Gifts
We appreciate all kinds of gifts: monetary, material, time, or donations made in our honor. We’ve included suggestions below to eliminate some of the guesswork. Our address is 139A Morewood Ave., Pittsburgh, PA 15213-1190.
Gift Registries
- Click here to view our alternative registry at wishpot.com. There are all sorts of things we’ll need for our new home and our lives together that cannot be found at one store. So we have collected them all onto one site. They range from subscriptions, to Judaica, to Etsy items, to electronics, to towels, to kitchen items. Many leave ample space for your creativity!
- Click here to view our registry at Williams-Sonoma. We have selected all sorts of things to outfit our kitchen in Pittsburgh. We’ve discovered in Switzerland that we really like to cook and bake. And eat. But we left our pots and pans in Switzerland.
- Click here to view our registry at CBL Fine Art. CBL has the nicest Judaica selection around, and we’ve picked out a few pieces from them. Since they are a local business, it is easiest for them if you call the store at 973-736-7776 rather than purchasing the gifts online.
Donations
- Click here to donate to Garden State Equality, a New Jersey organization fighting for the freedom to marry for all couples. We are so lucky to be able to get married; we wish the same for all our friends. The online form has a place where you can note whom the gift is in honor of and enter our email or address so we will be informed. (Don’t know our email or address? Contact us)
- Click here to donate to American Jewish World Service. Please follow that link, so we will be notified and will be able to thank you! Seth went on an AJWS alternative spring break to Guatamala and organized one to Mexico. AJWS supports all kinds of grassroots organizations outside the United States. It embodies the kind of Jewish and human rights work that Jackie spends a lot of time thinking about.
- Click here to donate to the National Yiddish Book Center. Jackie studied Yiddish at Harvard, and we both studied Yiddish in Paris. In Switzerland, we belonged to a small Yiddish circle in Lausanne, and our teacher used many resources from the National Yiddish Book Center, a remarkable organization in Western Massachusetts that has saved one million volumes of Jewish books.