Our professional staff work collaboratively from offices in New York City and Jerusalem. Contact us.
Becky Voorwinde
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Executive Officer
Rebecca Voorwinde is CEO of The Bronfman Fellowship. An alumna of the program, Becky served as a volunteer member of Bronfman’s Alumni Advisory Board before taking the full-time position of Director of Alumni Engagement in 2008. Becky’s professional experience includes work in the Corporate Responsibility Group at Ernst & Young LLP, where she led the roll-out of an employee volunteer program focused on increasing access to higher education for disadvantaged students, implemented a greening and socially conscious element into all of Ernst & Young’s meetings and conferences, and created a social enterprise track at the company’s annual Entrepreneur of the Year Awards. Previously she worked at a non-profit human resources consultancy, Diversity @ Work in Melbourne Australia. Becky graduated Summa Cum Laude from Barnard College with a B.A. in American Studies. She holds a Certificate in Jewish Executive Leadership from Columbia Business School and UJA-NY. Becky serves on the board of M2: The Institute for Experiential Jewish Education and the Board of Advisors for Assembly. Becky resides in Brooklyn with her husband Michael and their three children. She can be reached at becky@bronfman.org.
Daphna Yizrael
Director, Amitei Bronfman
Director, Amitei Bronfman
Daphna has been active for many years in the fields of pluralistic Judaism, community development, and young adult communities. She has held managerial and educational positions at the Mandel Leadership Institute, Beit Tefilah Israeli, and the Zalman Shazar Center, and served as a community emissary in the MetroWest community of New Jersey. Daphna holds a degree in Jewish Philosophy and Political Science from Tel Aviv University (Cum Laude), and is completing her thesis research at the Sociology and Anthropology Department at Bar Ilan University on mentoring. She graduated from the Hartman Institute’s Beit Midrash for outstanding students in Jewish Studies, and completed the programs in Cultural Institution Management and Career Development Counseling at Tel Aviv University.
Dapha has also volunteered as the Chair of the Alumni Organizations Forum in Israel and served on the Board of Directors. She has edited the book Georgia – Journey to Jewish Heritage, published by The Zalman Shazar Center; and co-edited a book with Dr. Daniel Marom on Hebrew culture for early childhood education, published by The Mandel Leadership Institute.
Heather Santelli
Director of Finance
Director of Finance
Heather is the Director of Finance for the organization. She manages all financial operations both in the US and Israel and has been with The Fellowship since 2001. She holds degrees in both Accounting and Hotel and Restaurant Management and is a Notary Public licensed in New York State. Outside of Bronfman, Heather assists various local small businesses with freelance bookkeeping help in the upstate NY area where she resides with her husband Tom. Her hobbies include kayaking, reading, gardening and herbology.
Erica Goldman
Deputy CEO
Deputy CEO
Erica Goldman has been an engineering linguist, a high school English teacher, and has taught Israeli dancing on five continents (so far!). In 2011, Erica joined the Global Jewish Education department at New Community Jewish (now deToledo) High School in Los Angeles and helped coordinate and implement both their three-week and three-month exchange programs with Tel Aviv high schools. In 2015, she became an Educator for the Foundation for Jewish Camp’s Cornerstone Fellowship and launched Ma’agal, an initiative to improve Israeli dance education at schools and camps across the nation.
A two-time Brandeis University graduate, Erica holds an MBA as well as a Masters in Jewish Professional Leadership and is a grateful Wexner Fellow/Davidson Scholar. Before joining Bronfman, Erica was the Chief Program Officer at JPro, an organization dedicated to supporting all those who work for Jewish organizations across the US and Canada. Erica lives in Brooklyn NY and loves taking really, really long walks.
Laura Liebman
Director of Development
Director of Development
As a 1988 alumna of The Bronfman Fellowship. Laura has been deeply involved with the program over the course of her professional and personal journey. She knows firsthand the transformative power of the Fellowship experience and the unique contributions of this community.
