Reframe: Restoring Connection Through Culture
A Letter to My Community,
My name is Taiga. I own a contemporary art gallery in Toronto, founded by my Jewish immigrant grandmother in 1973. I was raised to treat artists like family, with the understanding that my home is their home, and we are united in support for one another. And I believed this sincerely…until October 7th.
Overnight, my friends and colleagues – people whose work I had collected and adored, whose careers I had followed with encouragement and enthusiasm – had raised their fists not in solidarity with Jewish suffering, but against us.
I learned that here, in my own city, Jewish exhibitions were being protested. Our national photography festival was boycotted because its title sponsor invested in Israeli tech. Many of my colleagues survived by dissociating, some endured horrific public backlash for being Jewish, and a handful left the field altogether. I was consumed by rage, embarrassment, and sadness. Like living next to a waterfall and realizing I no longer registered the thunderous sound, it had instead taken on a physical weight in my body. The joy and belonging felt within the Toronto arts industry were replaced by anxiety and alienation.
In May 2025, I had the opportunity to travel to Israel. Immersion within the rich artistic landscape and diverse community lifted that familiar weight off my shoulders as though it had never been, replaced instead with connection and inspiration. When our wheels touched down in Toronto, the weight returned in full force. Except…now I noticed it. Now I could name it. And my deep sense of horrified betrayal became impossible to ignore.
In that clarity, I saw two paths: abandon the art world (and with it, my career), or dig deep into my love of the arts, extend my hand to the colleagues and friends who I know are also hurting, and together create renewed purpose for us all.
I chose the latter.
The Reframe Arts Fellowship is a curated, immersive arts and culture pilgrimage to Israel for Jews and our non-Jewish friends with a passion for the arts. Whether a working artist, consultant, curator, seasoned collector, or someone who enjoys engaging with visual arts and architecture, Reframe is for anyone interested in exploring Israel through that lens. The purpose of Reframe is to create a space for learning, reflection, and restoration. By submerging ourselves in the art, architecture, history and heritage of Israel, and by engaging with the people who make up that community, we can begin to heal the wounds that have shaken our confidence in the art world at home. Reframe is an opportunity to reconnect with culture, purpose, and each other through our shared passion.
Our mission is twofold:
- To give Jews with a passion for the arts a space of reconnection, reflection, and restoration through heritage and community
- To offer our brave and curious allies a rare opportunity for firsthand experience and context, engaging with Israeli culture, and gaining new context and clarity on a topic too often distorted by headlines
We’ve had wonderful responses to date. Our first cohort is fully booked and will run September 5-10. The second cohort is scheduled for January 2026. The trips will include a mix of Jews and non-Jews in the arts. We will be spending a week touring museums, galleries, and artist studios; sharing meals, exploring architecture, and bearing witness to October 7th by visiting monuments and listening to survivors. Educating ourselves. Engaging with our community. Strengthening our resolve. Inoculating ourselves against hatred with real, lived experience.
Reframe is now a StandWithUs Canada initiative, created to advance our shared commitment to education, cultural engagement, and combating misinformation. All donations to the Reframe Arts Fellowship are eligible for charitable tax receipts. As a StandWithUs Canada program, Reframe strives to champion firsthand experience over headlines, curiosity over ideology, and the belief that storytelling, art, and presence have the power to reframe the narrative.
In a conversation with Rabbi Splansky, she suggested Reframe might be of interest to the Holy Blossom community. I invite you to take a look at the website Reframe Arts Fellowship
for more information. If this resonates with you, I look forward to hearing from you. If you think it would resonate with someone you know, please share.
Am Israel Chai,
Taiga Bentley





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