The Samueli Foundation, founded by Orange County residents Henry and Susan Samueli, is proud to sponsor the 2024-2025 Orange County Jewish Community Study. Our goals for supporting this research are:
Giving the widest set of Orange County Jewish community members an opportunity to reflect on their needs, practices, and opinions on existing Jewish community resources and the issues that most impact their lives
Ensuring all Orange County Jewish service and religious organizations are operating from the same, data-driven, actionable understanding of our entire community
Demonstrating a new model for community collaboration by working in broad partnership across Orange County Jewish organizations
Signaling our commitment to ensuring thriving, safe, joyful Jewish life now and in the future
The Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies (CMJS) at Brandeis University is conducting the study in partnership with NORC at the University of Chicago, an innovative independent research organization. CMJS is a renowned research institute dedicated to the study of American Jewish life and religious and cultural identity. Over the past decade, CMJS has worked with more than thirty Jewish communities like ours to develop local community studies, using its cutting-edge methodology to illustrate the characteristics, attitudes, and behaviors unique to each place.
In conversations with Jewish communal and lay leaders in Orange County, a common theme emerged: while everyone is interested in working to protect and strengthen Jewish life in the County, no one has strong data to leverage about the size, characteristics, locations, or current needs of the Jewish community.
Over the last decade, many Jewish communities across America have undertaken formal demographic studies to create this data set. Orange County has never had the benefit of such a research effort, depriving the community—and particularly the organizations that serve the community—of vital information that allows for more strategic decision-making, responsive resource allocation, creative program development, and cross-organization collaboration.
A scientific demographic study of the Orange County Jewish community is a critical way to learn more about our community—from our community—and we look forward to sharing the results with you when the study is complete.
Gather actionable data about the Orange County Jewish community
Develop a comprehensive picture of Jews in Orange County, across levels and types of engagement and identification
Utilize an inclusive process that yields results that are useful for all Jewish community organizations in Orange County and generates new public will to support the Jewish community
Foster collaboration and decrease siloes among Jewish individuals, leaders, and organizations across the County
Imagine what could be possible if we knew:
How big the Orange County Jewish community is.
What role(s) community members want Judaism to play in their lives – spiritual, social, cultural, other.
Who feels disconnected from or under-engaged with our Jewish community – and why.
If there are geographic areas with large Jewish populations that aren’t being reached by community programs and services.
What Jews of all ages care about – and what differentiates younger and older cohorts in our community.
What families with young children need to keep their kids engaged in Jewish life.
The extent of antisemitism experienced by children and adults in our community.
What Jewish community members are most excited and concerned about.
How we can work together to meet the needs of the Orange County Jewish community
We are deeply grateful to the 31 Orange County Jewish organizations that have partnered with us to launch this study. We extend a special thanks to the steering committee that helped shape our community study:
Leadership Team
Scott Braswell, CEO, Merage JCC
Tamy Cohen, Executive Director, OC Hillel
Rabbi David Eliezrie, Congregation Beit Meir Ha’Cohen
Erik Ludwig, CEO and President, Jewish Federation of Orange County
Lindsey Spindle, President, Samueli Family Philanthropies
Rabbi Rick Steinberg, Congregation Shir-Ha-Ma’a lot