Laura is a passionate and dynamic advancement leader with experience in philanthropy, community relations, management, and communications. Trained as a lawyer, for more than fifteen years Laura has worked with non-profits, higher education institutions, and health care systems to achieve transformative growth and fulfill their missions.
For nearly a decade as the Director of Development and Institutional Advancement for the Bard Prison Initiative and then in a number of consulting roles since, Laura led community engagement; annual fund, major gifts and stewardship; corporate and foundation relations; and strategic planning and capacity building. By working closely with executive leadership and boards to determine priorities and strategy, Laura has cultivated meaningful, long-term collaborations with individual, foundation, and corporate donors.
Laura has a BA (Summa Cum Laude) and MA degree from Brandeis University and earned her JD at the Northwestern School of Law at Lewis and Clark College. She is a Board member of the Jewish Federation of Dutchess County and a member of the Anti-Semitism Workgroup for the Dutchess County Human Rights Commission. Laura lives in Rhinebeck, NY with her family.
Evan Parks
Director of Education; Educator 2019, 2021 & 2023-24
Director of Education; Educator 2019, 2021 & 2023-24
Dr. Evan Parks is the Director of Education for The Bronfman Fellowship. Evan’s research treats modern European literature and culture, especially the entanglement of German and Jewish intellectual traditions. He is also interested in correspondences between Jewish diaspora writers and Hebrew literature. Evan is a Visiting Scholar at NYU’s Center for the Humanities, and is currently completing a book that explores tensions between the post-Shoah poet Paul Celan and his philosophical readers, especially Hans-Georg Gadamer, Theodor W. Adorno, and Jacques Derrida.
As an educator, Evan is interested in the intersection of liberal education and Jewish learning. He taught at Columbia University’s Department of Germanic Languages and Core Curriculum, where he was a finalist for the University’s highest teaching honor, the Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching. Evan served as Faculty for the Bronfman Fellowship for four years (2019, 2021, 2023, and 2024).
Evan received his Ph.D. in German and Comparative Literature from Columbia University and holds a B.A. in European Cultural Studies from Brandeis University. He was a 2020-21 Fellow with the Leo Baeck Institute London. Originally from Atlanta, Georgia, Evan was a Bronfman Fellow in 2005. He lives in Manhattan with his partner Eliana and daughter Selah.
Sophia Adler Varon
Manager of Strategic Initiatives
Manager of Strategic Initiatives
Sophia is a New York native currently living in South Baltimore, where she creates vibrant Jewish community through the Moishe Pod she co-founded with her partner. Before joining the Bronfman team, Sophia served as the Assistant Director of 4Front, a platform dedicated to empowering and amplifying the voices of Baltimore’s Jewish teens. There, she developed programs for adult engagement, aimed at encouraging whole-family participation and promoting development for youth engagement professionals. She also led the expansion of 4Front’s Gesher Teen Board Members program, placing young leaders on the boards of Jewish non-profits.
Prior to this, Sophia was the Program Director of the Diller Teen Fellowship at the JCC of Greater Boston, where she guided cohorts of teens through experiences that fostered Jewish identity, leadership, and social impact. Passionate about growth and exploration, Sophia enjoys staying active, exploring nature, and experimenting with new artistic forms. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Psychology and is pursuing a Master’s in Business Administration.
Sari Setton
Program Coordinator
Program Coordinator
Sari is a not-for-profit professional with twenty-two years of experience in a variety of roles at the Sephardic Community Center before joining the Bronfman Fellowship in 2020. In her last position as Director of Special Projects, she managed programs, fundraisers and staff. Sari is most proud of her children and grandchildren. She and her husband Sion live in Brooklyn.
Stefanie Weisman
Program Officer
Program Officer
Stefanie Weisman is the Communications and Design Associate at The Bronfman Fellowship. She received a B.A. in history from Columbia University and an M.A. in art history from NYU’s Institute of Fine Arts. Her first book, The Secrets of Top Students: Tips, Tools, and Techniques for Acing High School and College, was published by Sourcebooks in 2013 and has since been translated into Chinese. She writes fiction and nonfiction in her spare time. A lifelong resident of Astoria, New York, Stefanie’s hobbies include reading, visiting museums, hiking, and traveling to as many countries as possible.
