The Atlantic Jewish Council, founded in 1975, is CJIA's Atlantic partner and was previously the Atlantic Canadian office of the Canadian Jewish Congress. Howard Conter is the president of its board of directors, and its executive director is Jon Goldberg. As a result of the
Canadian Jewish Congress' reorganization in 2007, the AJC became an individual member rather than an affiliate organization of the CJC; this was further reformed after the establishment of the
Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs, which subsumed the CJC in 2011. The AJC also owns and operates Camp Kadimah.
Camp Kadimah Camp Kadimah, founded in 1943 and affiliated with
Canadian Young Judaea, is located on the
South Shore of Nova Scotia in
Lunenburg County. Campers range from 8 to 16 years of age. Many of the campers are from
Toronto but there remains a large portion of campers from Halifax. Many of the campers also from Israel. There are 5 sections are the camp. The youngest sections, Giborim and Goshrim occupy the main side of the bridge. Giborim, the youngest section, means 'mighty', or 'heroes' in
Hebrew. Goshrim, for children aged 10–11, means 'bridge builders.' Kochot, the next section, means 'power.' Machar, the eldest section means 'tomorrow.' There is also a Counsellors in Training program that fosters the development of teenagers into adults. The CITs live on the Machar side of the bridge. The camp is
Kosher and nut-free. In 2009, ten teenagers from
Sderot, Israel attended Camp Kadimah. ==Controversies==