Boards
GPM is proud of the outstanding people who serve on the Board of Directors and Advisory Board
Valerie Gerstein
Board Chair
While on a study mission to India with Jewish Federations of North America’s National Young Leadership Cabinet, Valerie was introduced to the Gabriel Project Mumbai and immediately felt empowered by Jacob Sztokman’s vision and the work in the slums of Mumbai. Upon returning home her to her family, Valerie’s stories about the slums became her children’s stories and when Liza became interested in helping the children she had heard about and saw in photos, their family’s commitment to GPM deepened and Liza became the GPM Youth Ambassador to the board, Valerie joined her in supporting this mission.
A lifelong learner, Valerie is studying in the Nonprofit Management master’s program at Columbia University. Her leadership at UJA-Federation of New York spans many of the lifecycle stages and aspects of the organization. Valerie served on the Center for Youth Philanthropy and Leadership committee and the Global Jewish Safety Net Committee providing emergency as well as strategic support to communities around the world. Within UJA’s Commission on Jewish Identity and Renewal, Valerie joined the inaugural group of the Beginning Jewish Families Task Force. Valerie has served on the boards of Hazon/Adamah, The Jewish Theological Seminary’s Center for Pastoral Education, NYU’s Bronfman Center/Hillel, the Holocaust Commemoration Committee, and the HeschelNotes choir at the Heschel School. She is also a NEXUS member. Valerie lives in NYC with her husband and two daughters, Mia and Liza.
Debra Feinberg
Vice-Chair
Debra Feinberg is a Program Officer for Schusterman Family Philanthropies, where she oversees recruitment, partnerships, and emergency response initiatives for REALITY, a community of diverse and influential changemakers and trailblazers. As a result of her own experience with REALITY, Debra was inspired to leverage her background in education as a Teach For America alumna along with her passion for repairing the world (tikkun olam). Her search led her to JDC Entwine’s Global Jewish Service Corps, placing her in India as a 2014 teaching fellow with Gabriel Project Mumbai.
Debra’s experience with GPM and its community partners was life-changing and a catalyst to a career advancing social justice. In the years since, she has established herself as a community builder and strategist while consulting with Strategic Education Inc’s workforce development arm, serving as the longtime Deputy Director of TALMA - a non-profit addressing education inequity and opportunity gaps in Israel's social and geographic periphery, and serving as an advisor to a national diverse-by-design charter school network. Debra holds a Master of Education from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte and a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from the University of Connecticut.
Audrey Trachtman
Board Secretary
Audrey Axelrod Trachtman is currently the President of AMIT Children, an educational network in Israel that serves over 40,000 students and provides opportunities for success for students from disadvantaged backgrounds. She previously held the positions of Treasurer and Vice President of Strategic Planning.
Professionally, Audrey retired as Vice President of Finance and Strategic Planning for Philip Morris and General Foods Latin America.
She served as Treasurer, Vice President of Advocacy and Programming and Conference Chair for the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance (JOFA). Audrey has also served on the Board of her local synagogue and is a founder of the Kol Echad partnership minyan in New Rochelle.
Audrey is a recipient of the YWCA Women of Achievement Award. She is a CPA and received an MBA from the Wharton School.
Board of Directors
Daniel Rekant
Treasurer
As a Manager of Finance at the Rockefeller Foundation, Dan's focus is on financial reporting, budgeting and planning. He manages the budget and spending for multiple programmatic areas and has executed various work and operating models within India. With a major focus in development of the Global South, Daniel is impressed with the growth potential of GPM.
Dan has a Bachelor of Arts in Communication from Michigan State University and a Masters in Accounting from the University of Miami. He is a licensed CPA in New York and currently lives in Cortlandt Manor, NY with his wife and daughter.
Joshua Greenspan
Leadership & Development Chair
Josh originally volunteered with Gabriel Project Mumbai in 2019, where he was inspired by the people he met and the positive impact of GPM. During his time at GPM, Josh met with several of the micro-enterprises, taught in schools, and worked on the farms. Through these experiences, he felt compelled to stay involved and help advance GPM's mission to lift up under-served communities in India through a holistic and sustainable approach. Josh's first visit to India was actually one year prior, during his study abroad experience with Semester at Sea. He was immediately drawn to the paradoxical beauty and chaos throughout the country and wanted to develop a closer relationship with its rich history, people, and culture.