Ashlie Flood
Data and Administrative Associate
Data and Administrative Associate
Ashlie Flood is the Data and Administrative Associate at The Bronfman Fellowship. Prior to joining the team at Bronfman, Ashlie was the Fundraising and Volunteer Coordinator for CHiPS Soup Kitchen and Women’s Shelter in Park Slope, where she helped the organization break all previous fundraising records and keep folks fed and housed throughout the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Ashlie’s professional experience also includes work in the development departments of The Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Services. Ashlie received a B.A. in Art History from Hamilton College with minors in Art and Hispanic Studies, and participated in two Hamilton off-campus study programs: the New York City Program and the Hamilton College Academic Year in Spain Program. Her lifelong love of art inspired her to co-curate an exhibition titled WILDFIRE, featuring art by Jon Bellona, at the February 2020 SPRING/BREAK Art Show. She lives in Hell’s Kitchen with her partner Gil and their two cats, Poppy and Tuna. She can be reached at ashlie@bronfman.org.
Elizabeth Ochs
Program Officer: Mentoring & Leadership Development
Program Officer: Mentoring & Leadership Development
Elizabeth Ochs (Bronfman ’01) leads the Fellowship’s portfolio of programs aimed at creating an interconnected network of alumni who can empower, inspire and engage one another towards enhanced leadership in the Jewish community and beyond. Elizabeth lives in Providence, Rhode Island, with her husband and son. She concentrated in Urban Studies at Brown University and received a Master’s in Education from Antioch University. Elizabeth directs the Creative Reuse Center of RI and serves as a Quality Advisor for the RI Department of Education.
Nava Melki
Israel Staff – Manager of Operations
Israel Staff – Manager of Operations
Nava was born in France and, after making Aliyah with her family at the age of 4, was raised and educated in Jerusalem. She attended the Emuna Arts High School for girls, where she majored in theater. During her national service she worked on a horse farm which specializes in therapeutic riding and treats people with special needs. She completed a BA in Management and Media & Communications at the College of Management, with a specialization in advertising and marketing. Nava lives with her husband in the Har Gilo settlement which is located a few kilometers south of Jerusalem.
Yuval Nussan
Israel Staff - Education Director
Israel Staff - Education Director
Yuval Nussan, a 2009 Amitei Bronfman alum, was raised in Hoshaya in the Galilee. In his gap year he volunteered at the Tzameret NGO, before studying at Har Etzion Yeshiva. Yuval served in the IDF combat forces as a commander. He has a Master’s degree in Hebrew Literature from Hebrew University as part of the Revivim, A Program of Excellence for the Training of Teachers in the Instruction of Jewish Studies. He also studied group management at Oranim College. Yuval has facilitated workshops and groups at the Gesher organization and at Amitei Bronfman as manche (counselor) in 2019-20, and teaches Humanities in a high school in Jerusalem. He lives in Jerusalem with his wife Elisheva and child Neta.
Adi Varon Feldman
Israel Staff - Manager of Recruitment and the Bogrim Community
Israel Staff - Manager of Recruitment and the Bogrim Community
Adi has been working with world Jewry and Israel education for the past 25 years, in Israel and North America. She has served as a Jewish Agency Shlicha (emissary) at Federation CJA in Montreal, Canada, and as the program director for the Israel Engagement program and Shinshinim program.
Adi has held educational and managerial positions at Alexander Muss High School in Israel; the Beni Hamoshavim youth movement; Gesher, the Shlichim Department at the Jewish Agency; Makom- The Educational Lab of the Jewish Agency; and the Mandel Program for Excellence, a joint managers program of the Mandel Institute and the Jewish Agency.
