Hello, please see below for an opportunity for public libraries from the 
Yiddish Book Center. Feel free to share. Thank you!

************

In what ways do immigrants change America, and in what ways does America change 
immigrants? Public libraries are ideal places to engage in this conversation.

The Yiddish Book Center’s “Coming to America” Reading Groups for Public 
Libraries<https://www.yiddishbookcenter.org/language-literature-culture/yiddish-book-centers-decade-discovery/coming-america-reading-groups>
 is a reading and discussion program to engage teens and adults in thinking 
about immigrants’ experiences encountering America.

Public library workers can apply by August 16, 2019, to be part of the program. 
Participants will receive training and resources to help them lead a reading 
group that will explore three books of Yiddish literature in translation, as 
well as one book related to an immigrant community served by their library.

Up to 30 public libraries will be selected. Learn more and apply online at 
yiddishbookcenter.org/public-libraries<https://www.yiddishbookcenter.org/language-literature-culture/yiddish-book-centers-decade-discovery/coming-america-reading-groups>.

Using Yiddish literature as a portal, the program will feature Yiddish 
literature in translation that explores questions of identity, assimilation, 
language, cuisine, and generational change, presenting American identity as an 
ongoing conversation, a give-and-take-between insiders and outsiders, and will 
compare these works written in the early 20th century to works by contemporary 
immigrant writers.

Participating libraries will receive:


  *   Expenses paid for facilitators to attend a two-day workshop at the 
Yiddish Book Center in Amherst, Mass.
  *   15 copies of each of three books on the Yiddish Book Center reading list, 
as well as one copy each for the discussion facilitator and the library’s 
collection
     *   “Motl the Cantor’s Son,” by Sholem Aleichem
     *   “Enemies, A Love Story,” by Isaac Bashevis Singer
     *   “A Jewish Refugee in New York,” by Kadya Molodovsky
  *   15 copies of one additional book, selected by the library, that relates 
to the immigrant experiences of their own community
  *   Plus downloadable discussion guides and reading resources

Applicants may also apply for an additional $500 award to cover the cost of a 
guest speaker.

The Yiddish Book Center’s “Coming to America” Reading Groups for Public 
Libraries is made possible by a gift from Sharon Karmazin.


_____________
Sarah Ostman
Communications Manager
American Library Association
Public Programs Office
312-280-5061

__
Messages and opinions expressed on Hasafran are those of the individual author
and are not necessarily endorsed by the Association of Jewish Libraries (AJL)
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