Josh currently works in Digital and Product Strategy at JPMorgan Chase on their Global Markets Innovation team. Previously, he worked at Ernst & Young as a Business Consultant in Technology Risk. Josh received both his Master's degree in Information Systems and Operations Management and his Bachelor's degree in Business Administration from the University of Florida. As a student, Josh served as the President of the Jewish Student Union, as well as a Senator for UF's Student Government. Josh is an alum of Birthright Excel and Onward Israel and has continued to stay involved in these organizations.
Rabba Dr. Carmella
Abraham
Carmella Abraham is a physician and an ordained member of the Orthodox Jewish clergy. With over 20 years of experience in the pharmaceutical industry, she currently works in Oncology Medical Affairs, focusing on women’s cancers. Carmella earned her BA from Barnard College and her medical degree from the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, where she also completed a residency in Internal Medicine and a fellowship in Women’s Health.
A proud member of the Bene Israel community, Carmella honors her heritage through her parents, who were born and raised in Mumbai's Bene Israel community and were instrumental in establishing the Indian Jewish community in North America.
Tamar Arenson
Tamar Arenson is a dedicated advocate for international development and gender equality, having studied the intersections of global development programs and gender-based violence reduction. Tamar began her journey with Gabriel Project Mumbai as an intern and grants officer, drawn to GPM's holistic approach to tackling poverty. Now working as a strategic partnerships manager for the Freedom Fund, Tamar is excited to continue supporting GPM as a board member.
After receiving her Bachelor's degree in Political Science and International Relations from Tulane University, Tamar moved to Israel where she received her Master's degree in Global Development in the Glocal program and worked in resource development at Latet-Israeli Humanitarian Aid, the largest humanitarian assistance organization in Israel following graduation. Tamar also served as a guest lecturer at The New School, in the Global and Adolescent Mental Health course, and as a speaker at the World Without Exploitation Youth Summit. She now lives in Manhattan.
Rohit Biswas
Rohit was born in the United States but has immense passion and love for India because he spent a large part of his childhood there. He travels often to India to visit family and friends. Rohit likes to support and help initiatives that provide sustainable futures for vulnerable populations within India. Rohit believes that GPM has the appropriate tenets in place to support sustainable futures for people living in underserved communities and he is excited to assist in any way he can.
Rohit is an Immigration Attorney working at Kramer, Levin, Naftalis, Frankel & LLP in New York City. He received a B.A. in International Relations from Tufts University and a J.D. from Brooklyn Law School. Currently living in Brooklyn, Rohit takes part in the South Asian Board Association serving as the Immigration Section Co-Chair.
Rohit is a former Board Secretary of GPM.
Alan Goldman JD
Alan helped create the Gabriel Project Mumbai as a nonprofit organization in early 2012. Since then, he has served as a Board member. He is thrilled to be a part of Gabriel Project Mumbai's life-changing work.
Alan has spent most of his career in the nonprofit sector, focusing on fundraising. He is currently Associate Director of Gift Planning at Oberlin College. A native of Brooklyn, NY - long before it was hip - he has lived in suburban Cleveland since 1996. He has a BA in Political Science from Columbia, an MSW from Wurzweiler School of Social Work, and a JD from Case Western Reserve.
His greatest joys are his wife Sara, his three sons, and his grandchildren.
Sharmilla Klestzick
Sharmilla was born in India and has a deep connection with the country due to her being born and raised in an English mission for the first six years of her life. She was adopted and raised by a family in America but always dreamt of going back and helping the less fortunate. In the spring of 2023, she had the opportunity to meet GMP’s team members and volunteer in Mokhadah as an English teacher. She was able to see firsthand what incredible and meaningful work GMP is doing to help better the lives for the people of Mokhadah. Since then she has served as a Board member.
Sharmilla holds a master’s degree in regular and special education from Bank Street College and the College of New Rochelle. She is a reading specialist, where she has been working at SAR Academy for over twenty years. She finds this work extremely rewarding.
She is currently living in Westchester and is married with four children.
Jesse Kornbluth
Hannah Rothstein, PHD
Hannah heard about Gabriel Project Mumbai several years ago when its director gave a presentation at her synagogue. She was bowled over by GPM's passionate commitment to bettering the lives of children and families from under-resourced communities in Maharashtra and by the organizations life-changing impact.
Hannah, who holds a Ph.D. in Organizational Psychology is Professor Emerita of Management at Baruch College. In addition to her work for GPM, she volunteers as a crisis counselor at a suicide prevention hotline and serves on the board of directors of Refa'enu, which runs support groups for individuals and families dealing with mood disorders. She lives in Manhattan.