She holds a B. Ed in Informal Education and Jewish Studies from Beit Berl College and an M.A. in Jewish Education from the Schechter Institute. Adi also holds a group facilitator certificate and teaching certificate, and is a graduate of the ifellow program at the icenter.
Nurit (Muszkat) Barkan-Bocarsly
Israel Staff - Educator & Facilitator
Israel Staff - Educator & Facilitator
Nurit (Muszkat) Barkan-Bocarsly (Amitei Bronfman ’13) was born and raised in Jerusalem, where she lives with her partner Rafi. After serving as an officer in the Education Corps, Nurit studied at Hadar and did Shlichut in Australia. She completed her undergraduate studies in History, Sociology & Anthropology at Hebrew University, and volunteered in the Lissan program. She is currently working on her MA in Sociology & Anthropology at Hebrew University, as well a teacher’s certificate from Kerem Institute. Nurit works at Hebrew University as a TA, at Bar Ilan University as a research assistant, and at the Rothschild Foundation (IL) as a facilitator.
Paz Bendek
Israel Staff - Educator & Facilitator
Israel Staff - Educator & Facilitator
Paz Bendek (Amitei Bronfman ’13) (he/him) grew up in Shimshit in northern Israel and now lives in Jerusalem with his partner Ariel. He is a high school History and Bible teacher, a facilitator of the Israeli Bronfman Fellowship program, and a workshop facilitator at Beit Avi Chai (a center for Israeli and Jewish culture in Jerusalem). In addition, he is an MA student in History at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, researching the immigration experience of Jews from Eastern Europe to England in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Previously, he worked as a data analyst at Lightricks, an Israeli tech company.
Elchanan Finn
Israel Staff - Group Coordinator
Israel Staff - Group Coordinator
Elchanan Finn (Amitei Bronfman ’17) was born and raised in Efrat. Before the army, he studied at the yeshiva in Otniel, then served as a paratrooper. After the army, he continued studying in the Siach Yizchak yeshiva in Efrat. Today, he is a student at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, studying Politics, Philosophy and Economics (P.P.E). He is married to Peleg and lives in Jerusalem.
Hannah Kapnik Ashar
Director of Faculty 2023-24; Educator 2015-18
Director of Faculty 2023-24; Educator 2015-18
Rabbi Hannah Kapnik Ashar (Bronfman ’04) is Director of Faculty at the Bronfman Fellowship. She is also the Founder and Director of Rahmana, a women’s prayer initiative. Hannah’s scholarship focuses on prayer practice and the poetry of liturgy, midrash (rabbinic exegesis), and feminine Torah of Yemima Avital and others. Hannah is a graduate of Hadar’s Advanced Kollel and an alumna of the Wexner Graduate Fellowship and the Atra Fellowship for Rabbinic Entrepreneurship. Hannah is a graduate of Wellesley college, a birth doula, and a mother of three girls.
Rafi Ellenson
Lead Facilitator
Lead Facilitator
Rafi Ellenson (Bronfman ’11; he/his/him) is a student at the Hebrew College Rabbinical School. Prior to rabbinical school he lived in Jerusalem working for the Hotline for Refugees and Migrants and for 0202: Points of View from Jerusalem. While in Jerusalem, he was awarded the Dorot Fellowship where he studied literary translation. In rabbinical school, he has worked as the Associate Director of the Dignity Project—an interfaith youth leadership program in Greater Boston—as the rabbinic intern at the Miller Center for Interreligious Learning & Leadership, and as the Director of Hebrew Programming at URJ Olin-Sang-Ruby Union Institute (OSRUI). Rafi’s writing has been published in Verklempt! and Jewish Currents and he is the translator of a collection of haiku by the poet E. Ethelbert Miller, the little book of e. He is a graduate of the Individualized Bachelor of Arts program at Goddard College in Plainfield, VT.
