For Organizations
The Belonging Project
This cutting edge initiative merges scientific research, relational best practices, and ancient Jewish wisdom.
What if we put belonging at the heart of Jewish communal life?
Background
Humans are hard-wired to thrive when we are in mutually supportive communities. Over the last several decades in North America, though, the ties that bind neighbor to neighbor have weakened, if not snapped completely. We have lost a sense of place, a sense of home, a sense of belonging. We are lonelier than ever before, to the detriment of our physical, mental, and civic health.
Faith communities are uniquely positioned to address this loneliness epidemic. These communities value deep connection, caring, and mutual support. However, we don’t always design our events, programs, staffing, services, and structures to maximize belonging.
Pilot
In the spring of 2022, Clal partnered with the Springtide Research Institute to pilot a survey of belongingness in seven synagogues across the U.S. and Canada. Then, we created a custom report of their belonging scores and action recommendations. The aggregate study included 1,100 respondents, and it is the very first scientifically-based, quantitative study of belonging in the Jewish community.
Notable Findings
- When congregants feel they belong, they contribute more of their time, money, and support. For example, high belonging congregants were 12 times more likely to donate money and 3.5 times more likely to recommend the synagogue to others.
- One-on-one connections and small groups produced a much greater sense of belonging; virtual programming and other “frontal” programs scored lowest.
- Each congregation has a unique fingerprint of strengths and weaknesses when it comes to creating belonging among congregants.
Since the pilot, over 25 more congregations throughout the US and Canada have undertaken the Belonging Project’s offerings, including the Belonging Index survey, training workshops for lay leaders and staff, and customized coaching and consulting.
Bring Belonging to Your Community
Jewish community institutions of all kinds can maximize belonging. Clal offers a variety of ways to bring The Belonging Project to your community, including:
- Belonging 101 Workshop: A 1.5 hour introductory, online workshop. This is for congregations and Jewish institutions beginning to focus on building a community of belonging, as well as leaders who want to spark interest in the idea of designing for belonging.
- Belonging Index: A survey measuring how belonging works in your synagogue community. This is for congregations that want to better understand their current belonging strengths and weaknesses and to receive customized, data-based recommendations for action steps.
- Half-Day Leadership Retreat: This is for congregations and Jewish institutions seeking guiding principles of designing for belonging and connection among congregants, as well as opportunities for brainstorming and reflection as a leadership team.
- Congregational Leadership Cohort: Includes workshop, survey, and coaching. This is for congregations that are ready to devote the next year to seriously impacting the experience of your congregants, the direction of your synagogue, and the culture of your community.
- Scholar-in-Residence: Kick off your community’s belonging work by bringing in a Clal faculty member to teach about belonging in Jewish community
At a Glance
Congregations
Survey Respondents
Cities
The Belonging Project
Impact on Participants & Communities
of participants would recommend the program to others
of participants rated their experience a 4 or 5 out of 5
Testimonials
From Alumni
Is this for me?
To learn more about The Belonging Project or to bring Clal to your institution, fill out this form. We look forward to being in touch!