Giving Back Magazine October 2018 | Page 11

A n iconic photograph in Michael Jeser’s childhood home is one with him, his parents, and his two brothers in front of a sign that reads “We Are One.” Hard as one might look, you will not actually find Jeser in the picture taken during an historic 1975 mission to Israel that drew more than 1,000 participants. That is because he was not yet born. Needing roughly three months longer before his birth, Jeser says, “My coming into this world is part of the Jewish story. I was coming in as part of a family – not just a nuclear family, but one that expands across the US and thousands of miles across the ocean.” This was the prologue to a story that Jeser says unconsciously set the stage to connecting within the greater Jewish community. The latest chapter finds the 42-year-old named as the Chief Executive Officer of the Jewish Federation of San Diego County, which identifies and addresses the Jewish community’s most critical needs. The path that began atop Masada, the ancient fortress in Israel, was nurtured by Jeser’s parents who were highly engaged in Jewish life. His father was a Jewish Federation executive in Maine and Florida, and his mother, a music teacher at the Jewish Community Center (JCC) and later in reform, conservative as well as Orthodox Day Schools around the country. The couple nurtured their son’s Jewish identity through Jewish camps, JCC programs and Jewish education. As an adult, Jeser chose his own path, parlaying his childhood experiences into a career as a Jewish communal professional at summer camps, the JCC, and Hillel (the Jewish college campus organization). He had his sights set on becoming a Jewish camp director; however, he turned his attention to fundraising while serving as a field intern at the Jewish Federation in Los Angeles during graduate school. “I did not realize I would fall in love with fundraising and working within the Federation system,” Jeser shared with Giving Back Magazine. “I love fundraising strategy – enabling, empowering, and equipping others to do the important work that needs to be done.” Now married and the father of a 21-month-old daughter, Jeser’s primary motivation is to take dollars raised and put them to the best use in the community. “I have the opportunity,” he says, “to bring community partners together. Federation is the connector, but not the parent. An organization is most effective when people feel equal.” Jeser looks forward to wrestling with challenges that come with addressing the needs of people in various ages and stages of life and regardless of their affiliation with religious practice. “As a CEO, a lot of the work is about raising money, but not for the thrill of closing a gift,” he explains. “I love the transformation that takes place in getting someone to give for the first time. I get to see donors light up when I have conversations with them or when they are able to stretch their gift. It is about the process of philanthropy. I see donors moved by their peers who give because they are motivated by a value system that compels them to do so.” www.jewishinsandiego.org OCTOBER 2018 | GBSAN.COM 11