Katie Vogel
Katie is a big-city social media consultant –
and an avid kite flyer, bicyclist, Shabbat host, vegan kosher cook, mikva
attendant, recreational statistician and Talmud student. She also happens to be
in charge of development and communications at Chicago Women's Health Center,
which provides health care and education to more than 6,000 Chicagoans
annually.
Katie’s commitment to living Jewish values is rivaled by
few, namely Miriam the Prophet, your rabbi and the Baal Shem Tov. She studies
at SVARA: A Traditionally Radical Yeshiva and is (deep breath) an American
Jewish World Service Global Justice Fellow, co-founder of the Chicago chapter of
Amplifier: The Jewish Giving Circle Movement, a member of Moishe House Without
Walls, a mikvah attendant at Anshe Shalom B’nai Israel and a future mentor for
JUF’s Diller Teen Fellows. At home, Katie hosts up to 15 people every
Shabbat and she’s shopping for a table that seats 20.
“Her love of
Judaism is infectious, and it informs and is enriched by her love of people and
the environment,” said Sari Steinberg, Katie’s colleague, friend and nominator.
“If I could retire and become Katie's assistant, it would be a privilege to
assist her in her countless (and ever-increasing) worthy pursuits!”
Age:
28
Primary gig:
Development & Communications Director at Chicago Women's Health Center
On the side:
I'm a strategic planning, social media, and
development consultant for small businesses and emerging non-profits, avid
bicycle tourist and kite flyer, and a student at SVARA: A Traditionally Radical
Yeshiva.
Relationship status:
I am married to my best friend, preferred
traveling companion, and the smartest and most compassionate guy I have ever
been privileged to know.
How do you give back?
I work for Chicago Women's
Health Center, where I connect our incredible community of supporters to the
work our amazing staff does to provide compassionate, collaborative, and
comprehensive health care and education to more than 6,000 Chicagoans
annually. Outside of work, my husband and I are passionate about
tzedakah and firmly believe that everyone can be a philanthropist. We
take hachnassat orchim (welcoming guests) very seriously, and typically
host five to15 people every week for Shabbat dinner or lunch. This year we
managed to squeeze 26 people into our apartment for first seder, and we hosted
a meal for at least five people every night of the holiday.
I'm also a mikvah attendant at Anshe Shalom B'nei Israel, which is perhaps the
single most powerful and meaningful volunteer project in which I have
participated during my short life. Additionally, I'm about to join an amazing
cohort of adults as a mentor for JUF's Diller Teen Fellows. For me, giving back
means building inclusive community, making Jewish life accessible, engaging,
and meaningful -- regardless of background or affiliation -- and providing a
warm and welcoming home where you can be a part of my family.
Describe yourself in 10 words or less:
Tiny Jewish blur/goes past on her bicycle/off to nourish friends
Celebrity doppelganger or Who would you play in a movie:
Stephanie Goldfarb. Ira Glass would narrate the movie. The
montage sequence would be nothing short of astonishing.
How do you Jew in Chicago?
Reb Zalman
calls it "Jewing," which I really like. This usually looks like davening with
independent minyanim, hosting oodles of Shabbat meals, learning Talmud at
SVARA, mikvah attending, learning with my incredible chevruta in West
Rogers Park, staffing the occasional Moishe House retreat, hosting people for
meals and holidays, supporting Jewish organizations and organizations that
support Jewish values, and helping to promote the work of American Jewish World
Service. I not-so-secretly aspire to be a professional Shadchan.
Passions:
Jewish life, bicycle touring, traveling off the beaten path,
feminism, small batch bourbon, Russian literature, challah and Middle Eastern
pastry recipes, vegetarian kosher cooking, mikvah, Asset Based Community
Development, geopolitics, statistical significance, learning languages, Israeli
history and politics, the Former Soviet Union, and last, but certainly not
least, learning Talmud.
If time and money were limitless, I would:
Move to Outer Mongolia and learn
throat singing. I'd give away the rest of the money, because once you're a
master throat singer, everything pretty much falls into place.
Chicago's Jewish community in 10 years:
The short answer is that it is going to be epic. In my crystal ball
I see a revitalized center of Jewish life in East Rogers Park, an
inter-generational, accessible, and knowledgeable Jewish community that spans
the socioeconomic and geographic depth and breadth of Chicago, and the
continued development of a Jewish community that is more inclusive, diverse,
and vibrant than anything we can currently imagine. Oooo, I also see an
organic, local kosher dairy making cheese that isn't disappointing due to
texture or taste. Stick around, Chicago Jews!
Me in 10 years:
My husband I will take
a year-long bicycle tour from Belarus to Beijing with, G-d willing, our posse
of kids. We will also have finally acquired a dining room and table that seats
20.