A rare treat - spending a day at Isabella Freedman

FALLS VILLAGE — It’s one of those out-of-the-way places that not too many locals know a lot about. To remedy that, the former Camp Isabella Freedman, which has been in Falls Village for more than 50 years, will open its doors to the public with a community day on Sunday, July 22.

“Many of us who work at Isabella Freedman plan to live in Falls Village for a very long time and we want to have a close relationship with the town,� said Adam Berman, executive director of what is now called the Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center.

The community day will have a barbecue supper, live music from a variety of performers and rides on the Falls Village Volunteer Fire Department’s antique fire engine.

“We want to be a resource for the community,� Berman added. “We are two communities that should feel like one.�

Over the last century, the camp has served just about every age group imaginable.

The facility opened its doors in 1893 on donated land in Port Chester, N.Y., as the Jewish Working Girls Vacation Society. It provided an affordable vacation for young Jewish women (primarily immigrants) working in Manhattan’s garment district. The society paid for the vacations and compensated campers for lost wages.

In the 1940s the camp began to offer getaways to young adults, including ex-GIs and students who could not otherwise afford a vacation. It was not until 1956 that the camp moved to its current 380-acre campus on Johnson Road in Falls Village. At that time, the board decided to develop programs for Jewish seniors. The camp’s name, Isabella Freedman, honored a generous donor.

Then in 1994, the Teva Learning Center opened there. That program serves elementary school children with an emphasis on Jewish spirituality and environmental activism.

In 2003, Isabella Freedman developed a new program called ADAMAH: The Jewish Environmental Fellowship, a three-month leadership training program for young Jewish  adults that teaches the connection between Judaism and environmental stewardship.

Isabella Freedman now has its own organic farm, and, says ADAMAH program director Shamu Sadeh, “Farming is an important part of what we do at Isabella Freedman and we have developed close working relationships with several nearby farmers.�

Those farmers include Dan and Tracy Hayhurst of Chubby Bunny Farm (which runs on the Community Supported Agriculture model) and Allen and Robin Cockerline, owners of Salisbury’s Whipporwill Farm, which counts grass-fed beef among its products.

“Our interest in farming and the environment is a common interest that has created a bond with many local residents,� Sadeh explained.

The day will include games for children, swimming, boating and tours of the organic farm. The event begins at 2 p.m. and ends at 6 p.m.

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