza: What did Israel Gain? Was It Worth It?

On Monday, May 24, 2021, the Zionist Rabbinic Coalition sponsored “What Has Israel Gained? Was it Worth It?”, a conversation with Brigadier General Yossi Kuperwasser, former Director of Israel’s Ministry of Strategic Affairs and of IDF Military Intelligence. This...

As Bombs Are Falling, What Do We Need from Our Fellow Jews

On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 the Zionist Rabbinic Coalition sponsored "What Rabbis Need to Know about What is Happening in Israel, and How we Got Here", an Emergency Briefing with Michael Oren, Former Ambassador of Israel to the United States. This webinar is one in a...

How to Empower Young Jews to Respond to Jew Hatred

On Tuesday, February 9, 2021, the Zionist Rabbinic Coalition sponsored a conversation with Brooke Goldstein, Executive Director of The Lawfare Project, an American, nonprofit, think tank and litigation fund that works to protect the human and civil rights of Jewish...

How to Convert an Anti-Semite to stop Hating Us

On Tuesday, July 28, 2020, the Zionist Rabbinic Coalition sponsored a conversation with Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal Center: What do you say to an Anti-Semite? This webinar is one in a series sponsored by the Zionist Rabbinic Coalition and is part of...

Israel’s Position After the Gaza War

On Wednesday, July 15, 2020, the Zionist Rabbinic Coalition sponsored a conversation with David Makovsky of the Washington Institute. https://youtu.be/KUjXuNOF4rM

Statement of Purpose and Guiding Principles

At a time when there is concern over the widening gap between the Jews of Israel and North America we are committed to working to close that gap before it becomes greater and irreparable. Moved by the Zionist vision of the founders of the State of Israel, we appreciate the role of Israel in the hearts, minds and lives of the Jewish people throughout our history and pledge to do our part to take constructive steps to support Israel and to strengthen the ties between our two communities.

As a diverse group of Orthodox, Conservative, Reform and Reconstructionist rabbis from North America, we express our commitment to the unity of the Jewish people, and to affirm our unbreakable bond with and support for the State of Israel. Our commitment to the security of the State of Israel and for the preservation of Jewish identity in the Diaspora and State of Israel is enduring and unwavering. We are committed to Israel being a free and democratic Jewish state, which is the goal of Zionism, the national liberation movement of the Jewish people.

As such, we respect the democratic process in Israel and appreciate the robust free press and public discourse that takes place in Israel. We recognize that ultimately, the people of Israel are the ones who must live with the consequences of the decisions they make – whether it pertains to security or other matters.

Yet we also believe that as the state of the Jewish people, Jews around the world have a stake in the outcome of those decisions, for we have a shared history and destiny. We believe it is crucial that Israel and North American Jewry help and support each other and work together to ensure the vitality and welfare of Judaism, the Jewish people and Jewish communities around the world.

As a result, we believe that the Jewish people is best served by an approach to Judaism in Israel that is tolerant of the various streams of Judaism. Inasmuch as unity does not require uniformity, we encourage our Israeli brothers and sisters to embrace policies and actions that support tolerance for different expressions of Judaism. We want to encourage diversity of expression of Judaism in Israel and intend to express this in a way that will not diminish support or love for Israel among the Jews of North America.

As rabbis from different affiliations, we celebrate and experience our Judaism in different ways. Even when we differ or disagree, we affirm that it must be from a position of mutual respect and caring, of love and devotion to each other, and that we take into consideration the different realities of our communities and the impact actions and statements have on each other.

With unconditional love, yet not uncritical support, we are convinced that working together, we can face any challenge. Divided we are weakened and diminished. We recognize that what we say has an impact on those who hear our messages – primarily the American Jewish community. Consequently, we rabbis must be conscious of the impact our words have on the community that hears them. To that end, we invite other rabbis to join us in creating a means to constructively express our concerns directly to appropriate parties in Israel while conveying to our fellow Jews in the Diaspora the importance of continued support for the State of Israel.

We commit to improving our communication, expanding our knowledge of each other, to finding constructive ways to deepen and strengthen the relationship between Israel and our communities and to work constructively and in a cooperative spirit to resolve differences that may arise.