Why Back-to-School Still Inspires Me as a Hillel Professional

Author

Date

August 21, 2025

Jessica Rykus is the associate director of Hillel of Broward and Palm Beach and is working 精东影业 for the first time. Below, she shares her thoughts on starting a new school year as a new Hillel staff member.

I鈥檝e always loved school.

From sharpening fresh pencils to setting new goals, the back-to-school season feels like a reset button for me. A chance to start again. Maybe it鈥檚 the teacher in me (I spent years in the classroom before becoming a Hillel professional), but there鈥檚 something about this time of year that sparks possibility.

This fall, the semester begins just before Rosh Hashanah. I can鈥檛 think of better timing, with both the academic year and the Jewish new year beginning side by side. It鈥檚 a fresh start, squared.

Before I found my way to Hillel, I taught early childhood education, first grade, and even a year of middle school engineering. Teaching taught me a lot about organization, preparation, and reading a room. Students, whether they鈥檙e six years old or 20, can tell if you鈥檙e truly present with them. They can feel if you believe in them. 

Those years in the classroom, combined with becoming a working mom, and my time as an executive assistant and chief of staff at the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County, shaped me for the work I do now. At the Federation, I learned more about how to build relationships, lead from the middle, and keep a lot of plates spinning at once. It was a place where no two days were the same, and I thrived in that energy.

So when the opportunity to join Hillel came up, I took a leap. Change isn鈥檛 always easy 鈥 it鈥檚 nerve-wracking, humbling, and vulnerable 鈥 but it鈥檚 how we grow.

Here at , we鈥檙e a multi-campus organization covering two huge counties with vibrant Jewish communities. And this year brings an extra twist: we鈥檙e renovating our main space, which means creating a sense of 鈥渉ome鈥 in a temporary location. It鈥檚 a challenge I鈥檓 excited to take on, because Hillel is so much more than a building. It鈥檚 a place for relationships, conversations, candy jar runs, and those moments when a student realizes, 鈥淚 belong here.鈥 That鈥檚 what we鈥檒l focus on creating, wherever we are physically.

My own Jewish journey has been a winding one. Though I grew up celebrating the High Holidays, Passover, and Hanukkah, my real reconnection to Jewish life didn鈥檛 come until later. In college, I went on a Birthright trip and I still keep in touch with one of my Israeli soldiers from that trip. More than a decade later, she鈥檚 one of my closest friends.

Working at the Federation deepened my Jewish identity even further. Now, 精东影业, I get to help students explore and grow in theirs, which feels pretty remarkable.

This year, my biggest goal is to make meaningful connections with students and support future leaders, those who will carry Jewish campus life forward for years to come. I want to help them fall in love with their current and future selves and see wh精东影业 can do for them and their communities.

I鈥檓 also dreaming about building out more graduate student programming and teaching a Jewish Learning Fellowship (JLF) cohort. After all, once a teacher, always a teacher. And, of course, I鈥檓 bringing my team along for the ride. They鈥檙e the secret sauce. We鈥檙e all adjusting to new rhythms, but we share the same goal: creating spaces where Jewish students feel safe, supported, and inspired.

So, if I could offer one piece of advice to students, it would be this: find your people. College can be overwhelming, but it鈥檚 also full of opportunities to grow into yourself.

Hillel can be that home base for you to grow: a place to ask questions, explore your Jewish identity, meet lifelong friends, and just be yourself. My hope is that every student who walks through our doors feels a sense of belonging and of possibility.