This Pesach Sheini, help stop the revolving door of addiction.

All the Way Home

3 DAYS TO DONATE and help rebuild lives
TUES APRIL 28 – THURS APRIL 30
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When people feel genuinely worthy of love, lasting recovery becomes possible.

The Problem

Addiction is often rooted in a deep sense of unworthiness, causing an inability to forge deep, healthy connections. Without creating healthy attachment, recovery is a “revolving door,” with as few as 20% of rehab graduates staying sober.
Without repairing the core wound, recovery is a “revolving door”

Our Approach

Our approach is straightforward, yet transformative:

We envelop each individual in a world of genuine love and community acceptance, patching the holes in their self-worth so they can begin to build strong and lasting connections.

On this foundation, Villagers experience a balanced lifestyle of structure and independence, community bonding and clinical support, motivation and accountability.

The Result

Villagers achieve consistent success rates of over 70%—more than triple the accepted standard—including long-term sobriety, steady employment, family reconnections and meaningful long term relationships including marriage.
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Villagers achieve consistent success rates of over 70%, more than triple the accepted standard.

“This fills a void in the frum community that we desperately need. It’s not just a bed and meetings. It’s the love, the relationships, the attention to detail. The Village create a family around the client where there’s constant contact, constant involvement, constant positive regard. That allows them to actually heal, not just stay clean.”

— Nate Nagelblatt, LCSW, PhD(c),

Associate Professor at Wurtzweiler School of Social Work

Our Beginnings

In 2015, Nossie Munk זצ״ל and Sony Perlman founded Arena Sober Living to fill the need for a recovery-focused, attachment-based sober living community. Arena quickly became a beacon of hope for those seeking an uplifting and caring sober community.

In 2019, following Nossie’s untimely passing, Sony founded what would become The Village, starting with just a single 12-bed sober living home.

The Village has since grown to six independent residences—two main homes for men, a main home for women and three “Step Up” homes of independent living—and a full community of lifelong support.