Thursday, / November 14, 2024
Home / news

Uncovering The Artist Within: Exhibit of Works by Children With Special Needs

By , Brooklyn, NY

When in the early 1990s, Yaffa Gottlieb adopted two children with special needs, all she wanted was for them to be a part of the Jewish community. At first she took baby steps to include them in the community. “At the time, families were still hiding their children with Down’s syndrome. I wanted them to be part of the community. We would walk down with our kids on the main avenue,” she recalls.

The writer, who just completed two new children’s novels says that since Friendship Circle of Brooklyn entered the picture, the community has been so much more receptive, accepting and inclusive. Friendship Circle, the Chabad initiative for inclusion has partnered with Bear Givers foundation to nurture the artistic talents of individuals with special needs towards an exhibit Art of Friendship. The Brooklyn division is headed by Rabbi Berel and Chani Majeski.

According to organizers and parents, the event has been an “empowering” experience for them. “They feel that they accomplished something that will be recognized as works of art by others. They see for once that they are a part of the greater community,” says Joseph Sprung, the Chairman and Founder of Bear Givers. “Art is art, no matter who creates it.”

Over a period of several months, local artists met with the amateur artists to create art. The workshops, conducted in the Jewish Children’s Museum, where the gallery and auction will take place Sunday, May 10, have been developed with each individual’s creative talents in mind.

The art program has been an eye opener for parents as they uncover their children’s innate artistic talents. Gottlieb, whose children are looking forward to the event, says that the experience gave her daughter the idea that she could become an artist, which is unusual for individuals who generally get overlooked as contributors to art or any discipline.

“It is mesmerizing to see how these individuals with special needs produce such interesting works of art,” says Chana Sharfstein, the author of Dignified Differences: A Special Soul, a memoir of her daughter’s autistic life

“How my daughter would have benefited from such programs is immeasurable,” she says wistfully. “But as a member of the pioneering generation of special children in my Jewish community, I am delighted that a new generation will have opportunities of inclusion through the activities of the Friendship Circle.”

Comment

Be the first to write a comment.

Add

Related Articles
Mother of Autistic Child Promotes Inclusion, Kindness
“In 1964 this condition [autism] was virtually unknown, still in its infancy. I was overwhelmed, and unsure of how I would cope,” says Chana Sharfstein,…
Striving for Inclusion, Chabad Inspires Opening of Retail Shop
When parents of adults with special needs wanted to organize a group home in Charlotte, North Carolina, Rochel Groner had another idea.
Musicians With Special Needs Release Recording
Chauffeured in limousines, dressed in formal attire, prepped by stylists, these aspiring musicians with special needs had the red carpet rolled out for them and…
Children With Special Needs and Their Parents Applaud Chabad’s Friendship Circle
“A model for a Jewish People unified by shared goals and ideals,” is how Dr. Talya Fishman describes Friendship Circle of Chabad of the Delaware…
Michigan Friendship Circle Breaks Ground For New Facility
“We all grow up and have a dream that we will get married and have children. We just take it for granted that our children…
Newsletter
Donate
Find Your Local Chabad Center
Magazine