EVENTS
Celebrate Jewish culture year round at concerts, screenings, art shows, and more.
YIDDISH SOCIAL JUSTICEARTS & LITERATURE FUNDRAISERS FAMILY EDUCATION ONLINE EVENTS IN-PERSON EVENTS COLLEGE NETWORK
Pssst… did you know we offer special member rates for some of our events?
The Manhattan Workers Circle School Open House
The Manhattan Workers Circle School helps children develop Jewish identities as part of a welcoming, diverse community that comes together to explore Yiddish language, culture, and activism through interactive, experiential learning. Join us at an Open House on Sunday, June 9, 2024.
Brooklyn Workers Circle School Open House
The Brooklyn Workers Circle School helps our children develop Jewish identities as part of a welcoming, diverse community that comes together to explore Yiddish language, culture, and activism through interactive, experiential learning.
Manhattan Workers Circle School Open House
The Manhattan Workers Circle School helps our children develop Jewish identities as part of a welcoming, diverse community that comes together to explore Yiddish language, culture and activism through interactive, experiential learning.
The History of Yiddish Theater in Four Illustrated Presentations with Motl Didner
This Yiddish language series explore explore the history of Yiddish theater with presentations on the Purim Shpiel, Yiddish Theater: From Goldfaden through the Present, the Jews That Made Broadway, and the Making of Fiddler Afn Dakh.
KinderKlub: Matzapalooza™
In this free 90-minute holiday celebration, Workers Circle School teachers will share timeless traditions and help your family create fun, new rituals
KinderKlub Yiddish
Join The Workers Circle for KinderKlub, a hands-on, interactive online Yiddish language class for kids aged 8-12.
Civil Rights Journey to Birmingham: The Children's March of 1963
Join us on a virtual journey to Birmingham with Janice Wesley Kelsey, and learn firsthand about how young people braved fire hoses and police dogs in what has been called “the chief watershed of the nonviolent movement in the United States.”