Camp Kesher 2008 Logo

Camp Kesher: A Fun-filled Weekend of Jewish Experiences

Open to all who seek to deepen family, friendship, and spiritual connections in the context of a Reform Jewish experience.

Scholar-in-Residence
Dr. Mark Washofsky
Labor Day Weekend:
Friday, September 3 – Monday, September 6, 2010
Vashon Island, Washington
We are modifying our normal Friday noon start because most area schools are starting before Labor Day this year. Plan to arrive for a 5 PM starting time. Closing circle will be after lunch on Monday.

Camp Kesher is honored and delighted to have Rabbi Peretz Wolf-Prusan as this year’s scholar-in-residence. Ever since Sinai, each generation of Israelites, Judeans, and Jews has been responsible for passing the Torah, literally and metaphorically, from one generation to the next. We have told stories, inscribed scrolls, sung songs, created symbolic foods, illuminated books, written plays, made movies—and now, in addition to it all, we send podcasts and post blogs. But what are the essential messages from Sinai? And how are we transmitting what is important to us? Looking over our shoulders at the past, and then back at ourselves, we will investigate our own storytelling potential as we celebrate our turn at telling our tale.

Rabbi Peretz Wolf-Prusan is Rabbi and Senior Educator at Congregation Emanu-El in San Francisco, as well as Senior Rabbinic Fellow of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem and on the faculty of the Consortium for the Future of the Jewish Family. He was ordained in 1990 from the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Cincinnati and holds an undergraduate degree from San Francisco State University. Rabbi Peretz Wolf-Prusan is the recipient of numerous awards, including the 2002 Covenant Award for Exceptional Jewish Educators.


Dr. Ron Wolfson (2009)
Rabbi Larry Hoffman (2008)
Rabbi Sue Levi Elwell (2007)
Rabbi Peretz Wolf-Prusan (2006)
Rabbi Naomy Levy (2005)
Rabbi Lewis M. Barth (2004)
Sponsored by the Reform Congregations of Western Washington

Endorsed by the Pacific Northwest Council of the Union for Reform Judaism (URJ)