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Call 354-6060 Environmental Group Begins Its Campaign New York (JTA) — The Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life wants to weave green threads throughout the fabric of the Jewish world. A year after its formal launch, the coalition is promoting a ma- jor campaign to involve people from all parts of the American Jewish community — grass-roots activists, scholars, synagogue leaders and communal agency professionals — in environmen- tal awareness, according to pro- ject coordinator Annette Lawrence. A wide range of Jewish agen- cies has signed on to the coalition as participating organizations — from Shomrei Adamah, a grass- roots group teaching ecological ethics, to the Jewish War Veter- ans of the USA. The coalition also includes the American Jewish Committee, the American Jewish Congress, Hadassah and the Reform, Re- constructionist Conservative and Orthodox movements. The National Religious Part- nership for the Environment un- derwrites the coalition's $200,000 annual budget and similar groups in the Protestant, Catholic and evangelical communities. There is tremendous Jewish interest in environmental issues at the grass-roots level, accord- ing to Jerome Chanes, director for domestic concerns at the Na- tional Jewish Community Rela- tions Advisory Council, and a founder of the coalition. "But that interest has not as yet been translated into pro- grammatic initiative on the part of Jewish organizations," he said. "The sad reality is that there are very few formal entities of the Jewish community that have the environment anywhere on their active agendas. We're faced with turning around this inertia." The environment "doesn't feel like the kind of parochial issue that the Jewish community is so heavily engaged in today," said Ms. Lawrence. "It's a great chal- lenge for us" to get Jewish orga- nizations involved. The coalition also wants to bridge the gap between Jewish grass-roots activists who have long been interested in environ- mental issues but devoted their energy to the Sierra Club and other environmental defense agencies, and "professional Jews" who have the same concerns. "We want to connect the peo- ple at the grass roots to Jewish tradition on this issue. We hope to bring some of them together to reinforce their work and learn from them at the national level," said Ms. Lawrence. "It also communicates to the Jewish national organizations that there really is interest at the grass-roots level," she added. There are signs of progress at some Jewish organizations, she said. Jewish community relations councils "are beginning to see this issue as one around which to do intergroup, interreligious and in- terethnic work," said Ms. Lawrence. "It ties into social justice for or- ganizations which are always looking for issues around which to approach other groups with- in urban settings," she said. The environment "is an issue around which people can build coalitions, and the impact will be greater in coalition. This issue cuts across all boundaries, cer- tainly organizational ones," she said. The coalition is launching sev- eral projects which, it hopes, will catalyze interest among other parts of the Jewish community. A "Guide to Jewish Environ- mental Study and Action" has been sent to 2,500 synagogues, The coalition expects to bring the participants back together periodically to continue the discussion. national and regional Jewish or- ganizations, campus and youth groups and schools, among oth- ers. It includes essays by rabbis from all points on the religious spectrum, ideas for environmen- tal-awareness programs and a guide to other resources. Beginning this fall, the coali- tion will offer grants of $500 to $1,500 to synagogue, education- al and other Jewish groups un- derwriting projects around "green" issues. The money could go for buying crockery and flatware for use at synagogue Shabbat kiddushes, to replace plastic and paper goods, said Ms. Lawrence. Or the money could go to hire an educa- tor to develop an environmental curriculum or to pay for a day- long consciousness-raising event. There is no limit to what can be proposed, she said. Her coali-