Camp Hemshekh

Camp Hemshekh (Yiddish: המשך; "continuation" Literally: Camp "Continuation")[1] was a Jewish summer camp in the United States that was founded in 1959 by Holocaust survivors who were active in the Jewish Labour Bund, a Jewish, socialist workers' party in Eastern Europe.[2] The camp was sponsored by the Bund as well.[3] Camp Hemshekh had as its goal instilling in its campers the ideals of the Jewish socialist movement that flourished in interwar Poland: socialism, secular Yiddish culture, equality and justice, and the Bundist concept of doikayt, "hereness," that Jews should live, build their culture and struggle for their rights wherever they dwell, rather than seeking refuge in a Jewish homeland.[1][4][5] A Hemshekh camper is called a Hemshekhist (the plural is Hemshekhistn).[citation needed]

  1. ^ a b "Camp in the Catskills: A Summer Tradition". The Forward. 24 June 2009.
  2. ^ "Remembering 'Hair' and The Tangle of the 1960s". The Forward. 12 May 2007.
  3. ^ "In Love and In Struggle: The Musical Legacy Of The Labor Bund". YIVO Institute. Archived from the original on 2007-03-08.
  4. ^ Newman, Margie (March 2009). "Resistance - Camp Hemshekh and a Survivor's Daughter". Jewish Currents. Archived from the original on 2009-05-23. Retrieved 2009-08-10.
  5. ^ ""Nonviolence gives me hope" - An Interview with Liliane Kshensky Baxter". FOR Fellowship Magazine. February 2004. Archived from the original on 2009-08-09. Retrieved 2009-08-12.

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