Tal Toren
Lead Facilitator
Lead Facilitator
Tal Toren (Amitei Bronfman ‘15) currently studies Sociology, Anthropology and International Relations at Hebrew University. She lives in Jerusalem, where she works in the national public diplomacy directorate; and is part of Bar Kaima, an environmental organization based on Jewish values. Tal was born in a kibbutz in the north of Israel and studied theater in an art school. Before her army service, she did a gap year in Hanaton, a conservative kibbutz. Tal was in the educational core in the army before working at an IB school with Jewish, Arab and international students and traveling for ten months, mainly in Asia.
Jonathan Gribetz
Educator 2024
Educator 2024
Jonathan Marc Gribetz (Bronfman ’97) is an associate professor in the Near Eastern Studies Department and the Program in Judaic Studies at Princeton University. He teaches about Palestine, Israel, the city of Jerusalem, and Jewish and Palestinian nationalisms, and also serves as director of Princeton’s Near Eastern Studies Program and of the Institute for the Transregional Study of the Contemporary Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia. Gribetz is the author of Defining Neighbors: Religion, Race, and the Early Zionist-Arab Encounter (2014) and Reading Herzl in Beirut (2024). He earned an AB in Social Studies from Harvard University, an MSt in Modern Jewish Studies from Oxford University, and a PhD in History from Columbia University.
Evan Parks
Director of Education; Educator 2019, 2021 & 2023-24
Director of Education; Educator 2019, 2021 & 2023-24
Dr. Evan Parks is the Director of Education for The Bronfman Fellowship. Evan’s research treats modern European literature and culture, especially the entanglement of German and Jewish intellectual traditions. He is also interested in correspondences between Jewish diaspora writers and Hebrew literature. Evan is a Visiting Scholar at NYU’s Center for the Humanities, and is currently completing a book that explores tensions between the post-Shoah poet Paul Celan and his philosophical readers, especially Hans-Georg Gadamer, Theodor W. Adorno, and Jacques Derrida.
As an educator, Evan is interested in the intersection of liberal education and Jewish learning. He taught at Columbia University’s Department of Germanic Languages and Core Curriculum, where he was a finalist for the University’s highest teaching honor, the Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching. Evan served as Faculty for the Bronfman Fellowship for four years (2019, 2021, 2023, and 2024).
Evan received his Ph.D. in German and Comparative Literature from Columbia University and holds a B.A. in European Cultural Studies from Brandeis University. He was a 2020-21 Fellow with the Leo Baeck Institute London. Originally from Atlanta, Georgia, Evan was a Bronfman Fellow in 2005. He lives in Manhattan with his partner Eliana and daughter Selah.
Anat Keinan
Visiting Artist 2024
Visiting Artist 2024
Anat Keinan (born in Jerusalem, Israel) is a multidisciplinary artist currently based in Brooklyn. She graduated with an honor BFA from Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Israel (2017), and completed an MFA in Sculpture at Yale School of Art (2023). Her work has been exhibited at various galleries, museums, and art spaces, including The Israel Museum, The Jerusalem Artist House, The 7th Biennale for Drawing in Israel, The Natural History Museum in Tel-Aviv, YvYang Gallery in NYC, Atelier Shemi Gallery’s sculpture garden in Israel, The Jerusalem Print Workshop, “Fresh-Paint” Art Fair in Tel-Aviv, The New Gallery Teddy in Israel, and more. Anat’s artistic approach is conceived from questions regarding the built environment, how places are inhabited and experienced, how they change over time, and exploring how space-body-sculpture relationships open positions of dialogue.
Joshua Meyer
Visiting Artist 2024
Visiting Artist 2024
Joshua Meyer (Bronfman ’91) is known for his thickly layered paintings of people, and for a searching, open-ended process. The Cambridge, Massachusetts artist studied art at Yale University and The Bezalel Academy, and has exhibited in galleries and museums internationally.
