Make your tax-deductible contributions by Dec 31 ⏰

Daffy

Jewish United Fund Of Chicago

Jewish United Fund Of Chicago

Chicago, IL 60606
Tax ID36-2167034

Want to make a donation using Daffy?

Lower your income taxes with a charitable deduction this year when you donate to this non-profit via Daffy.

Payment method

Frequency

Amount

$USD
Daffy covers all ACH transaction fees so 100% of your donation goes to your favorite charities.

Do you work for Jewish United Fund Of Chicago? Learn more here.

By donating on this page you are making an irrevocable contribution to Daffy Charitable Fund, a 501(c)(3) public charity, and a subsequent donation recommendation to the charity listed above, subject to our Member Agreement. Contributions are generally eligible for a charitable tax-deduction and a yearly consolidated receipt will be provided by Daffy. Processing fees may be applied and will reduce the value available to send to the end charity. The recipient organizations have not provided permission for this listing and have not reviewed the content.
Donations to organizations are distributed as soon as the donation is approved and the funds are available. In the rare event that Daffy is unable to fulfill the donation request to this charity, you will be notified and given the opportunity to choose another charity. This may occur if the charity is unresponsive or if the charity is no longer in good standing with regulatory authorities.

About this organization

Revenue

$115,511,637

Expenses

$106,258,445

Website

juf.org

Mission

JUF amplifies our collective strength to make the world a better place — for everyone. Community powered, we consider the totality of local and global Jewish needs and how to address them. From generation to generation, we help people connect to Jewish life and values, fueling a dynamic, enduring community that comes together for good. As a member of the greater Chicago community, JUF also participates in the wider civic arena of addressing general community needs and problem solving for people of all faiths.

About

Allocations (Local) - The Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago (JUF) conducts fundraising activities by means of annual calendar year campaigns and makes allocations to Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago (JF) and Jewish Federations of North America (JFNA). Through its allocation to JF, JUF supports various nonprofit organizations in the Chicago area that provide assistance to people of all faiths, including hot meals and groceries, utility and rent assistance, prescriptions and medical care for impoverished families; job training and placement for people who are out of work; multi-faceted, specialized support services for people with disabilities; support services for Holocaust survivors; assisted living, specialized Alzheimer's care and transportation for seniors; respite services for caregivers of frail seniors and people with disabilities; counseling, prevention and intervention services for troubled teens; and an entire continuum of prevention and therapeutic services for individuals and families in crisis.Because the Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago and the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago are so closely linked in numerous ways (combined Board of Directors, shared professional staff, shared office space, etc.), and because JUF provides an annual, multi-million dollar allocation to the Jewish Federation, we measure and report our program and service results jointly for the combined JUF/Federation enterprise, which are summarized below:2018 IMPACT: PROVIDING HUMAN SERVICESLocal- 584,744 meals, food bags and grocery cards were delivered to needy local Jews. - 5,747 households received $7.45 million in emergency financial aid to pay for housing, healthcare and other critical needs - a 25% increase in dollars and a 7% increase in the number of people helped over 2017.- 2,000 Holocaust survivors maximized their independence through in-home services, emergency financial assistance, group support, advocacy and socialization.- 2,256 people with disabilities received intensive, holistic support.- 1,749 workers benefited from job placement services, including 503 workers who secured paid jobs.- 39,935 individuals received free or highly-subsidized mental and physical healthcare.- 384 low-income families received free or subsidized legal assistance.- 30,403 Jews from across the world began new lives of freedom in Israel.- 17,849 new olim were assisted with absorption services: job preparation & placement, language skills, housing and socialization to help them integrate into Israeli society.- 6,500 disadvantaged Israeli youth in Kiryat Gat-Lachish-Shafir were immersed in holistic enrichment and educational programming designed to close the socioeconomic gap and ensure their future success. - 87,842 impoverished elderly throughout the countries of the former Soviet Union received food, medicine and heating fuel to sustain them. 2018 IMPACT: CULTIVATING JEWISH LEARNING, IDENTITY, & CONNECTION- 15,897 children and youth engaged in Jewish learning and built stronger Jewish identities through formal and informal Jewish educational experiences.- 3,189 (73%) of Jewish day school students received scholarships and/or tuition assistance. - 1,159 children received nearly $800,000 in Jewish summer camp scholarships.- 972 children received $1.5 million in financial assistance or subsidies for Jewish early childhood educational experiences.- 9,952 families with young children received free, monthly Jewish books and music through JUF's PJ Library and PJ Our Way programs.- 3,400 teens connected to community through JUF-supported programs focused on engaging the next generation.- 1,813 Jewish young adults went on free trips to Israel courtesy of JUF Birthright Israel, strengthening their connection to the Jewish homeland.- 851 youth and young adults received JUF-supported scholarships that helped them afford pivotal educational experiences in Israel.- 58 college students participated in interfaith leadership trips to Israel. - 150 students participated in Onward Israel internships over the summer.- 58 participants from area high schools engaged in Write-On for Israel, an intensive, two-year Israel advocacy training program for upperclassmen. - 500 teens studied Hebrew at Chicago-area public high schools - the most of any city in the nation.- 7,800 students and community members participated in pro-Israel college events and Israel advocacy programs through JUF's Israel Education Center and Hillel.- 6,575 college students participated in Jewish life on Illinois campuses.- 4,600 young adults attended JUF-sponsored education, advocacy, fundraising and outreach events, setting them on the path to Jewish involvement.- 950 Russian-speaking young professionals and 376 young families were engaged in 111 customized Jewish projects, programs or events to connect with each other, the broader Jewish community, and their own Jewish identity.- 10,136 Jews of all ages volunteered through JUF's TOV Volunteer Network, other JUF programs and throughout our network of Jewish communal agencies - for a total of 143,214 volunteer hours of hands-on assistance from serving meals to people in need to tutoring at-risk children. - 96,000 visitors came to Oy!Chicago, the outreach blog for local 20- to 30-somethings.

Interesting data from their 2020 990 filing

The purpose of the non-profit is outlined in the filing as “Juf provides critical resources that bring food, refuge, health care, education and emergency assistance to over 500,000 chicagoans of all faiths and millions of jews in israel and around the world, funding a network of nearly 70 agencies and programs.”.

When discussing its operations, they were defined as: “Juf is the chicago jewish community's central philanthropy, funding wide-ranging services.”.

  • The state where the non-profit operates has been legally reported as IL.
  • The filing indicates that the non-profit's address in 2020 is located at 30 South Wells No 4049, Chicago, IL, 60606.
  • The non-profit has reported 611 employees on their form as of 2020.
  • Is not a private foundation.
  • Expenses are greater than $1,000,000.
  • Revenue is greater than $1,000,000.
  • Revenue less expenses is $9,253,192.
  • The organization has 88 independent voting members.
  • The organization was formed in 1949.
  • The organization pays $13,787,716 in salary, compensation, and benefits to its employees.
  • The organization pays $8,002,799 in fundraising expenses.