Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Met Council to deliver millions of pounds of food in NYC for High Holidays

“We’re delivering comfort, dignity and the reassurance that no one is forgotten,” David Greenfield, the council CEO, told JNS.

Met Council
Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine (right) helps package food donations ahead of the High Holiday season for the Met Council at a United Jewish Council of the East Side (UJCES) food pantry, September 2025. Credit: Courtesy of the Met Council.

The Met Council intends to deliver 1.4 million pounds of kosher food to more than 200,000 Jews throughout the New York City metropolitan area for the High Holidays this year.

“Every year brings its challenges, but this year has been tough for so many families,” David Greenfield, council CEO, told JNS. “That’s why our mission is clear. No one in our community should ever have to decide between paying the rent or putting food on the table, least of all during the holiest days of the Jewish calendar.”

Met Council
Met Council CEO David Greenfield (left) and Daniel Valentino, food pantry manager for the United Jewish Council of the East Side, package food donations ahead of the High Holiday season, September 2025. Credit: Courtesy of the Met Council.

“We’re not just handing out groceries,” he said. “We’re delivering comfort, dignity and the reassurance that no one is forgotten.”

The nonprofit plans to deliver the food—including pasta, rice, challah, tuna, canned fruits and vegetables and fresh produce—via more than 140 partners and with help from more than 800 volunteers, who will work with Met Council staff.

“When 200,000 Jewish New Yorkers can sit down to a proper holiday meal, when they feel seen, supported and embraced—that’s more than charity,” Greenfield said. “That’s community.”

“That’s what it means to stand together, to take care of one another and to live our values in the most tangible way possible,” he said.

Aaron Bandler is an award-winning national reporter at JNS based in Los Angeles. Originally from the San Francisco Bay Area, he worked for nearly eight years at the Jewish Journal, and before that, at the Daily Wire.
A small business owner in the Big Apple told JNS that she is being hurt by tariffs more than by the credit rating.
Jay Greene, author of a new report on the subject, told JNS that the unions communicate in an “overwrought and extreme” way about Israel.
“Why are we to trust the U.N.’s own vetting procedures?” Adam Kaplan, of USAID, asked a congressional committee.
The pro-Israel group “has become increasingly problematic for many American Jews and for many candidates running for office,” Lauren Strauss, of American University, told JNS.
Sharon Liberman Mintz, of Jewish Theological Seminary, told JNS that the 1526 Haggadah “is one of the most exciting books that I have ever had the pleasure to turn the pages of.”
Tehran combines a narrative of victory with one of victimhood to shape public opinion. Israel is trying to catch up in the battle for public perception.