BBG Red Book 2014 | Page 16

THE FOUNDING AND EARLY HISTORY OF THE B’NAI B’RITH GIRLS TIMELINE In , a prominent Jewish organization called B’nai B’rith adopted the Aleph Zadik Aleph () as its auxiliary program for young men. Efforts began immediately to launch a program for Jewish young women that would serve as a sister to  in the B’nai B’rith family. New groups emerged as early as  in Seattle, Washington and  in Newark, New Jersey; unfortunately, these groups dissolved quickly. However, the movement was not defeated. Efforts to create a sisterhood for Jewish young women continued. Rose Mauser organized the first permanent chapter of what is now  in December of  in San Francisco, California. Mattie Olcovich and Essie Solomon served as the first advisors. Unlike , which began in Omaha in  and then spread to become an International Order, chapters of girls sprung up throughout the United States and Canada in response to spontaneous local forces, but without any central 1923 So many important events and occurrences have happened since 1924 that a timeline structure is perhaps the best way to understand the gradual development of the BBG program into what it is today. The first chapter of the Aleph Zadik Aleph (AZA) is formed in Omaha, Nebraska. 14