Meyer has been recognized with a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, a CJP Arts and Culture Impact Award, The Sustainable Arts Foundation Award, and twice with the Massachusetts Cultural Council’s Painting Fellowship. The Cambridge, Massachusetts artist studied art at Yale University and The Bezalel Academy, and has exhibited internationally, including Eight Approaches at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts and the Worcester Art Museum, Tohu vaVohu at Hebrew College, and Becoming at the Yale Slifka Center and NYU Bronfman Center and the retrospective Seek My Face at UCLA’s Dortort Center. Meyer is represented by Rice Polak Gallery in Provincetown and Dolby Chadwick Gallery in San Francisco.
Marisa Scheinfeld
Visiting Artist 2024
Visiting Artist 2024
Marisa Scheinfeld was born in Brooklyn, NY in 1980 and raised in the Catskills. She received her B.A. from the State University at Albany in 2002, and her MFA from San Diego State University in 2011. Her work is motivated by an interest in landscape and its embedded histories, both apparent and hidden.
Marisa’s photographic projects and books are among the collections of the Library of Congress, The New York Public Library, Yeshiva University Museum, The National Yiddish Book Center, The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art & Life at UC Berkeley, The Simon Wiesenthal Center, The International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation and The Edmund and Nancy K. Dubois Library at the Museum of Photographic Arts.
Marisa is a frequent guest lecturer and her photographs have been exhibited throughout the United States and in the UK. Her work has appeared in publications such as National Geographic, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, The Jerusalem Post, American Photography, Tablet Magazine and The Jewish Daily Forward.
On October 4, 2016, Cornell University Press released her first book entitled The Borscht Belt: Revisiting the Remains of America’s Jewish Vacationland. In 2023, Marisa founded the Borscht Belt Historical Marker Project with a group of artists and historians dedicated to commemorating the history of the Borscht Belt, a celebrated era in American Jewish life, American culture and Catskill history. The project’s mission is the creation of a large-scale historic marker trail that leads audiences on an education and adventurous tour through history. The 20-marker trail aspires to permanently cement the Borscht Belt in its physical place and pay tribute to its immense legacy. Marisa is an Adjunct Professor of Photography at Purchase College and working on her second book, anticipated in 2026.
Zurit Buskila
Israeli Senior Educator 2024
Israeli Senior Educator 2024
Zurit Buskila leads the Kolot Beit Midrash and teaches Jewish Studies at Ono Academic College. She has been active in the social and spiritual spheres in Israel for many years, facilitating group and writing workshops. Previously, she lived and worked in the Negev, teaching at the Bina and Daroma southern Midrashot. She founded and led the Karimon Community Beit Midrash in Mitzpe Ramon; was part of the founding team of Kulna in Yeruham, a center for Masorti culture and identity; and led several educational programs for the organization, including “Elul from the East” and “School for Contemporary Masorti Art.”
A qualified therapist using psychodrama and nature therapy, her book Naive in the Days: A Collection of Buberian Poetry was published by Newspaper 77. Her main focus is on exploring the connection between spirit, soul, and body. Married and the mother of two daughters, she lives in the Jerusalem Hills.
Rani Jaeger
Israeli Senior Educator 2020-22, 2024
Israeli Senior Educator 2020-22, 2024
Rabbi Dr. Rani Jaeger is a research fellow, faculty member, and head of the recently formed Ritual Center at the Shalom Hartman Institute. He was one of the founders of the Institute’s Be’eri Program for Pluralistic Jewish-Israeli Identity Education.
Rani received his doctorate at Bar-Ilan University on Jewish-Israeli culture as perceived by the poet Avraham Shlonsky. He was a participant in the first cohort of the Beit Midrash for Israeli Rabbis and received rabbinical ordination from the Shalom Hartman Institute and HaMidrasha at Oranim in September 2016.
Rani is one of the founders of Beit Tefilah Israeli, a secular synagogue in the heart of Tel Aviv. He spent a year at Paideia, the European Institute of Jewish Studies in Stockholm, as scholar in residence.
