The Keren Avrohom Vsoroh Foundation concentrates its modest giving on Orthodox Jewish religious education and communal support, primarily funding yeshivas, girls’ schools, and congregations while also directing resources toward charitable relief for the needy. Grants are local to the New York/New Jersey Jewish community and emphasize sustaining institutions that provide religious instruction and social support services.
Concentrated, small-number grantmaking: a few relatively large gifts totaling about $118k, with repeat disbursements categorized as 'Misc Charities' and targeted one-off grants to local schools and a congregation. Emphasis on sustaining core community institutions rather than broad, programmatic diversification.
Keren Avrohom Vsoroh Foundation’s recent giving is centered on Orthodox Jewish religious education and support for the needy, with its largest reported grant of $63,257 going to Misc Charities in 2023 for those purposes. The foundation’s pattern is modest in total dollars but consistent in mission: it funded the same Brooklyn charity again in 2024 and 2025, alongside grants to a yeshiva and a congregation in Monsey. That mix points to a funder focused on sustaining religious instruction, school support, and communal relief within the New York Jewish community. The foundation’s recent awards show a narrow institutional footprint rather than a broad portfolio. One grant supported Bais Yakov of Ramapo for religious education and school help, while another went to Cong Sharei Shamayim for similar work. The recurring Brooklyn recipient suggests an emphasis on direct support for organizations already embedded in local Orthodox communal life. With annual grants totaling $117,885 and a 2025 filing year on record, the foundation’s grantmaking appears concentrated, local, and purpose-driven.
Religious education is the clearest thread in the foundation’s grants. It gave $20,525 in 2025 to Misc Charities in Brooklyn for “religous education and help needy and poor,” and $10,000 to Bais Yakov of Ramapo in Monsey for “religous education and help schools.” The foundation also supports congregational life. In 2025, it awarded $10,000 to Cong Sharei Shamayim in Monsey for “religous education and help schools,” linking synagogue support to broader educational activity. Poverty relief is another stated purpose. Its Brooklyn grant to Misc Charities explicitly included help for “needy and poor,” showing that charitable assistance sits alongside school and congregation funding in the same grantmaking stream.
Typical grants cluster in a relatively tight range: the 25th percentile is $10,000, the median is $14,103, and the 75th percentile is $20,525. The foundation’s latest grants show repetition rather than one-off experimentation: Misc Charities appears in 2023, 2024, and 2025 with purpose language that stays consistent across years. Keren Avrohom Vsoroh Foundation does not fund individuals and is not making program-related investments, so its giving runs through institutional grants rather than direct individual aid or PRI activity. The available record shows no application process details.
$118K
$5K
$5K
$41K
Most grants fall between $10K and $21K, with a median of $14K.
25th Percentile
$10K
Median
$14K
75th Percentile
$21K
About 100% of grants go to recipients in NY.
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Notable grantees: Misc Charities (multiple grants totaling $97,885), Bais Yakov of Ramapo, Congregation Sharei Shamayim
Giving is entirely local: 100% of grants went to recipients in New York, and the top recipient city by count is Brooklyn. Monsey also appears in the recent grants list, indicating a second New York community in the foundation’s orbit. The recipient country distribution is entirely U.S.-based, with all five recent grants landing in the United States. The pattern is concentrated in New York Jewish institutions rather than spread across multiple states or countries.
Its recent grants focus on Orthodox Jewish religious education, school support, synagogue or congregational programs, and charitable relief for needy and poor members of the community. The clearest recurring purpose language is “religous education and help needy and poor.”
Typical grants are in the five-figure range. The 25th percentile is $10,000, the median is $14,103, and the 75th percentile is $20,525.
The recent grant record shown here is fully local to New York: 100% of grants went to recipients in NY, with Brooklyn and Monsey appearing in the recent grants list.
No. The foundation is marked as not funding individuals, and the recent grants shown are all institutional awards to charities, schools, and a congregation.
2025
Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2025.
Most recent grants reported to the IRS.
| Recipient | Location | Amount | Year | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Misc Charities | Brooklyn, NY | $20,525 | 2025 | to further religous education and help needy and poor |
| bais yakov of ramapo | Monsey, NY | $10,000 | 2025 | to further religous education and help schools |
| cong sharei shamayim | Monsey, NY | $10,000 | 2025 | to further religous education and help schools |
| Misc Charities | Brooklyn, NY | $14,103 | 2024 | to further religous education and help needy and poor |
| Misc Charities | Brooklyn, NY | $63,257 | 2023 | to further religous education and help needy and poor |
Misc Charities
$20,525to further religous education and help needy and poor
bais yakov of ramapo
$10,000to further religous education and help schools
cong sharei shamayim
$10,000to further religous education and help schools
Misc Charities
$14,103to further religous education and help needy and poor
Misc Charities
$63,257to further religous education and help needy and poor