Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try Chabad OP. There’s no membership costs and the Hebrew fees are affordable. Best of all, it’s just one Sunday per week for 2 hours— even as they get older.
You’re suggesting Chabad to someone who barely goes to temple? It’s orthodox.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another option would be Moed, which is an afterschool program that introduces Hebrew and holiday celebration in a more secular fashion. http://www.moedcommunity.org/. Give your kids a framework, and if they reject it, they reject. Hebrew school has also changed a lot since you were a kid, there is more of an emphasis on fun, modern Hebrew, Israeli/women teachers - it's not like the old Ashke-normative, fusty Hebrew school of yore.
Someone let in a refugee from Jewbook?
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in a Conservative Jewish household. We only went to synagogue on the High Holidays, but we observed other "big" holidays with family meals. I had to go to Hebrew school 3x/week and really resented it. I lived in an area with a lot of other Jewish families growing up and this seemed to be the norm, although a lot of other families belonged to Reform congregations, but the Conservative one was close to my house which is why my parents joined that one.
Anonymous wrote:Another option would be Moed, which is an afterschool program that introduces Hebrew and holiday celebration in a more secular fashion. http://www.moedcommunity.org/. Give your kids a framework, and if they reject it, they reject. Hebrew school has also changed a lot since you were a kid, there is more of an emphasis on fun, modern Hebrew, Israeli/women teachers - it's not like the old Ashke-normative, fusty Hebrew school of yore.
Anonymous wrote:Try Chabad OP. There’s no membership costs and the Hebrew fees are affordable. Best of all, it’s just one Sunday per week for 2 hours— even as they get older.
Anonymous wrote:We didn’t do it and I regret it a little bit. My parents and in laws really weren’t happy with the decision either.