We’re Very Busy

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We’re very busy. It’s a phrase I keep saying when people ask what’s going on. How do I answer that question concisely?

Do I say every single day, we are dealing with another incident of antisemitism? Like when Hillel of San Diego at CSUSM was being honored by the County Supervisors and while I was talking about how Hillel provides a safe space for students, someone in the audience decided to shout “Free Palestine”– as if caring for Jewish students had anything to do with it.

Or do I say, we put together a beautiful on-campus Empty Shabbat Table to honor the hostages and bring awareness to UCSD. Do I share it was Hillel staff that organized the effort– including renting a U-Haul and schlepping tables to campus? Or that Chancellor Khosla came to support Jewish students?

Do I share about our coordination for Bassem Eid to speak at both UCSD and SDSU?

Do I talk about the anti-Israel teach-ins at USD and our work with the administration there to protect Jewish students and ensure they feel supported?

Do I say that we are staying with students all day and all night, on the phone, while they cry– editing their speeches for student government– providing them with the coaching and mentoring to center their voices and their leadership on campus?

Do I talk about convening professors to work in partnership and leveraging diverse spheres of influence? Or do I talk about our weekly meetings with university administrators to push again and again for our Jewish students? That we are tracking as many antisemitic incidents as possible and holding our universities accountable to act?

Do I talk about the work we are doing in collaboration with other Jewish organizations and synagogues?

Or do I share the JOY I see when our students are hanging out at the Melvin Garb Hillel Center or Glickman Hillel Center? They are making sugar cookies and watching silly movies, sharing a Shabbat meal, or now– lighting the Chanukiah together before going back to studying for finals.

Or do I talk about taking students to coffee, lunch, frozen yogurt- whatever they need whenever they need it?

know I could be updating the community about all the work that is happening to improve our campus climates more. I know I should be sharing more that the good work you are investing in when you give to Hillel is directly fueling what our students want and need. Gifts to Hillel are a way to give directly to students.

know I should be screaming from the rooftops that I am so beyond proud to work for an organization that centers students and empowers them to lead through everything we do.

But I don’t share it enough because… well, we’re very busy.

Thank you for being in it with us, with our students. It matters and makes a difference. Happy Hanukkah– may it be filled with so much light… And hopefully some peace!

Other Stories From Hillel

Incident at Hillel of San Diego Today

January 6, 2026

Hope you are having a great start to your 2026. At Hillel of San Diego, our highest priority is, and will always be, the safety of Jewish students.

Over the past few months, an individual repeatedly harassed Hillel San Diego, prompting us to obtain a restraining order. Today, that individual attempted to break into our Melvin Garb Hillel Center and left an unidentified package.

You Made it Possible. Now We Must Sustain it.

December 21, 2025

Over the past five years, and especially since October 7th, this community has shown up in extraordinary ways. Your leadership made it possible for Hillel of San Diego to respond immediately and decisively in moments of crisis, expanding support, strengthening safety, and meeting students in their most vulnerable moments. Thank G-d you did. Because of you, students know exactly where to turn — and they know they will not be turned away.

Why Hillel of San Diego Matters Right Now

December 19, 2025

As we enter the final days of Hillel of San Diego’s year-end efforts to raise $500,000 by December 31, our family is proud to stand with this community and publicly join this effort to strengthen Jewish life on San Diego’s campuses. We do so while holding two truths at once. We are celebrating the light and resilience of Hanukkah, even as we grieve the tragedies and violence that have shaken Jewish communities in recent days. Joy and heartbreak coexist. For Jewish students, that tension is not abstract but rather something they are navigating every day on campus

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