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A bystander no more

Motivated by Jewish tradition and values, the Jewish Climate Network aims to harness the capabilities and creativity of the Australian Jewish community to accelerate the transition to a zero emissions world.
Rebecca Forgasz
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three people in front of a polluted environment

Illustration: Avi Katz

Published: 4 October 2019

Last updated: 5 April 2024

MY JOURNEY INTO THE WORLD of climate activism began less than a year ago, when my sister, Rachel, and I decided to educate ourselves about climate change and figure out how we could make a difference.

I had known about climate change for many years, of course. I went to see Al Gore’s film An Inconvenient Truth back in 2006, and remember feeling shocked and disturbed. This lasted for a few weeks, maybe months, and then it disappeared off my radar. Certainly, in recent years, I hadn’t given the issue much thought. I was busy with a full-time job and two young children; I had no headspace, let alone time, to think about such seemingly abstract and far-away issues. And I probably thought there were plenty of good people working on this issue. Basically, I had my head in the sand. Over the first few months that my sister and I met, I started to hear people talking not about climate change but about the climate emergency and the need to act with speed and urgency if we are to prevent an irreversible chain of catastrophic impacts that could  render large parts of the planet uninhabitable, or, worst case scenario, see the extinction of humankind. Over these months, I experienced feelings of intense fear, grief, and anger. I felt a sense of  disbelief that people weren’t running around in the streets like Chicken Little shouting “the sky is falling, the sky is falling”, because the sky may not be falling, but the ice is melting, the oceans are dying and the earth is burning.
One of the key moral lessons of the Holocaust is not to be a bystander.
And then one day, the penny dropped. I was talking to the CEO of Courage to Care, an organisation in our community that does important work educating non-Jewish school students about the Holocaust. He told me that their focus was not on the events of the Holocaust, but on one of its the key moral lessons – not to be a bystander. They usually talk to students about not being a bystander to racism or even the bullying they see in the school yard. As we were talking, it occurred to me that climate change is the greatest catastrophe confronting humankind, yet so many of us are standing by, letting it happen. We are being bystanders. I thought about my kids, 20 years from now, looking at me and asking, “Twenty years ago when the world still could have done something, everyone knew what was happening. You knew what was happening. What did you do?”  It felt unbearable to me to imagine saying to them, “I did nothing. I just carried on life as it had always been.” It became clear to me that I was not going to be a bystander. With a background as an educator and public speaker, I decided to do what I did best. Together with my sister, I developed an interactive presentation aimed at raising awareness about climate change, initially among our personal and professional networks. We wanted to take them on the same journey to “awakening” that we had been on. In March, we invited 14 friends and colleagues to my home to participate in our first session. Among the attendees were four people who had been engaged with the issue for far longer than me and had been thinking about doing something to mobilise the Jewish community. We decided to form the Jewish Climate Action Group, with the aim of raising awareness and inspiring action in the Jewish community.
Jewish philanthropy is helping to solve many of our social problems and are great benefactors to arts and culture. However, climate change is a societal issue that we are not engaging with in a significant way.
So why a Jewish climate group? Eytan Lenko, one of the group’s co-founders, wrote in a recent op-ed piece in the Australian Jewish News: “Australia’s Jewish community is one of the most engaged and organised in the country. We have strong institutions that get involved in national issues such as marriage equality, refugees and the rise of racism. “Many of us individually volunteer with our schools, synagogues, sporting clubs and the care of our elderly. Jewish philanthropy is helping to solve many of our social problems and are great benefactors to arts and culture. However, climate change is a societal issue that we are not engaging with in a significant way.” The Jewish Climate Network is working to change that. Motivated by Jewish tradition and values, our mission is to harness the capabilities and creativity of the Australian Jewish community to accelerate the transition to a zero emissions world. Our work includes political and community engagement, creating opportunities for investors and philanthropists to accelerate climate solutions, and delivering grassroots programs that empower the Jewish community to take solutions into their own hands.

Since 2019, across over 100 events, in partnership with diverse community organisations, JCN has engaged over 10,000 community members towards its mission.

Climate change has already begun to exacerbate societal challenges in many areas that the Jewish community cares deeply about - such as education, health, human rights, equality and food security.

We need to activate the potential of the Australian Jewish community  towards solving these challenges.

About the author

Rebecca Forgasz

Rebecca Forgasz is an Associate Professor at the Australian Centre for Jewish Civilisation at Monash University, and a co-founder of the Jewish Climate Action Group.

The Jewish Independent acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Owners and Custodians of Country throughout Australia. We pay our respects to Elders past and present, and strive to honour their rich history of storytelling in our work and mission.

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