Michal Tikochinsky
Israeli Senior Educator 2020-24
Israeli Senior Educator 2020-24
Rabbanit Dr. Michal Tikochinsky is one of the leading women Talmud scholars and educators in the world today, a sought after lecturer in Talmud, Jewish law and women’s issues. She holds a Master’s Degree in Law and a Doctorate in Talmud from Bar Ilan University.
Through her scholarly and incisive articles Rabbanit Tikochinsky has had a profound influence on the Halakhic discourse regarding women’s issues. She has also established an umbrella organization for women Torah scholars in educational leadership positions, enabling greater collaboration and support between women Torah leaders and institutions, and facilitating the transformation of women’s Torah study into an organized movement.
At Beit Morasha, Rabbanit Tikochinsky is Director of the Moshe Green Beit Midrash for Women’s Leadership and the Women’s Halakha Program, which offers a select group of senior women Torah scholars the opportunity to study and take examinations that are parallel to the requirements for male rabbinical candidates in Israel. Rabbanit Tikochinsky was born and raised in Israel. She is married and resides with her husband and seven children in the community of Nof Ayalon.
Dana Raucher
President
President
Dana Raucher is President of the Board of Directors. A Bronfman alumna from ’89, she is the Executive Director of The Samuel Bronfman Foundation. Prior to joining the Foundation, Dana worked at the Israeli law firm Shiboleth, Yisraeli, Roberts, Zisman & Co. in Tel Aviv. Ms. Raucher is a graduate of Columbia University and the Buchmann Law School at Tel Aviv University, and is a member of the Israel Bar Association. Born in Israel, she currently lives in New York with her husband, Yossi, and their sons.
Jonathan Wachter
Secretary
Secretary
Jonathan Wachter (Bronfman ’96), Secretary of the Board, was a director in the chief investment office and global treasury of JPMorgan Chase. He helped manage liquidity strategy for the firm. Before joining JPMorgan, Jonathan was a consultant in the banking practice of McKinsey & Co. and a private equity analyst at the Blackstone Group. Jonathan earned a BA in Applied Math and an MBA from Harvard. Jonathan grew up in the western suburbs of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where his parents, sister and four nephews still live. Jonathan is a long-time resident of Manhattan’s Upper West Side, where he is an active member of Darkhei Noam, a lay-led minyan which counts several other Bronfman alumni as members.
Noam Lockshin
Treasurer
Treasurer
Noam Lockshin (Bronfman ’01) is a partner at Kimmeridge, an investment firm in New York focused on the energy sector. He previously worked as Senior Research Associate at Sanford C. Bernstein on the #1-ranked E&P research team. Noam is a native of Toronto and earned a BA in math from Canada’s York University. Before that, he also studied for two years at Yeshivat Har Etzion in Israel. Noam currently serves on the Board of Advisors for Hillel International’s Office of Innovation. He also organizes shabbat services for tots at his shul on the Upper West Side, the neighborhood where he lives with his wife and three daughters. Bronfman has been a big part of his life since he was a fellow in 2001.
Stephanie Berger (’17) is an environmental educator and urban farmer in Brooklyn, New York. They currently work at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden coordinating a plant education program for low income Brooklyn students and their teachers. Previously, Stephanie worked in plant education at the NYC DOE and was part of the leadership of Zumwalt Acres, a Jewish farm and communal land project. Stephanie grew up in the Boston area as an active member of their reform synagogue. Stephanie is a graduate of Washington University in St. Louis, where they studied mechanical engineering, environmental studies, and gender studies. They are a co-facilitator of the Bronfman alumni LGBTQ+ group.
Daphna Ezrachi (Amitei Bronfman ‘05) is a Senior Project Manager at NYC’s Department of Housing Preservation and Development. Upon joining HPD, Daphna completed her Masters in Urban Planning from NYU’s Wagner School of Public Service. Before pivoting to urban planning and housing policy, Daphna was an educator in Jerusalem, where she grew up. Daphna has worked in numerous educational programs, including serving as mancha (educator) for Amitei Bronfman’s 2016 cohort. She received a BA from Hebrew University in European History. In her spare time, she volunteers at her synagogue, the Fort Tryon Jewish Center; and for climate change activism. She lives in Washington Heights with her husband (also a Bronfman alum) and their two sons.
