Program for Orthodox LGBTQ youth gets $1 million to expand across US

NYC-based Jewish Queer Youth will use donation to offer in-person clinical services in other cities, hire more staff for crisis phone line

Andrew Silow-Carroll is the editor-in-chief of JTA

LGBTQ Jewish youth gather at the Jewish Queer Youth (JQY) Drop-In Center in New York City. (Courtesy of JQY via JTA)
LGBTQ Jewish youth gather at the Jewish Queer Youth (JQY) Drop-In Center in New York City. (Courtesy of JQY via JTA)

New York Jewish Week via JTA — The New York City-based Jewish Queer Youth organization received a $1 million donation to expand its social services to Orthodox LGBTQ youth nationwide.

The gift comes from Toronto-based real estate developer Paul Austin, CEO of the Salpam Group, and his partner, Dalip Girdhar, who works in information technology at TD Bank.

Theirs is JQY’s biggest donation since it launched as a nonprofit in 2012, according to a release from JQY. The organization will use the gift to bring its Drop-in Center initiative, an in-person clinical program that operates in New York, to local Orthodox communities in New Jersey, Baltimore, Chicago, and South Florida, and to expand the staffing for the organization’s crisis phone line.

The clinical program and hotline will be renamed in honor of the donors.

JQY Executive Director Rachael Fried said in a statement that during the pandemic, JQY pivoted to providing several of its key programs virtually, allowing youth from around the country to take part and underscoring the need for its services.

In addition to direct outreach to LGBTQ Orthodox youth, JQY offers training programs for Jewish schools, camps, youth organizations, synagogues, and mental health professionals.

Nearly all Orthodox communities and institutions do not condone same-sex marriage or sexual relations between people of the same gender.

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