| We wanted to share a wonderful professional development opportunity to support your work with Jewish individuals, families, and students. Drawing on insights from over 2,000 facilitated support groups, this training equips clinicians and educators with evidence-informed frameworks for understanding and responding to the mental health impacts of antisemitism. Topics include traumatic invalidation, identity-based stress, culturally responsive clinical approaches, and strategies for fostering resilience and meaning-making in Jewish clients and families.
This online session takes place on Friday, June 12, 2025, from 10:00 AM to 12:00 PM PDT and is offered by the Child Training Institute (CTI) in partnership with the Jewish Community Mental Health Initiative (JCMHI).
Upon completion of this training, participants will be able to:
- Identify the mental health impacts of antisemitism and identity-based hate on Jewish individuals and families
- Understand how identity-based stress and traumatic invalidation affect belonging, safety, and emotional functioning
- Describe key findings about Jewish mental health from JCMHI’s work across thousands of support groups and original data
- Apply trauma-informed, culturally responsive approaches when working with Jewish clients and communities
- Integrate evidence-informed strategies to support resilience, foster hope, connection, and meaning-making in Jewish individuals and families
For questions about scholarship opportunities or group discounts, please contact Teresa Merenda, CTI Program Coordinator, at TeresaM@jfcs.org.
Early-Bird Discount Until May 28!
REGISTER HERE |