Andy Katzman ’93 is the Chief Philanthropy Officer of Willoughby Capital and the Executive Director of The Jane and Daniel Och Family Foundation. Prior to joining the foundation, Andy was a partner at The Bridgespan Group. At Bridgespan, Andy focused on building new platforms to direct philanthropic capital as well as the role technology can play in social sector organizations.
Prior to Bridgespan , Andy spent eight years in the technology sector as a business development and sales executive at Twitter, Facebook and Yahoo. Before working in the technology sector, Andy spent five years at McKinsey & Company. In addition, he previously served as a Press Secretary for NY Senator Charles E. Schumer.
Andy has an MBA from the UCLA Anderson School of Management and a BA from Yale University, and currently lives in New York City with his wife and two sons.
Elliot Mamet (’10) is a political scientist currently serving as a Postdoctoral Research Associate and Lecturer at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. His research has focused on advancing ideals of democracy and democratic equality, and his writing has appeared in venues including Political Theory, American Political Thought, State Politics & Policy Quarterly, and The Washington Post. Previously, Elliot served on the legislative staff of Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC) as an American Political Science Association Congressional Fellow. He holds a Ph.D. from Duke University and a B.A. from Colorado College.
Dr. Kira Sheinerman (Bronfman parent ’17) is the co-founder and CEO of DiamiR, a life sciences company developing blood-based diagnostic solutions for brain health diseases. She is also a Managing Director, Investment Banking at H.C. Wainwright & Co. where she works on financial and strategic transactions for growth biotech companies. Kira serves on the Board of Directors of the Boyce Thompson Institute, an affiliate of Cornell University, and as the senior strategic consultant to Aptorum Group (NASDAQ: APM). From October 2015 through December 2018, Kira served as the co-chair of Alzheimer’s Association Business Consortium. Kira received her Ph.D. in Biomedical Sciences from Mount Sinai School of Medicine for her work on molecular mechanisms of Alzheimer’s disease. She also holds an Honors MBA from the Zicklin School of Business, Baruch College/CUNY. Kira lives in NYC with her husband and two daughters.
Hilary Caplan Somorjai is Director, West Coast Admissions, at Harvard Business School. She has worked for HBS since 2003. Prior to working for HBS, she worked at Oracle Corporation in the education line of business focusing on strategy and marketing. She currently serves on the Silicon Valley Advisory Council for Common Sense Media and has been active in teen initiatives for the San Francisco Jewish Federation. She is a graduate of Stanford University and Harvard Business School.
She and her husband John live in the Bay Area. Their son Ben, a recent college graduate, works at a technology startup in the Bay Area. Diana (Bronfman 2019) is currently a sophomore at Amherst College.
Roberto Woldenberg is the Co-Founder and Co-Chairman of Torrecom, a leading independent wireless infrastructure provider in Latin America. He is also Managing Partner at Indigo Capital, a private equity fund focused on growing small and medium-size businesses. Prior to co-founding Indigo Capital in 1999, Roberto was an associate at J.P. Morgan’s Latin America M&A practice. He is a board member of W International, a holding company with interests in the steel, media, real estate and renewable energy sectors. Other current and past board memberships include Enlight Partners, Wedderspoon, Torres Unidas (now ATP), Communications Tower Group, Climbing Collective, Fibra Inn (BMV: FINN13.MX), and Promotora Ambiental (BMV: PASAB.MX).
Born and raised in Monterrey, Mexico, Roberto holds a BA from Columbia University. He and his wife Carrie, a psychologist, live in New York City. Their four children – Rebecca, Noam, Zev and Daniela (Bronfman ’22) – are currently students at Sarah Lawrence, Columbia, University of Chicago and Yale, respectively.
To nominate a teen, click here.
Learn more:
Watch our Oct. 10 info call recording here.