“Where conscience finds moral fault in purportedly divine imperatives, the imperatives need to be reexamined.”
-Harold M. Schulweis
Founded on the shared history of the Jewish people and the principle of Tikkun Olam (repairing the world), Rabbi Harold M. Schulweis (z”l) and Janice Kamenir-Reznik created Jewish World Watch (JWW) in 2004 after learning of the ongoing genocide in Darfur, Sudan. Recalling the deafening silence during the Holocaust, and the 1994 Rwandan genocide, Rabbi Schulweis taught that we must not be silent in the face of yet another genocide; that we must educate ourselves and raise our collective voices, and that we cannot stand idly by. The “we” at the time was the Jewish people, but since its founding, JWW has grown from a collection of Southern California synagogues into an organization that draws support from schools, churches, individuals, communities, and partner organizations across the country all sharing a vision of a world without genocide.
Globalism & Judaism
In 2004, on the Jewish holiday Rosh Hashana, Rabbi Harold M. Schulweis (z”l) gave a powerful sermon that called for the creation of Jewish World Watch.