Clarence Sundram
Born in Kalyan, Maharashtra, not far from the Kalwa District in which GPM works. Clarence grew up in Mumbai before emigrating with his family to the USA at age 16 years old.
Clarence Sundram is a lawyer who is a nationally recognized expert on conditions in institutions and community programs for persons with mental disabilities. The report he made to the Governor of New York recommended sweeping reforms in the system for prevention, reporting, investigating and responding to such incidents in New York. Governor Cuomo proposed and the legislature unanimously adopted The Protection of People with Special Needs Act, implementing the key recommendations of the report, in 2012. Clarence participated in international efforts to reform mental health services in Argentina, Armenia, Bulgaria, Hungary, Kosovo, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, Romania, Serbia, Turkey, the Russian Federation and Uruguay as a member of the Board of Disability Rights International and as a consultant to UNICEF and WHO. He has testified by invitation before both Houses of the US Congress and before legislative committees in New York, Maine, Massachusetts and Washington, DC regarding legislation dealing with abuse, neglect and exploitation. He has published numerous articles in legal and other professional journals, and is a frequent speaker at national conferences.
Jesse Ilan Kornbluth Is a documentary photographer based at the International Center of Photography in New York City. He has worked with startups and NGOs across Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, and India. He spent five years working in Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institution in Washington DC. He was a GPM volunteer in 2014 and returned to India in January 2022 on a grant from the Olam Foundation to document GPM’s work Mumbai and Mokhada (check out the album here).
Jesse earned a bachelor’s degree in anthropology with a concentration in global health at Boston University and a master’s degree in international administration at the University of Miami, where he received the Award of Academic Merit. In addition to GPM, he serves on the University of Miami College of Arts and Science's International Advisory Council and served on the advisory board of the Sundara Fund. He is an avid runner, backpacker, dog-lover, and road-tripper. His documentary photography and writing has been featured by VICE News, the Brookings Institution, Huffington Post, the ACLU, and many more. You can view his work here.
Liza Gerstein
Youth Ambassador
GPM is proud of initiating 'Youth Ambassadors" to our board. This role encourages young passionate people to be involved with the work done behind the scenes in creating impactful and development initiatives. Youth Ambassadors to the GPM Board are instilled with the love of service and the importance of working hard to make a difference.
Liza Gerstein has been advocating for the children in the slums and rural villages since her mother returned from a Jewish Leadership study mission in India. The weekend after she learned about GPM, Liza requested her friends, who were celebrating her 8th birthday, donate to help children in India. In addition to the gifts of her generous friends, Liza and her sister, Mia donated to GPM following the flooding in Mumbai during the summer of 2017. Liza has a pen pal named Monika in the Ashte Village where GPM operates. They send mail and gifts to each other and often talk live on video calls learning about each other’s lives. Liza and her friends have donated the funds to ensure that Monika can attend a boarding school as her parents migrate for work for multiple months throughout the year. Liza looks forward to meeting Monika in person one day!
Liza attends the Abraham Joshua Heschel School in New York City.
Advisory Board
Peter Geffen
Peter Geffen is the founder of The Abraham Joshua Heschel School in NYC, former Director of the Israel Experience Program for the CRB Foundation and one of the most respected Israel education specialists in the world. He has been a social activist since serving as a civil rights worker for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1965-66 and has been deeply involved in Arab-Jewish co-existence work since the early 1960's. Peter served as Executive Director of The Center for Jewish History from 2003-2005.
He has designed and conducted international travel programs for teenagers and adults since 1969 including the Kivunim summer teachers' programs that have served over 1500 participants between 1999 and 2015. Peter was the recipient of the Covenant Award in 2012, the highest recognition given to a Jewish educator. He lives in New York City with his wife Susie Kessler and has six children.
Joseph Gitler
In 2003, Joseph Gitler founded Leket Israel –The National Food Bank as a one-man volunteer operation to respond to the paradox of growing hunger and poverty in Israel on the one hand and significant food waste on the other. Today, Joseph’s operation has grown to become the only food rescue and resource organization in Israel. Leket Israel supplies surplus food and nutritional support to over 200 non-profit organizations serving more than 175,000 people in Israel weekly. Joseph has worked to expand the scope of Leket Israel’s capabilities. Today, Leket thrives with the assistance of 105 employees, 12 delivery vehicles and tens of thousands of volunteers – a direct result of Joseph’s dedication.
