There is a group of students at 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis who make magic.
They can be found Saturday mornings singing camp songs in Olson Hall, circled up on the Quad on Fridays for cabin chats, or spotted around campus sporting T-shirts emblazoned with a green and blue caterpillar named Karl.
These are the members of Camp Kesem at 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis, students who organize, do fundraising and put on two weeks of free summer camp for children in the greater Sacramento region affected by a parents cancer.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Lev Farris Goldenberg is a junior majoring in anthropology and a writing fellow in the Office of Strategic Communications. He was a camper at the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis chapter of Camp Kesem for two years and is now in his fourth year as a counselor, with the camp nickname of NASA. He says joining Camp Kesem was the best decision he ever made.
which means magic in Hebrew is a nationwide, nonprofit organization run by college students at the campus level. The Davis chapter, founded in 2004, is one of more than 130 spread across 44 states. It is also the largest in Northern California, serving around 300 campers each year.
This year is a big one for Kesem at Davis. It will be the first time since 2019 that campers and counselors will return to camp in person after two summers of virtual programming.
The camp held at Camp Sugar Pine, just a few miles from Yosemite will run two sessions from Aug. 3 to 15.
I think its really hard to describe how it feels to go back in person after so long, said third-year music and anthropology major Chloe DeBarros. Going to camp is an experience that is incomparable. Itll be my first time as a counselor in-person, so I expect lots of happy tears from myself.
DeBarros attended 51勛圖窪蹋LAs Kesem program as a camper for nine years and is in her third year as a counselor at Davis.
During her years in the 51勛圖窪蹋LA program, DeBarros came to be called Clover, and she brought it with her to Davis, where all of the chapters 160-plus members also have camp names names that the members call one another not just during summer camp, but year-round. Hearing a friend shout Ketchup or Meatball or Leviosa across the Quad is not an uncommon occurrence.
Clover is planning camp this year as part of her role as an operations coordinator, along with fellow coordinators Brendan Magoo Crow, Taylor Maple Slarve and Sophie Saturn Stern.
Camp days fill up with fun activities, from gaga ball to friendship-bracelet-making to talent shows. Every night is a special event. Day 1 is Campfire. Day 2? Newbie show, where new counselors get dressed up by campers and perform improv. Movie nights, talent shows, Messy Olympics and dance parties fill up the other days.
Cabin chats go deep
The shadow of cancer feels far away at Kesem.
Each night ends with a cabin chat, one of Kesems most treasured traditions. Campers and counselors circle up and answer questions some deep, some silly. It is an opportunity to open up about Why I Kesem. In other words, to talk about the cancer experience that has brought them to camp something that many kids do not get a chance to do in their day-to-day lives.
College students are drawn to help these kids because they are just like us in so many ways, Ryan Padre Cohen said. Theyre going through things that are so incredibly difficult. They all have these childhoods of their own that are being impacted by their familys health diagnosis and we want to help kids that are like us as much as possible.
Padre, a fourth-year communication major, is one of the Davis chapters two directors, along with Ella Almond Piper. He has seen what the magic of Kesem means not just to campers, but to the college students who support them.
We obviously do it for the kids and the families thats what its all about, Padre said. But we, as counselors, obviously get so much out of it too, and thats what makes Kesem so special. I love my fellow counselors like family, and were such a special unit once we get to camp. And that rubs off for the campers, too.
Continued Padre: When the counselors are together and unified as one, it makes the entire experience for every camper and every counselor that much more enjoyable, because you really feel like youre in a safe space where youre allowed to be more vulnerable.
Make the Magic Gala
To make all that magic at camp possible, the college students have to do a mountain of work throughout the year.
Every Kesem member is responsible for helping fundraise to reach the Davis chapters yearly goal of $200,000. Students write letters, send emails, hold bake sales and pull off crazy dares in exchange for donations.
But the biggest fundraiser of the year is the annual Make the Magic Gala.
On April 30, friends of Davis Kesem flocked to the California State Railroad Museum for an evening of music, auctions and Kesem magic. Bouquets of flowers and golden caterpillars adorned tables blanketed in white.
Kesem families, alumni and guests all showed up in their finest for the first in-person gala in three years. They sang a camp song, were serenaded by a jazz band led by Kesems Jacob Drummer Boi Green, and listened to speeches from current campers and counselors. After dinner, guests bid on auction items like dessert cakes and Tahoe cabin stays. Each paddle raise drew a louder roar from the crowd.
The night was a resounding success, raising $100,000.
Dylan Cactus Blaufus planned the event, along with fellow gala coordinators Nina Willow Steinkemper and Aarya Guava Gupta.
Its truly one of the most inspiring moments I have ever gotten to take part in, Cactus said. To be able to share the Kesem love and support with members of the community and guests who have never attended (camp) before was really beautiful. Having the privilege of planning this event for an organization I feel incredibly connected to was fulfilling in itself.
A common experience
Every other Saturday morning during spring quarter, Kesem members gather in Olson Hall for a precamp training.
A lot of care and preparation goes into serving this particular population of kids (nationwide, Kesem serves 8,600 kids affected by cancer). They have been through a lot, and Kesem counselors know this many of them have gone through cancer experiences of their own.
This is part of what makes Kesem unique: It is a community of people who have shared a common experience. And the tight-knit nature of this group of student leaders is the result.
Kelly Sharky Weihrauch is one of almost 100 new members that Kesem welcomed near the end of fall quarter. And she can already feel the Kesem magic.
Kesem has made me feel like Ive known the members for years when I only joined a handful of weeks ago, Sharky said. The Kesem community is the definition of releasing your inner child. Something that might normally feel silly is welcomed with wide open arms, smiles and laughter at Kesem.