[COMMUNICATED]
By C.B. Weinfeld
The embrace lasted only seconds, but it captured everything Project Inspire stands for.
At the Motzei Shabbos Gala, Oren had just finished sharing his experience from October 7, when he drove back into the line of fire near the Gaza border to rescue young people fleeing the Nova Festival massacre. Among them was a young boy who had been bleeding for hours while hiding in a ditch. Oren jumped in, shielded him with his body, and applied direct pressure to the wound, keeping him alive until they reached a field hospital.
The crowd sat in awe. Then came a moment no one expected.
In a carefully planned surprise, that same boy, Maayan, suddenly walked onto the stage.
The audience froze as rescuer and survivor embraced. When Shulem Lemmer began singing “One More Dance,” the room rose with him in a powerful expression of unity, resilience, and shared responsibility.
But the roots of that moment began much earlier.
Months before, during a Project Inspire leadership trip to Israel, Shalom Brickman, already deeply involved in learning and supporting less affiliated Jews, realized there was one step in kiruv he had never taken: personally offering someone the opportunity to put on tefillin. Standing beside Oren at the Nova site, he asked. Oren said yes, and he has been putting them on ever since.
That moment, Shalom, Oren, and Maayan’s embrace on stage, was the pinnacle of the Project Inspire Motzei Shabbos Gala and reflects the heart of Project Inspire: meaningful change begins when ordinary people take one courageous step toward another Jew.
This spirit defined every part of Project Inspire 2.0. From the moment participants arrived, the atmosphere was charged with purpose. This was not a passive conference, but an immersive experience designed to engage and activate.
Through dynamic workshops and open discussions, participants explored how to initiate conversations naturally, extend invitations, and build authentic relationships that endure.
One of the most powerful moments came on Shabbos afternoon with the launch of the first-ever “Teach It Forward” program at a Project Inspire convention. It marked a first step toward becoming comfortable sharing Torah with less affiliated Jews. Attendees were divided into three learning tracks and then regrouped across tracks with one mission: to teach one another what they had learned.
The Teach It Forward program reflected this idea in action. By helping participants become comfortable teaching what they know, even small pieces of Torah, it transformed hesitation into confidence and demonstrated that the first step in kiruv often begins with simply sharing one idea with another Jew.
For many, this was their first experience actively transmitting ideas rather than simply absorbing them. The room buzzed with energy as participants leaned in to ensure their message was clearly understood. When their words were fully received, the sense of accomplishment was palpable. It captured a central Project Inspire message: whether one knows the alef or the beis, the responsibility is to teach what we know.
This message echoed throughout the weekend. Rabbi Chaim Sampson, Founding Director of Project Inspire, emphasized that meaningful change begins with taking personal responsibility. Just as Rav Noach once urged him to find ten men to stand up and make a difference, Rabbi Sampson explained that the same mindset drives Project Inspire’s growing initiatives, many of which are already seeing strong participation and expanding interest.
Participants were also joined by Rabbi Moshe Weinberger, the Rov of Aish Kodesh, whose farbrengen and unforgettable Shalosh Seudos created an atmosphere of warmth and spiritual elevation that lingered long after the final zemirah.
On Friday night, the women gathered for a meaningful discussion circle in an intimate setting that fostered openness and connection. The conversation continued late into the evening, strengthening bonds and deepening the shared sense of mission.
Zevy Samet, an aspiring basketball star, attended the convention together with several of his YU teammates and quickly became an integral source of inspiration and energy throughout the weekend. The process he began several years ago, quietly taking responsibility within his own circle and strengthening his teammates’ connection, has steadily grown over time. Most recently, that growth led to two transformative Shabbos weekends in Lakewood and Inwood. These experiences were created from the ground up by Project Inspire. What began as one young man stepping forward years earlier ultimately led many of his teammates to take their first steps toward keeping Shabbos and beginning their own journeys of connection.
Between sessions, hallways buzzed with networking, idea-sharing, and spontaneous conversations. Participants exchanged experiences, formed new partnerships, and began envisioning how to bring what they had learned back into their own communities.
That sense of momentum reached another peak at the Motzei Shabbos Gala, where the crowd felt they were witnessing not just an inspiring event, but a movement gaining strength and clarity before their eyes.
By the weekend’s close, the energy was unmistakable. Conversations had shifted from inspiration to commitment. Partnerships were forming. Concrete next steps were already underway.
The true measure of Project Inspire is not what happens during a convention, but what happens afterward: in the concrete initiatives already underway, from mentorship networks to Shabbos experiences and community partnerships that are actively drawing more Jews into connection every day. The response has been tremendous, with participants stepping forward in growing numbers and the movement continuing to gain momentum long after the weekend ended.
This is not a moment for inspiration alone. It is a moment for action.
Project Inspire is already mobilizing mentorship networks, Shabbos experiences, leadership initiatives, and community partnerships that are reconnecting Jews across the country, and the momentum is only growing.
Step in. Take responsibility. Join the movement today at www.projectinspire.com or call (646)-291-6191 and be the one who says: I’m in.