Sports, arts entice teens to Israel for JCC Maccabi Games

Soccer action at the 30th annual JCC Maccabi Games and Arts Fest being held in Israel. Photo: JCC Association

By Allison Kaplan Sommer, JTA

KIRYAT SHEMONA, Israel – It’s not easy getting American Jewish teenagers to Israel these days.

With Birthright Israel offering free trips to 18- to 26-year-olds, parents are wary of shelling out cash for their high school-aged children to visit the Jewish state when they know a freebie is right around the corner.

For the JCC Association of North America, it is an acute problem. Last summer, only 160 teenagers from JCCs, camps and other institutions came on trips organized by the association. This year, JCC Association officials were expecting 210.

But when the association decided to move its annual summertime American Jewish athletic competition to Israel for the first time, interest in going to Israel for the games soared – after the JCC Association secured assurances from Birthright that participating in the games would not make teenagers ineligible for Birthright trips.

Some 900 students from middle school and high school came to Israel for the 30th annual JCC Maccabi Games and ArtsFest, which runs through Aug. 5. They brought with them several hundred coaches and family members, as well as an “American Idol” finalist.

“For me to be able to stand here with my family in Israel and watch them stand with their teammates and sing ‘Hatikvah’ is an unbelievable experience – it is just giving me chills,” said Columbus, Ohio mother Joanne Williams, during the opening ceremonies.

For 15 years, Williams has traveled across the United States every summer to watch her children compete against teens from other JCCs at the annual games. The games are organized jointly by the JCC Association and the Maccabi World Union, which puts together Jewish sporting events the world over, including the so-called Jewish Olympics: the Maccabiah Games, which are held in Israel every four years.

If the JCC competition was coming to Israel, Williams decided, she and the rest of her family would come, too. She had never been to Israel before. The fact that the games were being held in a part of Israel that was besieged by rocket attacks five years ago, during the 2006 war with Hezbollah in Lebanon, did not deter Williams.

For organizers, putting the games in northern Israel was key. Israel is trying to boost investment and tourism in the North – far from where the vast majority of Israelis work and live – so the JCC Games were able to receive subsidies and support from four separate Israeli government ministries.

The 900 U.S. and Canadian teenagers came to compete in soccer, basketball, volleyball, table tennis and swimming. Delegations from South Africa and Israel also participated in the competitions.

The sporting events took place in six different villages in the northern Galilee near Kiryat Shemona. On Shabbat, the games organized home hospitality for the athletes, sending the teens to whichever city in Israel was the Jewish federation sister city of their hometowns.

Williams’ daughter Rachel, 15, a basketball player, spent a week before the games in Columbus’ sister community, Kfar Saba. The teens from her host Israeli family were invited to participate in the games together with several hundred other young Israelis.

Designed to foster Jewish identity through sports, the JCC Games began in 1982 with 300 participants. Today they take place in three host communities each summer and involve thousands of teens. Six years ago, the JCC Association decided to broaden its outreach to teens by adding an arts component to the games. The ArtsFest includes workshops in music, dance, broadcast journalism, photography, visual art and food.