The power of camp: Leadership and teachable moments for everyone
https://ramahnyack.org/wp-content/themes/ramahnyack/images/empty/thumbnail.jpg 150 150 admin admin https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/f797ddf95336606cda8a18a56df5907b?s=96&d=mm&r=gThe power of camp: Leadership and teachable moments for everyone
by Rabbi Cantor Shoshi Levin Goldberg
Director of the H.L. Miller Cantorial School – The Jewish Theological Seminary
July 31, 2025 / 6 Av 5785
As a staff member at Ramah Day Camp in Nyack nearly two decades ago, my favorite evening of the summer was always Zimriyah, the camp-wide musical performance with full participation from the campers and staff. Now, as a parent of two campers at Ramah Nyack, I look forward to the days toward the beginning of each summer when my children come home from camp singing their Zimriyah songs.
There are two valuable gifts that stand out above all other specialties Camp Ramah offers: understanding every moment and interaction as a teachable moment; and finding leadership opportunities – big and small – that suit the talents of each person.
My family and I spent a Shabbat at Ramah Nyack this summer, and it was meaningful to spend time with the American and Israeli staff in prayer and in learning. I taught a session on Shabbat afternoon about spiritual resilience during challenging times, and I talked with dozens of staff members about everything that JTS has to offer.
Two moments stuck out to me over Shabbat:
First, a teachable moment: On Friday night, I sat next to a member of the Mishlachat, the Israeli staff delegation in camp. He was struggling to follow along in the Hebrew prayerbook, continuously asking me to show him what page we were on and which prayer was being recited. I was moved by his openness and unabashed desire to learn.
And second, leadership: As I led the Preliminary Service on Shabbat morning, it occurred to me that my daughter’s Zimriyah song could be found in the text of the psalms in that service. At the appropriate moment, I invited her up to help me lead, and we sang her Zimriyah song together. Others joined in, adding the hand motions, in true Ramah style.
Teachable moments and leadership go hand in hand. Following the service, a division head approached me and thanked me for including the Zimriyah song in the service. She noted that she loves learning the Zimriyah songs each summer but doesn’t often stop to consider where the texts can be found.
One of the special features of Ramah Nyack is that the campers go home at the end of the camp day. Spending an evening or a Shabbat at camp, you will find the staff learning and praying together. CITs and lifeguards, Israelis and Americans, counselors and division heads, all pray and learn with and from another, modeling the type of modesty that is necessary for all of us to learn and grow. I am proud of our JTS students who spend time soaking up this culture and helping create and perpetuate it, at camp and beyond.