JFCS JOINS WITH BAY AREA INTERFAITH LEADERS 
- JFCS News

JFCS has issued the following statement in coalition with the San Francisco Interfaith Council and our network of faith-based organizations.
As leaders of diverse faith-based traditions we understand human life to be the greatest and most sacred gift endowed by our Creator. Inherent in that gift is the inalienable right to live freely and not in fear.
The May 25, 2020, senseless killing of George Floyd, in Minneapolis, at the knee of a law enforcement official, sworn and entrusted to protect the public and keep the peace, is yet another stark reminder of humanity’s blindness to the sacredness of that… Read More
Posted by Admin on June 2, 2020
JFCS Ramps up Its Services to Meet Daunting Coronavirus Challenges 
- JFCS in the Media
- JFCS News

Read the original article on jweekly.com >
Anita Friedman thought she’d seen it all: wildfires, earthquakes, 9/11 and the brutal 2008 economic recession.
But the longtime executive director of the S.F.-based Jewish Family and Children’s Services had not seen it all—not until the onset of the coronavirus pandemic of 2020, which she calls “the deepest and most profound crisis we’ve had to deal with in the last generation. This combines both a health crisis with a mental-health crisis with an economic crisis, and it affects everyone.”
Having served the local Jewish community for more than four decades, Friedman is… Read More
Posted by Admin on April 1, 2020
Holocaust Center Fights Antisemitism in Cooperation with Bay Area Schools 
- JFCS News
- Education
- Holocaust Center

There has been a recent and dramatic rise in antisemitism; from the shooting at Pittsburgh’s Tree of Life synagogue, to the stabbing on Hanukkah in New York. Attacks on Jews have increased globally, and locally as well. The JFCS Holocaust Center reports a 175% increase in antisemitic acts in schools and community spaces of the past year.
As leaders of the Jewish community in the Bay Area, JFCS works diligently to combat hate and antisemitism. We find that education is one of the strongest tools in this ongoing fight. The Holocaust Center continues to play a role in preventing these… Read More
Posted by Admin on January 31, 2020
JFCS Launches New Center for Children and Youth 
- JFCS News
- Parenting

Raising children today is more challenging than ever before, especially in the Bay Area. Without a place to turn for coordinated services, too many families don’t find the help they need until it is too late.
To address this growing crisis and serve thousands of Bay Area children, JFCS has announced the launch of its new Center for Children and Youth.
One of the largest initiatives ever undertaken by JFCS in its 170-year history, the Center for Children and Youth is bringing together and expanding critical services in four key areas:
Parent consultation and community education through JFCS’ Parents … Read More
Posted by Admin on June 11, 2019
Dr. Anita Friedman Honored with Silver SPUR Lifetime Achievement Award 
- JFCS News

JFCS’ Executive Director, Dr. Anita Friedman, was recently presented with the Silver SPUR Lifetime Achievement Award, the most prominent award for lifetime civic achievement in San Francisco.
Dr. Friedman was honored for her visionary leadership in health and human services and innovative social enterprises across the Bay Area. In addition to heading JFCS’ services and humanitarian work, Dr. Friedman has served on various local, state, national, and international boards and commissions, and served as a consultant to Israel’s Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs.
As a speaker and author, Dr. Friedman’s expertise includes social policy and programming for diverse populations;… Read More
Posted by Admin on November 5, 2018
Tad Taube: Endowment Gift to JFCS Ensures Jewish Peoplehood at Home and Around the World 
- Donor Stories
- JFCS News
- Other Legacies

When 8-year-old Tad Taube left Poland in 1939 en route to New York via Ellis Island, the Krakow-born child didn’t know that he and his parents would narrowly escape the Nazi invasion. He also did not know that he would never return to the culturally rich and prosperous Polish Jewish community that he knew in his youth, or that this community would be destroyed during World War II.
As the war raged on, Tad and his parents would soon learn that Tad’s beloved grandfather had been murdered by the Nazis, along with many others in their family. More fortunate family… Read More
Posted by Admin on November 5, 2018