To help ensure the continuity of a strong and vibrant Jewish community in Dallas, Israel, and throughout the world.

Our Mission

The Federation is the central coordinating fundraising agency for the Dallas Jewish community. It is the one place where philanthropy, volunteerism and shared commitment come together to make a difference in the community and the world. From hometown to homeland, Federation brings life-saving and life-sustaining care to Jews in need in Dallas and overseas.

Helping another human being become self-sufficient, according to Maimonides, is the most elevated form of charity. Through its vast network of services, programs and special campaigns, Federation helps millions of people…impenetrable barriers have been broken down and the impossible accomplished through the necessary energy of many people and resources.

By addressing Jewish affiliation and identity through education and programs about heritage and religion, Federation maintains Jewish community and fosters Jewish continuity for children, teens and adults.

With funds raised each year through community events, phone-a-thons, outreach campaigns, mailings and personal Jewish conversations, a network of 64 organizations and initiatives devoted to helping Jews enhance or rebuild their lives in Dallas and around the world is supported by Federation.

Our Shared History

OUR FOUNDING

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Imagine that we are back on October 7, 1911, the day we officially incorporated as Federated Hebrew Charities. Jews helping Jews was not something new in Dallas, even then; this had actually started well before the turn of the 20th century, with a number of various benevolent societies. But now, these various entities became one, under Godcheaux Levi’s presidency, uniting to take on the immediate work of settling Jews who were coming to America through the Port of Galveston.

BOOM TOWN

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Our purpose was to "shelter the homeless, feed the hungry, render assistance of a charitable nature to relieve suffering humanity.” The general population of Dallas was less than 150,000 then with Jews numbering around 7,000.  South Dallas was the place to be. Families with businesses in Deep Ellum often lived near or upstairs of them, and many newcomers from Russia and Eastern Europe settled north of the old downtown, in neighborhoods called Goose Valley, Frogtown, and Little Jerusalem.

THERE FOR GOOD

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Answering 477 local requests for aid, one-third of them Russian immigrants.  We welcomed Jews fleeing Europe before WWII, those seeking new homes post-Holocaust, and those from Cuba, South Africa, Israel and more. We provided food and shelter, assessed and met health needs, taught English, and brought them into our communities. In 1923, we re-named ourselves the Federation of Jewish Social Services and became the central fundraiser for all Jewish organizations locally and regionally.

THE MORE, THE MERRIER

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We belong to the Jewish Federations of North America, together serving the entire Jewish world, and have done so since 1932, when our Federation authorized the first local United Jewish Appeal campaign to help Jews suffering overseas.

The local social service bureau within the Federation was expanding its work. In 1942, it became Jewish Family Service (JFS), with Bernard Goldstein as director, assisted by a staff consisting of a single social worker. Four decades later, in 1983, JFS came into organizational “adulthood” when it incorporated on its own, as a Federation partner agency.

STATING OUR SUPPORT

In 1948, Temple Emanu-El’s Rabbi David Lefkowitz spoke out strongly for the needs of the new State of Israel, and we’ve never failed since to help her. Our first official Israel Mission was in 1961, then we raised more than $3 million in our 1967 Six Day War drive, and more than $7 million in 1973, when Golda Meir came here to garner support for the Yom Kippur War drive. In 2006, our support of the Lebanon emergency campaign sent almost $2.5 million more to Israel.

SPREADING OUR IMPACT

We also helped Operation Moses move some 15,000 Jews from Ethiopia to Israel in 1985, and six years later supported Operation Solomon as it rescued the many Ethiopian Jews still stranded in the Sudan. Our Soviet efforts peaked with the Operation Exodus special campaign that began in 1990, and in three years raised $5.5 million to help resettle thousands of Jews in Israel, across the United States, and locally. We’ve benefited immeasurably from the many who have come to live here! More recently, we earmarked $142,000 to aid victims of Hurricane Katrina, and resettled some of them in the Dallas area.

MEETING OUR COUNTERPARTS

In 1998, we began our Federation Partnership With Israel, now known as Partnership 2Gether, in an effort to improve life for residents of the Western Galilee. Since 2006, we’ve also been impacting Jewish lives in Budapest and the FSU through our current partnerships with the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) and the Jewish Agency for Israel.

FUTURE FOCUSED

In 1976, we took the name that is ours today, The Jewish Federation of Greater Dallas. This title reflects our continuing growth as we are no longer simply a charity organization. We’re an enabler of better living, an incubator of new ideas and initiatives, an engager of leadership development and Jewish education, and an advocate for interfaith/interethnic relationships.

Our 1988 demographic survey showed 45,000 Jews in the area we serve. Since then, the number has grown to 70,000. We’ve continued to research our community’s needs, and develop and deliver the programs that answer them.

We are fulfilling the dream of our long-ago Federation visionaries who first declared, “We offer social, philanthropic, and educational activities to improve the health, happiness, and economic efficiency of all area Jews. We centralize fundraising for philanthropic purposes. We determine the Jewish institutions entitled to community support, and make contributions to them.”

Our current name recognized the Jewish population growth and accompanying needs in Far North Dallas, Collin, Denton and Dallas counties, and with that recognition, we began to raise funds in those areas. Our Annual Campaign hit $10 million for the first time in 2006, and even in the down economic year preceding our 100th anniversary, we raised more than $10 million to fund our many programs. In 2014, we raised $10,525,00, the largest increase in three years. View our current numbers.

Financial Transparency

Jewish Federation of Greater Dallas strives to be completely transparent in our financial reporting to donors and constituents.

Our impact brochure showing sources and uses from our most recently completed campaign, audited financial reports, and links to our most recent Form 990s are available to download.

990 TAX FORMS





AUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS