inside jewish

argentina

for college students

may 27  – june 2, 2019

Join college students from across the U.S. to experience the magic of Buenos Aires, Argentina. Engage with the rich cultures, powerful history and inspiring Jewish leaders that make up this unique South American Jewish community.

trip
highlights

FAQ
  • Dance tango, learn how to make empanadas and enjoy traditional asado (BBQ)!
  • Engage with young Jewish adults through a visit to Moishe House Montevideo and LAZOS in Buenos Aires.
  • Experience Buenos Aires’ famous sites – Plaza de Mayo, Recoleta Cemetery – and trendy neighborhoods such as Palermo, La Boca, and San Telmo.
  • Learn about JDC’s critical interventions during the 2001 economic crisis in the areas of medical and welfare assistance, jobs training and elder care.
  • Meet residents of LeDor Vador, a state-of-the-art Old Age Home, established through JDC in partnership with local institutions.

“It isn’t how much time you spend somewhere that makes it memorable: it’s how you spend the time.”

– David Brenner

PARTICIPATION FEE

$900 USD*

(This trip has been highly subsidized in order to provide greater access and
opportunity. Average actual cost of an Entwine Insider Trip is estimated at $4,500/person
)

INCLUDES:

Local transportation within Argentina

Meals

Hotel accommodations

Site visits, briefings, tours, etc.

Medical and emergency evacuation insurance.

*Please note that your participation fee does not include international airfare to/from South America

Trip Dates

May 27 – June 2, 2019

(GROUND DATES ONLY, does not include international flight)

Application Deadline

March 29, 2019

About JDC in Argentina

Argentina is home to Latin America’s largest Jewish population, the 7th largest in the world. A prosperous community for most of its history, which dates back to the Spanish and Portuguese inquisitions, Argentina’s Jews were devastated by the 2001 economic crisis that turned middle-class families into “the new poor” virtually overnight. JDC responded immediately and efficiently to the Jewish community’s sizeable needs, leveraging decades-long partnerships to expand existing relief services to aid those hardest-hit by the crisis. More than 10 years later, with the local Jewish institutions’ overall health largely restored, JDC has resumed its historic role in Argentina as a community-development expert.

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