Genesis Prize Foundation announces matching grants competition to promote gender equality

JTA

(JTA) — The Genesis Prize Foundation has launched a matching grants competition aimed at promoting gender equality in the North American Jewish community.

The Genesis Prize Women’s Empowerment Challenge was announced on Wednesday morning by the Foundation.

The money for the challenge comes from the $1 million Genesis Prize for 2018 awarded to American-Israeli actress Natalie Portman. When the prize was announced in December, Portman said that the funds would go toward advancing women’s equality in the United States and Israel. In April, the actress announced that she would not travel to Israel for the award ceremony, which was then cancelled, because she did not want to be seen as endorsing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who was a scheduled speaker at the ceremony.

The Genesis Foundation later decided that the prize money and an additional $1 million matching grant by Israeli philanthropist Morris Kahn would still be distributed to women’s empowerment programs, but through the foundation.

“The Genesis Prize competition has already generated a great deal of interest in Israel, and we are excited to be expanding our close philanthropic partnership to advocate for the empowerment of women in Jewish communities in the United States and Canada,” said Dafna Jackson, CEO of the Kahn Foundation.

In May, the Genesis Prize Foundation announced a competition to distribute $1 million in grants to women’s organizations in Israel. More than 200 applications from Israeli NGOs were received and the grantees are set to be announced in September 2018, according to the foundation.

The Genesis Prize matching grants initiative will  fund programs in the areas of: prevention of gender-based discrimination, harassment and assault in Jewish community workplaces and communal spaces; development of gender sensitivity and inclusivity educational and training programs in Jewish communal organizations;  encouraging and supporting opportunities for Jewish girls and women to engage in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) education and career; and  conducting research on salaries for men and women working in the Jewish community.

The grant competition will be administered by the Jewish Funders Network.

Jewish non-profit organizations seeking to promote gender equality in the United States and Canada can submit proposals before November 16. Organizations interested in applying for funding can do so at http://genesis-prize-womens-empowerment-match.org/.