No more FOMO or longing for the good old days. There’s a summer sleepaway camp for Jewish adults.

October 26, 2023
Posted in Lifestyle, News
October 26, 2023 jason

Written By Emma Glassman-Hughes  Boston Globe Staff
Full Article Here

Carine Warsawski first went to sleepaway camp at 13. Her age made her an “elder” in the girls’ bunks, but, it being her first summer, the title came with little distinction. The other girls navigated the unspoken codes of camp with ease, sporting matching Baby-G watches and Tiffany bean bracelets — only the hottest bat mitzvah gifts for tri-state tweens. But until that summer, sleepaway camp had been a foreign concept to Warsawski and her Peruvian-Israeli parents. She was an obvious outsider. But she caught on quickly.

Before long, she was trading Steve Madden platform sandals and Delia’s catalog clothes with the best of them. She learned that even though camp staff says to wear all white for Shabbat dinner, most kids don’t. And she established herself as a leader, organizing “singles nights” on the soccer field at 3 a.m. — be there or be square.

“It felt like this amazing place of freedom,” she said in a recent Zoom call. “But also people who Got It, like, capital G, capital I. You just felt your bunk was your family and your counselors were the coolest people in the world. I totally drank the Kool-Aid.”

That was at Eisner Camp in Great Barrington, on the same leafy campus where she now runs two annual sessions of Trybal, her own four-day Jewish sleepaway camp. Except hers is for adults. Trybal brings millennials together to experience the golden days of childhood summer camp all year long, powered by a potent mix of nostalgia and Jewish community spirit. She also has summer sessions in California and Wisconsin, and is rolling out a new slate of year-round programming in Boston this October.

Though attendees range in age from their mid-20s to late 30s, Trybal itineraries have more than a little childlike influence. Summer campers choose from close to 50 electives like human foosball, friendship bracelet–making, zip-line paintball, and archery tie-dye. Year-round events include the annual “erev Xmas Eve” dinner at Kowloon and a ski trip in Vermont. The most adult thing about Trybal is the alcohol: Summer campers can break from rounds of slip-n-slide kickball to attend an Ashkenazi mixology workshop or sip from Bubbe’s Beer Garden. Last fall, Trybal organized a Shabbat-inspired “kiddush crawl” that involved a wine tasting (wine), Dunkin’ munchkins (bread), and glow sticks (candles). Just as the Torah intended.

And though adult summer camps have spiked in popularity, Trybal claims to be one of few “socially Jewish” experiences. Before founding Trybal in 2017, Boston native Warsawski worked in Israel travel. She surveyed Birthright alumni, who would often return from their trips “super energized with their Hamsa necklaces” (she pointed to the little opal hand pendant hanging from her own neck) “but after three months start to assimilate back into their everyday pattern,” she said. “I wanted to find a way to sustain that energy and make people feel connected to their Jewish roots close to home.”

Since then, Warsawski has not stopped collecting data about her campers. From various surveys, she’s determined 67 percent of summer attendees identify as “reform or culturally Jewish”; 50 percent are now Trybal alumni returning for another season; and 70 percent of first-timers come not knowing anyone else. She’s also categorized the Trybal community into four subgroups: “Nostalgics,” “Do-overs,” “FOMOs,” and “Tagalongs.” Nostalgics want to re-create their camp days of yore. Do-overs are the “Hebrew school dropouts.” FOMOs never got to experience camp in the first place. And Tagalongs are the “I’ll go if you go” crowd.

Sumner Lewis, who described herself as a “nostalgic-do-over hybrid” in a recent phone call, attended her first Trybal camp this August. The Manhattan–based musical theater performer and climate action organizer adored camp as a kid. When she outgrew it, she went to work for two summers as a counselor at Eisner. Still, to take the Trybal plunge, she needed some convincing.

Lewis, 24, identifies as a Jew of color, and said some Jewish spaces leave her feeling “burnt out” doing “constant advocacy for myself and my sub-community.” But Trybal reminded her of the magic of a healthy Jewish community. “This is my culture and my heritage, these songs are the songs that inspired me to become a musical theater performer, and [being Jewish] is an intrinsic part of who I am,” she said.