Read Now: Ellia’s Story and Night Shuk

Student-Quote-Ellia

Today is Day 4 of Hillel Global Giving Week!

Jewish pride. Student leadership. Resilience. That’s what your gift to Hillel of San Diego makes possible — and right now, your support WILL BE DOUBLED! Thanks to a combined $55,000 in Hillel Global Giving Week challenge grants, you can help students strengthen their Jewish identity and lead the way in making campus more welcoming and more inclusive for Jewish students.

Just ask Ellia, a student at UC San Diego.

 When October 7th, 2023, happened. And everything changed.

The campus climate turned hostile overnight. I knew I couldn’t stay silent. Hillel gave me a platform through Tritons for Israel. I joined and became super active. I spoke at student government meetings and wrote three articles—two were published in our campus paper and one in The San Diego Union-Tribune. Hillel made that possible.

Because of donors like you, Ellia didn’t just find her voice- she amplified it. In February, she and her co-presidents of Tritons for Israel joined Hillel student leaders across San Diego for a leadership retreat. Together, they dreamed BIG and are making it real.

That dream became this year’s Peace in Israel Week at UCSD: a campus-wide initiative with world-renowned speakers like Yohay Sponder and Yossi Klein Halevi, a vibrant Jewish night market, and daily programs to educate, connect, and inspire their UCSD student community.

We’re doing so much more this year—more education, a commemorative mural for Nova, a DJ, and outreach to other student clubs who may have missed the opportunity to join us last year. We’re building something joyful, inclusive, and proud.

I think this is going to be the best Peace in Israel Week yet!

Ellia’s story doesn’t stop there.

At Hillel’s February Leadership Retreat, Ellia learned about herself as a leader. That experience inspired her to take the initiative and launch a new Persian Jewish club on campus—a space she wished she had found earlier.

There was always this divide—spaces where I was Persian but experienced antisemitism, and Jewish spaces that felt too Ashkenazi. I wanted a home for both identities. Now we have 40 members and just celebrated a Persian holiday with a picnic in the park!

For Ellia, Hillel isn’t just about programs; it’s where she goes for that Jewish home away from home experience.

I’ve studied for class at the Glickman Hillel Center—and recently for the MCAT. During that stressful process, the staff cheered me on, fed me, and celebrated with me afterward.

P.S. Your pledge will count during Hillel Global Giving Week! Pledge now and send your gift later via your donor-advised fund, IRA account, or gift of stock. To learn more, reply to this email or contact me at lkalal@hillelsd.org or 619-764-5992. 

Other Stories From Hillel

Hey, it’s up to YOU

January 29, 2024

Last night at the Welcome Back BBQ, students planted their legacy tree in the backyard to memorialize those lost on October 7th and in the war. SDSU President Adela de la Torre was in attendance and spoke about how students were able to show up as leaders and leave a lasting legacy on their community through Hillel.

Supporting Students and Learning Together in 2024

January 12, 2024

Welcome to 2024! As we launch into the second half of our year, we continue to be hyper-focused on supporting students. This is done through a multitude of strategies.

First and foremost, we focus on imbuing pride in being Jewish. That looks like joyful shabbats, social bonfires, opportunities for lots of laughing…and lots of good food. Programs of joy are possible BECAUSE you support Hillel. Your generosity funds their joy.

What will Hillel look like in 2024?

December 28, 2023

“Dos pintele yid, ‘that little point of a Jew,’ refers to that spark of Jewishness in each of us that we can’t quite manage to ignore, no matter how hard we may try,” writes Sarah Hurwitz.

Dos pintele yid has been on our minds at Hillel every day, especially now. Our organization has radically expanded after October 7th. This is not a crisis. This is the new normal, and what it means to be Jewish on campus has also changed.

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