Caitlin Lasher
Caitlin Lasher is an energetic and enthusiastic development professional with over 5 years in the nonprofit space. Currently the Philanthropy Officer for the New York region at UNICEF USA, Caitlin advises her donors on the way they can make the greatest impact for children around the world. In addition to her role at UNICEF USA, Caitlin serves as an Associate Instructor for Columbia University and advises pro-bono for a number of NYC-based charities.
Caitlin has a MS in Nonprofit Management from Columbia University’s School of Professional Studies and a BA in Political Science from Hobart & William Smith Colleges. A New Hampshire native, Caitlin currently resides in New Haven, Connecticut.
Rachel Karlin
Rachel Karlin is a seasoned technical writer who devotes her free time to volunteer at soup kitchens, teen shelters and environmental causes. Rachel has successfully balanced her professional life in the high-tech industry with her dedication and passion for advancing social justice issues. At her current position in a multinational hi-tech company she is an ambassador for the community relations projects and strives to spread awareness about volunteering opportunities to other hi-tech employees. She has an MA from Wayne State University in Technical Communication and an MA from Bar Ilan University in Creative Writing. Recently she joined Gabriel Project Mumbai as Director of Alumni Relations and is a source of great guidance as the latest member of the Gabriel Project Mumbai Advisory Committee.
Debra Waldocks
Debra Waldoks is a lecturer at the international nutrition program at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, where she teaches Maternal & Child Nutrition, as well as Evidence Analysis in Nutrition. She prepares her students to apply their newly acquired knowledge to nutrition challenges in their home countries, often including India. She holds a Master’s Degree in Public Health from Columbia University and completed her nutrition training at Yale-New Haven Hospital. She is a US Registered Dietitian-Nutritionist.
A former New Yorker, Debra currently lives with her husband and four children in Modiin, Israel & is the founder of Checkbox Health Ltd., which helps clients reverse their health conditions (pre-diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure) and find their natural weight. She counsels clients all over the world via online coaching and her private app.
Mandie Winston
Mandie is the CEO of UJIA (UK) and brings with her more than two decades of programme and management experience strengthening Jewish communities, vulnerable populations around the world, and building ties to Israel and Israeli innovations for humanitarian ends. Previously she was the Executive Director of the JDC’s disaster response and international development arm.
Mandie holds a BA from University College London and an MSc from The New School in International Affairs with a specialisation in development economics.
Mandie is a British-born Israeli who currently lives in London with her family.
Sarah Gribetz
Former GPM Chair, Sarah Gribetz is an educator who has worked in both general and Judaic studies. Sarah has taught at the Dalton School, was one of the founding teachers at the Heschel School, was Director of Lifelong Learning at the Park Avenue Synagogue and mentored both principals and teachers in her work as an Academic Coach at CUNY. Sarah currently works as a private
educator and tutor.
Sarah has served on the board of GPM since its inception in 2012 and was the previous co-chair of the board. She was drawn to GPM because its mission aligned with her commitment to social justice based on the Jewish value of helping those in need regardless of their race, nationality, or creed. Sarah holds a B.A. in Government from Smith College, an M.A. in Education from
Stanford University and was a fellow at the Senior Educators’ Program at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. A native New Yorker, she resides on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
Aviva Fisher Rosenberg JD
Aviva has been working as a lawyer for the last 20 years, specializing in health care law. She has lived throughout the United States and made strong connection to the Jewish communal organizations in all locations. She is passionate about international health and development work. Aviva joined the GPM board after visiting our development initiatives in India.
Aviva is co-founder and co-president of Gaucher Community Alliance, a non-profit patient advocacy organization for rare disease. Through her work with the Gaucher community she is the first American to be appointed to the Board of the International Gaucher Alliance. She is past chair of the Weschler Leadership Program for Pittsburgh Jewish Federation and current chair of the Israel Scholarship Committee. She has served as GPM Board Chair and on her synagogue Board in Pittsburgh.
Aviva lives with her husband, three boys and two dogs in Squirrel Hill.
Molly Pollak
Molly Pollak fell in love with Hindi film. She traveled to India to see all the places she had seen on screen and she fell in love with India. While there, Molly visited the Gabriel Project Mumbai and fell in love with the work they are doing. Then, she went back and volunteered at the Gabriel Project school and realized that she had to do more. Molly also acted as GPM Board Chair for a few years.
