Can we talk about something good for a change?                                                                                       
As headlines bombard us with stories of violence and curfews set against the backdrop of an epidemic, it’s easy to lose hope. Which is why it’s been so refreshing to step away from the unrelenting daily news cycle and read the work of young writers whose work brims forth with energy, honesty, and yes, even optimism.

READ ALL WINNING ENTRIES

Our Young Writers Contest inspired hundreds of middle-school and high-school students to share what freedom means to them in this time of remote-learning and social isolation. Our young authors come, of course from the United States, but also from CanadaEurope and Africa. They sent essays, poems and short stories.

The talent and intelligence on display has been both exhilarating and daunting. Our judges — former U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro; Dahlia Lithwick, who writes about the Supreme Court for Slate; The Jewish Education Project’s Nicole Fine and Hillary Gardenswartz; Jodi Rudoren, editor-in-chief of the Forward; and Nora L. Sissenich, a first-year high school student who originally conceived of the contest and who just happens to be my daughter — had a tough time selecting the winners, whose pieces represent only a fraction of the terrific work we received.

You can read all the winning entries here. Congratulations to the winners, who each receive $180 in addition to the glory, and the two runners-up in each category, who receive $72 and $36.

And don't miss my talk with the winners on Wednesday, June 10 at 4 p.m. ET.

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I hope you enjoy their pieces highlighted below. 

Best,

Adam Langer
Senior Editor

Unexodus — a story of freedom
In a time of social isolation, Julie Levey, an 18-year-old student at New York’s Spence School, finds the meaning of freedom while conducting a Zoom seder.
Levey is the 1st place winner in our High School I (11th-12th grade) division. 
Freedom is seeing others for who they truly are
Marika Campbell-Blue, a 15-year-old student from the Montgomery Blair School in Silver Spring, Md., ponders the burdens of being economically challenged in an affluent Jewish culture.
Campbell-Blue is the 1st place winner in our High School II (9th-10th grade) division
To be free is to love 
In this harrowing story, Rachel Ezrielev, a 13-year-old student from Eastern Middle School in Silver Spring, Md., confronts the dangers of publicly expressing love.
Ezrielev is the 1st place winner in our middle school division.
The lie wasn't ignorance; it was freedom
Laine Schlezinger, an 11th grader at Burlingame High School in Burlingame, Ca., confronts prejudice in her purportedly liberal West Coast bubble.
Schlezinger is the 2nd place winner in our High School I (11th-12th grade) division.
We took pity on Arkansas
In this charming story by Nora Wyrtzen,  a 15-year-old student at Wilbur Cross High School in New Haven, Conn., a group of friends finds freedom in the world of imagination.
Wyrtzen is the 2nd place winner in our High School II (9th-10th grade) division.

 
Freedom for me is freedom from you — a poem
In Victoria Nealey’s poignant poem, the narrator learns a hard lesson about freedom and acceptance.
Nealey, a 13-year-old student at the Brandeis School in San Francisco, is the 2nd place winner in our middle school division
Freedom is fighting for change
A brush with mortality leads Lily Forman, a 17-year-old student at Columbia High School in South Orange, N.J., to pursue activism.
Forman is the 3rd place winner in our High School I (11th-12th grade) division.

 
From Minsk to America, freedom remains elusive
Josh Elkin, a 16-year-old student at the High School of Health Sciences in Wales, Wi., finds that immigration does not always lead to freedom.
Elkin is the 3rd place winner in our High School II (9th-10th grade) division.
Freedom is summer at camp
Sasha Leitner, a 7th grader at New York’s Institute for Collaborative Education, recalls what freedom used to feel like.
Leitner is the 3rd place winner in our middle school division.

 
 
READ ALL WINNING ENTRIES
 
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