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AEPi

This milestone “is a testament to the strength and dedication of young Jewish leaders committed to ensuring a vibrant Jewish future,” said the founder of The Jewish Youth Promise.
They are against students who were involved in two incidents against the Jewish fraternity AEPi.
“It’s just a violence I’ve never seen before,” Andy Borans told JNS.
The 110-year-old fraternity serves as a place where the common language of values are stressed and shared … with some good-old-fashioned Yiddishkeit thrown in.
According to Rutgers Hillel, “eggs were discovered to have been thrown at the house while brothers were reading the names of Holocaust victims overnight in commemoration of Yom Hashoah.”
Jim Fleischer, CEO of AEPi, called the results “staggering and alarming,” saying that more needs to be done to “not only push back against the rise of anti-Semitism on campuses.”
AEPi in San Luis Obispo, Calif., reported that the vandalism consisted of swastikas and anti-Semitic slurs scrawled during Shabbat.
Anyone can give—young or old, with large or small dollar amounts. The organization has already partnered with Alpha Epsilon Pi (AEPi).
“It is not just sharing money, but wisdom, values and life lessons,” said Amy Holtz.
Immediate access to lifesaving protective personal gear like masks, gloves and gowns is the best defense against the pandemic for both workers and the people they serve.
Equiping a cadre of students with debating tools, historical information, legal support, trips to Israel and more, so that Israel has a place on the university playing fields.
AEPi, with the help of Synagogue Connect, built an online database that allows college students to search for congregations within a radius of a location of their choice.