Molly Pollak developed and teaches the pedagogy curriculum at Yeshivat Maharat. Molly taught English at the Dalton School, Ma’ayanot and SAR High School. She has done teacher training and mentoring at Dalton, Ma’ayanot, YCT and Drisha and Drisha’s Ha-Sha’ar program. She taught a seminar on teaching methods for the Beit Midrash fellows at SAR, and co-presented workshop on “Alternative methods of teaching Tanach.” She has done extensive work on using technology in the classroom. Molly holds a BA in English from Barnard College, a masters in English from Columbia University and is ABD from New York University.
Molly is a former GPM Board Chair.
Lenore Fogel
Lenore grew up in Atlanta, Georgia and one of her first childhood memories was watching retrospective footage of the civil rights struggles. This began her longing for the world to be a kind place for everyone. With a BA in psychology from UGA, Lenore earned her MSW from Wurzweiler School of Social Work, with a certificate in Jewish Communal Service. She lived in Israel for five years where she practiced Social Work with vulnerable populations.
While raising her five children in Stamford CT, Lenore focused on different volunteer opportunities in her community. Lenore has volunteered with SHINE and the Red Cross Children’s Hospital and currently coordinates over 100 volunteers in a literacy program at the Stamford Public Elementary Schools and she also works for the Friendship Circle of Stamford, an organization that runs programs for children with special needs. GPM has spoken to her heart since the day “I heard of the wonderful things the organization is doing”.
Micah Joseph
Mr. Micah Joseph, a prominent member of the Jewish community in Mumbai was the Director of Administration & Quality at Dr. Balabhai Nanavati Hospital, a Charitable Trust. Micah is also past Vice President of the Association of Hospitals in India and a qualified ISO and NABH Quality Auditor.
Micah is an active member of the local Jewish community in Mumbai and was honorary Chairman of the AJJDC and Chairman of the local JCC. Micah is involved in local grass root social justice organizations and active in synagogue, organizational and Jewish communal life in Mumbai.
Elise Rynhold
Elise is an experienced nonprofit, Israel programming and development professional. She worked at Taglit-birthright israel during the project's early years and later as Israel Experience, Missions and Communications Representative at the Israel office of the United Jewish Israel Appeal of Great Britain. At the UJIA, she was responsible for short and long-term Israel Experience programs, as well as donor missions and public relations. Currently, she is a fundraising manager at Orr Shalom for Children and Youth at Risk, a leading Israeli non-profit. Elise strongly believes in creating meaningful, hands-on Jewish engagements for youth and adults through the "voluntourism" community experience.
Elise has a BA in French and Spanish from Leeds University, and an MA in Specialized Translation from the University of Westminster, London. Elise was born in Manchester, UK and moved to Israel in 1998. She lives in Modiin with her family where she is active in community life.
Dr Chaim Trachman
Dr. Trachtman is the Director of Pediatric Nephrology at New York University Langone Medical Center and a Professor of Pediatrics at New York University School of Medicine. His professional memberships include the American Society of Nephrology and the Society for Pediatric Research and he serves as an ad hoc reviewer for many professional journals. He is the recipient of research grant awards, the principal investigator in numerous NIDDK- and industry-sponsored clinical studies and the author of multiple articles, chapters and abstracts. Dr. Trachtman serves on the Medical Advisory Board of the National Kidney Foundation serving Greater New York and is a Fellow of the National Kidney Foundation.
Dr Jack Zeller
Dr Jack A Zeller is retired Pathologist and former director of Laboratories at the Washington DC Veterans Administration hospital center. Dr Zeller is the founder and Past President of Kulanu Inc which is a Jewish large volunteer organization dedicated to supporting emerging and forgotten Jewish communities. Now living in Israel, Dr Zeller was a long standing member of the social action committee of his synagogue at Tifereth Israel in Washington DC. Dr Zeller remains actively involved in Kulanu which works almost exclusively in third world countries. Both Dr Zeller and his wife Dr Diane Zeller became board members of the American Association for Ethiopian Jews in 1985 prior to originating Kulanu in 1993.
Jeffrey Loewenthal
A GPM board member for several years, Jeffrey is a dual Israeli/US citizen, currently residing in Denver, CO with his wife and 4 children. Mr. Loewenthal is a serial entrepreneur who has worked with several start-ups as well as consulted for more established organizations.
Mr. Loewenthal is a Founding Board Member of PORAT (People for Orthodox Renaissance And Torah) and is also Chairman of the Board of his own companies that operate BrightStar Care and Meineke Franchises.
