The 12th Oklahoma Jewish Film Festival
By: Value News | Category: In Our Communities | Issue: March 2026
The 12th edition of the Oklahoma Jewish Film Festival returns to the Circle Cinema, Sunday, March 22 – Sunday, March 29, 2026.
By: Value News | Category: In Our Communities | Issue: March 2026
The 12th edition of the Oklahoma Jewish Film Festival returns to the Circle Cinema, Sunday, March 22 – Sunday, March 29, 2026.
By: Value News | Category: In Our Communities | Issue: February 2026
On Sunday, March 1, the Tulsa Oilers and Jewish Tulsa (formerly the Jewish Federation of Tulsa) will make history with the city’s first-ever Jewish Heritage Game, an unprecedented celebration of Jewish culture, community, and connection at the BOK Center.
By: Value News | Category: In Our Communities | Issue: November 2025
The Jewish Federation of Tulsa and The University of Tulsa present Still Neighbors: Holding Relationship in a Fractured World on Thursday, November 20 at 7 pm at Lorton Hall on the TU Campus.
By: Value News | Category: In Our Communities | Issue: October 2025
As Seen Through These Eyes, narrated by Maya Angelou, Sunday, November 2 at 3 pm at the Circle Cinema. The film is free and open to all.
By: Value News | Category: In Our Communities | Issue: October 2025
The Jewish Federation of Tulsa Council for Holocaust Education presents the annual Kristallnacht Commemoration entitled Music Against All Odds. The many facets of Kristallnacht, the night of broken glass, provide myriad perspectives, and the program this year turns the focus to music.
By: Aarika Copeland | Category: In Our Communities | Issue: April 2025
It is estimated that out of nine million Jews under Nazi domination, tens of thousands were rescued during the Holocaust by non-Jewish people. Many rescuers acted out of a sense of altruism, some acted out of deeply held religious beliefs or moral codes, while others acted in the spur of the moment.
By: Value News | Category: In Our Communities | Issue: December 2024
Jewish, non-Jewish, elected officials and interfaith leaders gathered in the Barbara and Dave Sylvan Auditorium on the Zarrow Campus to listen to Sagi’s terrifying first-hand account of the minute-by-minute actions he took to save the lives of himself and his former girlfriend. I
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