United States
Jewish summer camps began near the end of the 19th century, when the Jewish population in the United States increased via immigration. It was a way for Jewish children of Eastern European immigrants to assimilate and "Americanize" at a time when summer camps excluded Jews from their ranks, as well as a way to allow children living in the city to experience the countryside.[1][3][4] The first Jewish summer camp, Camp Lehman, was founded in 1893 in New York.[4] Another early camp, Surprise Lake Camp, was founded in 1902, aimed towards "lower-income boys from Manhattan’s Lower East Side".[4] Early camps primarily had ties to socialist, Yiddish, or Zionist Jewish organizations.[4]
Most of the early camps also catered primarily to boys; but the Young women's hebrew association was running summer camps by 1925.[5]
After the Second World War the number of Jewish camps in the U.S. expanded as a way to preserve Jewish culture.[1][4] This period also saw the founding of camps tied to the Reform and Conservative movements.[3][4] Some camps, such as Camp Hemshekh, were founded specifically for the children of Holocaust survivors.[2]
Many Jewish summer camps began observing Tisha B'Av, a Jewish fast day that falls in the American summer, which had largely "fallen into obscurity among American Jews". Some camps used the day to reinforce the need for the state of Israel, while others used it to focus on past tragedies, such as the Holocaust, or on acts of charity.[1][2][6]
The 2010s and 2020s have seen the creation of specialized Jewish summer camp programs, for groups such as adults[7] and LGBT children.[8]
Outside the United States
American-style Jewish summer camps can also be found in other countries, such as Camp Kimama in Israel.[2] Notably, a Jewish summer camp in southern France, MahaNetzer, was founded in the mid-2010s and draws from American and Israeli influences.[9]
In Glämsta on the Swedish island of Björkö, a Jewish summer camp has been operating since 1909, initially only for children from impoverished homes.[10][11]