A Day at Camp

Last week, I got an e-mail from a Jewish Women's Archive member, which was, in part, an ode to Sara Blum, the founding director of Camp Navarac in the Adirondack Mountains. And, since it's July and since I spent last weekend with my band of camp friends, I'd be remiss if I didn't write a little bit about summer camp.

Camping has a long history for American Jews. An American Jewess article from July 1895 worries about the idleness of all the children in Chicago who didn't get to go out to the countryside during the summer, and according to the Forward, "the first known Jewish camp was, of all things, a girl's camp, founded in 1893 by the Jewish Working Girls Vacation Society, located in New York." The camps established in the late 19th and early 20th centuries aimed at getting children out of their hot, crowded, inner-city, immigrants neighborhoods and helping to Americanize them. Around mid-century, camping took a turn towards being a place for young Jews to develop a positive cultural identity - to get their Jewishness to "stick." Today, hundreds of North American camps serve more than 60,000 kids per year.

Camp nostalgia abounds. Meatballs (1979) and Wet Hot American Summer (2001) satirize the highs and lows of a day at camp; this spring, the authors of Bar Mitzvah Disco put out Camp Camp, a volume of kitchy pictures and essays about the Jewish summer camp experience; some of the Camp Navarac girls from the 1950s and 1960s remembered Sara Blum's annual reading of The Little Engine that Could throughout their long careers.

But camp is not such a great place for everyone, girls especially. Elisa Albert, the author of The Book of Dahlia, has likened Jewish summer camps to The Lord of the Flies, and columnist Marjorie Ingall remembers worrying whether or not she'd have a boyfriend, and how she would deal with the mean girls before she packed off every summer. I remember watching, both as a camper and a counselor, as the pressures of camp life - desired or failed romance, skimpy tank tops, and freedom from parents' watching eyes - led many girls in my bunk down the road towards eating disorders. Maybe the rule keeping me out of the boys' bunks shielded me from similar problems in their male world, but somehow I don't think so. The intensity of a life populated solely by adolescents has the potential to heighten not just the joy of girls' friendships (which is camp's greatest strength), but also the insecurities that being a teenager brings.

Leaders of the American Jewish camping movement hope to enroll 150,000 kids in Jewish summer camps in the next five years. I hope they'll be led by someone like Sara Blum, about whom our member wrote:

"She taught all of us - at the all-girls' camp - that we could be individuals, leader, and to follow our hearts. I have a friend (I was a counselor at Navarac when she was a camper) who lives near me. When we get together, we always com back to talking about Navarac and what an incredible teaching (and fun) experience it was and how it made many of us the resourceful, independent, self-sufficient women we became as grown-ups."

Topics: Summer Camps
4 Comments
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

A little late for the summer of 2008 but the camp is now Young Life's Saranac Village. It is a gorgeous place, beautifully maintained, which has an excellent camping program. Certainly in the spirit of Mrs. Blum.

This story, which virtually every Navarac camper can recite by heart, complete with the hand motions and inflections that Sara used, pops up in all sorts of places.

Look where I found it today: http://my.barackobama.com/page...

Yes, he can!

i have wonderful memories of my time at camp navarac. we are heading up to the saranac lake area today and i would love to go back and visit the camp itself. does anyone know the address and what it has become? thanks

Navarac spells Caravan backwards. Perhaps one of the purposes of camp is to take us on a journey away from what it familiar so we can see who else we can be when we're in a new environment. That was certainly true for me when I went to camp in the 60's as a child and in the 90's as an adult staff member.

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

Donate

Help us elevate the voices of Jewish women.

donate now

Listen to Our Podcast

Get JWA in your inbox

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

How to cite this page

Rabinoff-Goldman, Lily. "A Day at Camp." 15 July 2008. Jewish Women's Archive. (Viewed on November 21, 2024) <https://jwa.org/blog/summer-camp>.