Grants
Louis Herman
Memorial Fund
Not accepting applications at this time.
The Louis Herman Memorial Fund, a designated fund of the Minnesota Jewish Community Foundation, has been used to support a variety of organizations in the Jewish community. Areas of particular interest to the Fund include:
Promoting Judaism among children and youth
Day school education
Israel experience
Technology in schools
While the fund does not place a limit on the dollar amount requested, historically most grant recipients have received grants of $5,000 – $20,000.
Special consideration will be given to new and innovative projects. Grants will not generally be awarded for regular operating budgets.
Grant finalists will be invited to give a brief presentation to the Louis Herman Memorial Fund Advisory Committee yearly in June.
Click here to apply.
Mount Sinai
Community Foundation
Not accepting applications at this time.
The Mount Sinai Community Foundation (MSCF) funds one-time projects up to $10,000 that fulfill the MSCF’s mission to improve health, enhance well-being, or otherwise advance medical care for Minnesota residents. MSCF gives equal consideration to proposals that impact the Jewish and non-Jewish communities in Minnesota. MSCF is especially interested in proposals that provide innovative approaches for addressing health, well-being or medical care that might not be funded by other grant sources. MSCF also gives priority to identifiable, discrete projects that MSCF may fund alone or with other funding partners.
Through the generosity of the Frances & Samuel Finkelstein/Janice Finkelstein Mattison Memorial Fund, one of the grants funded will be in the area of cancer research and education. Organizations interested in securing the designated Memorial funds, should address the connection to cancer research and education in their application.
Click here for more information on MSCF and the grant application.
The Howard B. & Ruth F. Brin Jewish Arts Endowment Fund
Not accepting applications at this time.
The Howard B. and Ruth F. Brin Jewish Arts Endowment Fund is awarding Rimon: The Minnesota Jewish Arts Council a special three-year grant for its unique Artist Salon series. With a distinctive dialogue format, the Salons invite the public to meet artists explaining what inspires them and how they create their art. Rimon produces its Salon series for Jewish artists in an array of venues throughout the Twin Cities, each uniquely suited to its subject. The Brin Endowment’s funding will enable Rimon to commission new works of art specifically for one of the Salons in each of the three years.
This new grant to Rimon changes the nature of the 30 year-old Brin Endowment which previously had solicited annual applications. The Brin Endowment has awarded more than $150,000 to nearly 130 projects in support of Jewish arts in music, dance, theater, puppetry, literature, visual arts, photography and film.
The Brin Endowment Fund was established in memory of the prominent Minneapolis couple Howard B. Brin and Ruth F. Brin. They believed that the arts are an essential way to enhance Jewish identity. Recognizing the challenges to artists and communities to foster and to support Jewish creativity, their family set up the Brin Endowment. The Brin Endowment endorses and now supports the Rimon Artist Salon commissions to individual artists.
Howard B. Brin (b.1919- d.1988), helped establish the Minneapolis Jewish Community Center in 1967 and was its president; he was also a noted collector of Jewish coins, amateur archeologist who participated in the first famous Masada excavation, and businessman. Ruth F. Brin (b.1921- d.2009) was nationally recognized for her 13 published books including children’s books, a memoir, a novel and poetry. Her pioneering liturgical poetry can be found in the Reform, Conservative and Reconstructionist prayer books.
The Howard B. and Ruth F. Brin Jewish Arts Endowment is a designated fund of the Minnesota Jewish Community Foundation. For further information contact Jenifer Robins, at jrobins@jewishminneapolis.org or rimon@bfcampus.org.
The Toodie and Frank Trestman Collaborative Education and Special Needs Fund
Not accepting applications at this time.
The Toodie and Frank Trestman Collaborative Education and Special Needs Fund supports local efforts in two areas:
Collaborative education: formal and informal Jewish education programs that involve collaboration between two or more organizations
Special needs: increasing the ability of children and adults with special needs to participate in Jewish life and receive a Jewish education.
The Fund was created through generous donations from our community to the Federation Community Capital Campaign, chaired by Toodie and Frank Trestman. Income derived from investments in designated endowment funds such as this one, help support Federation’s mission to build community, care for the welfare of Jews everywhere and maximize participation in Jewish life. The Fund makes grants in the following focus areas:
Collaborative Education – support for formal and informal Jewish education programs that involve collaboration between two or more organizations, primarily (but not exclusively) in three programmatic areas:
Family education;
Teen programs; and
Professional development
Special Needs – subsidies and other support for the education of children and adults with special needs and their participation in all aspects of Jewish community life. This includes the removal of barriers of attitude, communication, physical accessibility and affordability, the provision of other support to enable people with disabilities to participate in Jewish education (both formal and informal), recreation, and social activities.
Grant-making Guidelines
The target audience of any project or programming must be local.
Grants may be awarded from the Fund to support both new and existing programs and/or subsidize tuition or a voucher system.
The Fund’s advisory committee will consider multi-year funding requests to support innovative programming that will impact a large segment of our community with special needs and/or programming in the arena of collaborative education.
Preference is given to requests that:
Are programmatic in nature
Assist those in the lowest income brackets
Have a track record of proven quality
Have a wide reach of impact on the community
Requests will NOT be considered to fund education programming for individuals with special needs otherwise funded by the Minneapolis Jewish Federation through unrestricted funds or from the special education funding pool or for requests where funding is available through government, either federal, state or local, sources.
Women’s Endowment Fund
Not accepting applications at this time.
The Women’s Endowment Fund provides grants up to $10,000 to Jewish organizations for programs or services that enhance the lives of Jewish women and children by supporting programs in the areas of education, civic, culture, health or social services. Priority for grants will be given to organizations in Minnesota.