Avner De-Shalit
Professor Avner de-Shalit was a member of Kibbutz Samar in the Aravah Valley until age 27 and worked in agriculture and music, after which he earned his B.A. from the Hebrew University’s Political Science department. He received his Doctorate from Oxford University (1990). He was chair of the Political Science department, was one of the founders of the Political Science Philosophy and Economics (PPE) program at the Hebrew University, and served as the head of the program for two years, and served as Dean of the Faculty for Social Sciences.
From 2012-2015 Avner was the head of the Glocal International Development Program at Hebrew University. He is a recipient of the Rothschild Prize for Social Sciences (2014) and winner of the ‘Best political theory paper in the Journal of Politics’ for 2015-2016. His most recently published books include “The Spirit of the Cities” (with Daniel Bell) published by Princeton University Press and “Disadvantage” (with John Wolf) published by the Oxford University Press.
Ari Marder
Former GPM Board Member, Ari fell in love with India and international development work while teaching with Gabriel Project Mumbai in the summer of 2016. His later experiences in international development (including social impact evaluation for a Ghanian NGO) reinforced that passion, as well as a belief in GPM's holistic approach to empowering those living in extreme poverty. Now professionally focused on environmental sustainability, Ari is thrilled to support GPM and its important work by serving on the board's partnerships committee.
Ari is Commercial Manager at BeZero Carbon and cofounder of the OpenAir Collective, a volunteer organization using research and policy to grow the carbon removal industry. He previously served as Vice President of Business Development at Formation Health and Head of Carbon Removals at Antenna Group, and he has spoken at conferences around the world. Ari was a finalist for the 2018 Leonard & Tobee Kaplan Award for International Development and Global Service, received the 2017 Steven Gladstein Memorial Award for Service to the Jewish People, and has been awarded three U.S. President's Volunteer Service gold medals from the U.S. Government. He graduated Magna Cum Laude from Yeshiva University with a B.A. in psychology (minors in business and theater) and an A.A. in Judaic Studies.
Scott Miller
GPM appeals to Scott as a true practical expression of making the world a better place. After working in the field of Holocaust memory for 30 years he was aware of the historical import and potent power of personal stories, and knew there were inspiring stories in India waiting to be told as well. He sees GPM as a vehicle for bringing these stories to light.
Scott was a founding staff member at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, where he worked for 30 years, and is the co-author (with Sarah Ogilvie) of Refuge Denied – The St. Louis Passengers and the Holocaust. Scott managed the Holocaust Museum’s Rescue the Evidence initiative and was appointed as the Director of the Benjamin and Vladka Meed Registry of Holocaust Survivors. In 2006, Scott became the Director of Curatorial Affairs. In addition to Refuge Denied – The St. Louis Passengers and the Holocaust, publications include “Teaching About Denial of the Holocaust,” in Journal of Social Education, and, co-edited with Randolph Braham The Nazis’ Last Victims: The Holocaust in Hungary.
Scott has an MA in Jewish History from the Jewish Theological Seminary, did extensive graduate course work at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and has a BA in History from Columbia University. Scott is a native New Yorker; currently lives in Washington, DC.
Robert Krieger
Robert is counsel at BlockTower Capital Advisors LP. Before moving to Florida, Robert was an attorney at Lowenstein Sandler LLP. His extensive practice focuses primarily on mergers and acquisitions, capital markets transactions, private equity investments, investment fund formations, restructurings, and bankruptcies.
In addition to his tax practice, Robert also advises various non-profit clients on issues relating to obtaining and maintaining tax-exempt status. While in college, Robert spent a summer volunteering with the Jaffa Institute in Israel, a non-profit, multi-service social agency formed to assist the city of Jaffa's severely disadvantaged children and their families.
Robert has a BA in International Trade and Geography from the University at Buffalo, and a JD from Fordham University's School of Law. Robert was born and raised in New York. Above all, Robert is passionate about ensuring that all children have access to adequate nutrition, healthcare, and education.
Rachelle and Alan Laytner
Alan and Rachelle are inspired by the work of GPM - of giving back to vulnerable communities through providing access to quality education, healthcare and nutrition to young people in India.
Rachelle serves as the Chief Financial Officer and Director of Human Resources for Mélange Home and Laytner’s Linen & Home, a retail store founded by Alan’s parents sixty years ago on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. She holds a BA from Barnard College and a Master’s of Museum Education from Bank Street.
Alan is the CEO of Mélange Home and Laytner’s Linen & Home. He serves on the boards of Dorot and the Hebrew Free Loan Society and he holds a BFA from City College and attended Columbia University for a Master of Fine Arts. Additionally, Alan has worked extensively in India over the past twenty years, sourcing textiles for his New York based importing company Mélange Home.
