Joy Sisisky, new Federation CEO, will be 2nd woman leader in org’s history – The Jewish News of Northern California

Posted By on June 14, 2022

The S.F.-based Jewish Community Federation and Endowment Fund board didnt have to look far to find a leader to take the helm of the organization. The board this week voted unanimously to name current interim CEO Joy Sisisky as the Federations new CEO, effective July 1.

Joy personifies the very best of the next generation of Jewish leaders, Federation board chair Arthur Slepian told J. She is a strong, strategic thinker, she works with great professionalism and competence, [and she] is an outstanding communicator and relationship builder who brings out the very best in the people around her.

Im so excited and really honored, said Sisisky, 46, who previously served as chief philanthropy officer for the Endowment Fund before becoming interim CEO in January after the departure of Danny Grossman. Theres a lot of work ahead of us, but Im up to the challenge.

The challenges are many, among them the pandemics ongoing impact, roiling social issues and increasingly visible antisemitism. Yet Sisisky remains bullish about the Bay Area Jewish community, its institutions and its robust philanthropic culture.

We continue to steward well in excess of $2 billion, Sisisky said, referring to the combined Jewish philanthropic capital of the Federation and Endowment Fund. It provides grants and other support to Jewish agencies, camps, schools and institutions locally covering the North Bay, East Bay, Peninsula and San Francisco and in Israel. The Endowment Fund facilitates over $150 million in grants [annually] that are donor recommended, she said. This year to date, weve already made 10,000 grants to 3,000 organizations.

A native of Virginia, Sisisky grew up steeped in Jewish life. She earned a B.A. from Brandeis University in Near East and Judaic studies and politics, and two masters degrees, including one in Jewish communal service from Hebrew Union CollegeJewish Institute of Religion in Los Angeles.

After a stint at AIPAC, Sisisky became a fellow with the Joint Distribution Committees Ralph I. Goldman Fellowship in International Jewish Communal Service, living and working in Ukraine and Ethiopia. She also worked for the Jewish Federations of North America running the Lion of Judah endowment. Before moving west to join the S.F.-based Federation, she served for eight years as executive director of the Jewish Womens Foundation of New York, which funds efforts to empower women and girls in New York, Israel and around the world.

Sisisky is the second woman to head the S.F. Federation after Jennifer Gorovitz, who served as CEO from 2009 to 2014. Only five women have been named CEO of comparably large federations in North America, a fact not lost on Sisisky, for whom womens issues are paramount.

It has always been a priority for me, she said. I am totally committed to diversity, equity and belonging. We have a commitment to advancing marginalized communities through [Federation] programming and giving opportunities, so its not a surprise that our Federation cares so deeply about the advancement of women. It doesnt just happen because you wish it to.

Board chair Slepian has known Sisisky since she joined the organization in 2016, and has been impressed by her abilities.

[Our] endowment and philanthropic work has been reinvented and remade under her leadership, he said. In the middle of all this we had the Ukraine crisis emerge. She stepped forward and led our community with compassion, insight and knowledge in ways others couldnt. It speaks to the breadth of the experience shes had in her career.

Since the Russian invasion on Feb. 24, the Federations Ukraine Emergency Fund has raised more than $3.3 million from nearly 1,500 donors. In addition, this past March, Sisisky and Slepian joined a contingent of other North American federation leaders on a mission to the Poland-Ukraine border.

There was no waiting around, she said of taking that trip. Our Federations historic partnership with global Jewish communities and the Joint Distribution Committee allowed us to welcome Jewish and non-Jewish [Ukrainian] refugees with compassion and open arms. My own family was from Ukraine, from the same city I lived in, Dnipro. I worked in the Jewish community in Donetsk and Donbas region, so its devastating to watch [the war there] unfold.

Back at home, she is gratified the Federation managed to flourish through more than two years of the pandemic. Even with rising inflation sending shock waves throughout the economy, Sisisky said giving from both the Federation itself and the donor-advised funds it manages have increased.

Expanding philanthropic innovations, such as giving circles (which allow people even of modest means to become philanthropists), remain a cornerstone of the Federations approach.

When the community is inspired they can do great things together, she said. Were not a bank. We want to put those assets to good use in the community. Like anybody in this business, [donors] pay attention to markets, and when theyre down, they still give, because they know the community may be in distress.

Sisisky and her husband, Jonathan Salky, live in San Francisco and have two young children.

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Joy Sisisky, new Federation CEO, will be 2nd woman leader in org's history - The Jewish News of Northern California

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