They live on the Upper West Side of Manhattan and enjoy spending time with Rachelle’s parents, their three daughters and grandson.
Moshe Sheck
Moshe Shek, the founder of the famous "Moshe's" cafe-restaurant chain in India, has generously opened his teaching kitchen school, 'A World Away', to the women of the GPM women's empowerment group. Mr. Shek and his staff gave cooking lessons to the sixteen women from Kalwa who produce and deliver hundreds of meals to children in school every day, in order to help them improve their techniques and learn from one of the most successful chefs in the country.
Moshe was a contributor in the Gabriel Project Mumbai cookbook, Masala Mamas. Moshe became an entrepreneur after gaining experience at Mumbai’s Taj Mahal hotel & the Tel Aviv Hilton. In 2017, Moshe opened his state-of-the-art kitchen and an organic garden at Alibaug, India. Moshe’s next project is bringing back the Jews of India, focusing on Jewish peoplehood and the upkeep of Jewish establishment.
Fern Penn
Fern owned a boutique in New York City called Rosebud where she exclusively sold Israeli designer clothing and contemporary objects in Soho from 2003 to 2013 then Madison Avenue from 2013 to 2018. She went on to lead Rosebud fashion tours in Israel and Rosebud food tours in Crown Heights in Brooklyn, NY. Before owning her own business, Fern was a buyer at Macy's then at Associated Dry Goods where she was also a merchandise manager for the designer fashion department. For many years, she volunteered at the Conservative Synagogue of Fifth Avenue where her family are members.
Fern was born in Queens, NY and studied at the Fashion Institute of Technology. Fern, her husband and son all live in Greenwich Village.
Carmi Abramowitz
Carmi Abramowitz was on the GPM Board from its inception in 2012 till the end of 2020 and is a senior project manager with over 20 years of experience in the pharmaceutical industry, software development, and engineering. His has worked on large projects with Fortune 50 companies such as Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson, as well as projects with other organizations. Carmi holds a BA in Psychology and BS in Mechanical Engineering from Columbia University.
Over the years Carmi has been involved in helping to promote various causes ranging from the Chazon Yeshaya soup kitchens and vocational training programs in Israel, to Soviet Jewry, to lobbying senators and representatives in the USA. For the past 5 years Carmi has served on the Board of Education at Yavneh Academy in Paramus, NJ, where he has headed the Hebrew language committee. He is a member of the Youth Committee at his local synagogue, and resides with his family in the United States in Bergenfield, NJ.
An advocate of the "Tipping Point" philosophy, Carmi believes that small changes can have a big impact.
Adrian Sackson
Adrian Sackson has been involved in a number of international volunteer programs in a variety of capacities. In 2009-2010, Adrian lived in India, where he volunteered for a local grass-roots human rights organisation in the state of Gujarat. Adrian has also worked as a group leader for short-term educational volunteer programs in Ghana, Mexico, El Salvador, and Guatemala. His first international volunteer experience was as an English teacher in Vietnam. Adrian served on the GPM board for a few years.
Born and raised in Melbourne, Australia, Adrian received his B.A. in philosophy and Judaic studies at Monash University. After moving to Israel in 2005, Adrian worked for three years as an educator at the Institute for Youth Leaders from Abroad in Jerusalem. He holds an M.A. in Jewish philosophy from Tel Aviv University, and has studied at a variety of institutions, including the Shalom Hartman Institute, the Pardes Institute, and Yeshivat Ma'aleh Gilboa. Adrian speaks a little Hindi and Gujarati, and is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Jewish philosophy at New York University.
Dr. Shlomi Ravid
Shlomi strongly believes that every Jew today should embrace a project of Tikkun Olam that expresses our commitment to all of human kind. To Shlomi, GPM is a current expression of Jewish destiny.
Shlomi is the founding director of the Center for Jewish Peoplehood Education, an organization dedicated to exploring the meaning of Jewish Peoplehood today and to nurturing Jewish collective consciousness. It is the culmination of over thirty years of working with Jewish communities throughout the world. His PhD is from Tel Aviv University and focused on the relations between norms and values in social systems. Shlomi live on Kibbutz Glil-Yam with his wife Linda, their four children, and two grandchildren.
Aviva Fisher Rosenberg JD
Aviva has been working as a lawyer for the last 20 years, specializing in health care law. She has lived throughout the United States and made strong connection to the Jewish communal organizations in all locations. She is passionate about international health and development work. Aviva joined the GPM board after visiting our development initiatives in India.
Aviva is co-founder and co-president of Gaucher Community Alliance, a non-profit patient advocacy organization for rare disease. Through her work with the Gaucher community she is the first American to be appointed to the Board of the International Gaucher Alliance. She is past chair of the Weschler Leadership Program for Pittsburgh Jewish Federation and current chair of the Israel Scholarship Committee. She has served as GPM Board Chair and on her synagogue Board in Pittsburgh.
Aviva lives with her husband, three boys and two dogs in Squirrel Hill.
Gladys Delman Teitel
In January 2014, Gladys traveled to India with her oldest daughter and husband to celebrate her daughter's Bat Mitzvah. While there, they volunteered with GPM as part of the trip and came home inspired by GPM's life changing work. Since then, Gladys and her husband have travelled to India twice, and volunteered with GPM. Since Gladys' maternal family hails from the Bene Israel Jewish community of Mumbai, these trips have been a very special chance to explore family roots in India with her children. It has also been so meaningful to be involved with the life changing work that GPM is doing in Kalwa and the villages.
Gladys is a graduate of Brandeis University with a BA in Islamic/Middle Eastern Studies and Journalism. She is also a graduate of Touro Law Center. As a law student, Gladys spent three summers in India, studying International Human Rights Law. Traveling throughout Southeast Asia, Gladys has seen first hand the immense challenges that children face in India's slums and is honored to join with GPM. Gladys lives in Stamford, CT with her husband and four children.
Bradley Cohen
Having completed a Philosophy Degree at the University of Manchester, UK, where he focused largely on the Indian Philosophy modules, All for the Kids Founder and Director, Bradley Cohen, lived in Asia for 6 years, including a year in India and Nepal. He spent much time volunteering in orphanages, most prominently in Bihar – India’s poorest state. He knows the local culture and has close contacts with local people running social justice projects.
Bradley volunteered in an orphanage in Malawi, Africa and has raised money and awareness for children’s charities in Africa and Israel. Bradley has experience running volunteer service programs in the developing world. He lives in Jerusalem with his family.
Naomi Ackerman
Naomi Ackerman is an experienced actress, consultant, and facilitator. She creates curriculums that use drama techniques to deal with social, gender, and educational issues, as well as exploring identity and promoting tolerance and dialogue between diverse participants. She is the Founder and Executive Director of The Advot Project uses theater for transformation, and works with disadvantaged youth to explore healthy relationships, improve communication skills, nurture personal growth, improve their self-esteem, and transform their lives for the better.
Naomi served two years in the Israeli Defense Forces and received a BA in Education and Theatre from Hebrew University, as well as a Special-Ed Teaching Credential from the David Yellin Teachers Seminar. She has participated in various multinational theater productions. She is a founding member of “View Points” – an Arab-Jewish dialogue theater produced by the Shimon Peres Center for Peace. Naomi wrote, directed, and performs the acclaimed one-woman show “Flowers Aren’t Enough,” which deals with the issue of domestic violence, and has been featured over 1,900 times globally, including at the United Nations’ Commission for the Status of Woman (CSW). Naomi is a recipient of the KCET-Link Local Hero 2014 Award, the 2016 International Woman Achievers Community leadership award, and the 2018 Covenant Award.
Shulie Madnick
Shulie Madnick was born in Jerusalem and grew up in Ashdod to Bene Israeli Indian Jewish parents from Mumbai. She traveled to India in 2016 to explore her Indian Jewish heritage. Shulie is a professional journalist, food and travel writer, speaker, cooking teacher and photographer. She writes about food, culture, and history. Shulie has been published in The Washington Post, The Forward, Haaretz, The Washington Jewish Week, Asian Jewish Life, and more. Some of Shulie's articles were syndicated in The Chicago Tribune and other national and local newspapers. She launched the podcast "Beyond the Bagel," and her collection of Jewish India photography is in the Beit Hatfutzot library archives in Tel Aviv.
Shulie was introduced to the Gabriel Project Mumbai through the JDC and JDC Entwine. She witnessed firsthand the dire socio-economic injustices endured by the population in the slums and villages and the urgent need to provide any aid and relief possible. The fact that the kids living in the slums and in poverty in India have no access to education during the pandemic is inconceivable and unconscionable. Shulie believes in what the Gabriel Project Mumbai is doing to support these children's educational and health needs, short and long term. Shulie lives with her husband, Jonathan, just outside DC.