our story

Why ducks?
Why not?

What started as one woman hiding ducks to make strangers smile has grown into a global movement carrying mitzvahs that float.

An official Kosher Duck Revolution rubber duck — blue, with a kippah, a Star of David, and שלום on its chest

The Kosher Duck Revolution is a global movement spreading Jewish joy, unity, and kindness — one duck at a time. It pairs collectible kosher-themed rubber ducks with a global community of Quackers, an interactive sightings map, and educational and interfaith programming. From cruise ships to city parks, from Atlanta to Athens, the ducks carry mitzvahs that float.

the founder

Kosher Duck Revolution started with Cheryl Dorchinsky — Co-Founder and Executive Director of AIC (the Atlanta Israel Coalition) — one rubber duck, and a hunch that a stranger's smile is worth the trouble. She hid the first ducks herself. Quackers took it from there, and today the ducks turn up everywhere from Yellowstone to Venice.

Yellowstone is ducking beautiful — Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA
Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, USA
Venetian Ghetto — Venice, Italy
Venice, Italy
A Duck Under the Chagall Windows — Jerusalem, Israel
Jerusalem, Israel

A few of the flock in the wild — from Yellowstone to Venice to the Chagall windows in Jerusalem, every one a photo a stranger sent in.

The floor, and the surface

The floor is real: Jewish pride, kindness, and a stand against antisemitism. The surface is joy. KDR does the work by spreading smiles — and the smiles are the strategy, not a softening.

A duck on the table at an airport gate is the work. A neighbor asking about the little blue duck with שלום on its chest is the work. The doors are wide; the Jewish core is unapologetic.

I got tired of watching hate travel faster than anything kind, so I answered it with a rubber duck. One duck, hidden for one stranger, to say we're still here and we can still laugh. The ducks did the rest of the talking.— Cheryl Dorchinsky, founder

the community

Quackers

Quackers are the community — people who buy ducks, hide ducks, find ducks, share photos, host duck parties, and run drops. They are the lifeblood of the map and the movement.

Kosher duck in Times Square — New York, USA
New York, USA

the work behind the joy

KDR is an initiative of AIC — the nonprofit Cheryl leads. Every duck adopted helps fund its education, community, and relief work. The duck is the joyful front door; the work behind it is real.

questions?

We've got answers.

What makes the duck "kosher"?

It's a wink, not a hechsher. The duck is kosher-themed — bright blue, a Star of David, שלום across the chest, Jewish pride worn out loud. (And no, you can't eat it. If people ate Tide Pods, we wouldn't risk it either.)

Do I have to be Jewish for this?

Not even a little. KDR is about Jewish joy, pride, and kindness — and it turns out those travel well. The ducks are found and loved by people of every background; a Hindu man once asked whether we make one for Diwali. If a rubber duck can make you smile, you belong here. The doors are wide.

I don't know much about Jewish life — where do I start?

Right here, and no background needed. Our Jewish Joy pages are short, friendly reads on the warmest parts of Jewish life — Shabbat, the holidays, a few good words, the bread on the table. Many people meet these ideas (and, honestly, sometimes their first Jewish anything) through a little blue duck. Come curious; that's the whole prerequisite.

Do the ducks really have a QR code?

Every duck comes with a little tag, and the tag carries the code. Scan it and you land on our sightings page, where you can add where you found it and see everywhere the flock has been. One duck, many hands, a map that keeps growing.

Where does my money go?

Every duck is $18. Three dollars covers the duck; the other fifteen is a tax-deductible gift to AIC — funding education, community-building, and relief work.

Can I get ducks for my event, school, or synagogue?

Yes — that's some of our favorite mail. Quackers have seeded bar mitzvahs, shul open houses, JCC celebrations, and community festivals. Start with the Community Duck Pack (ten for $120), or reach out about a bigger drop.

What's a Quacker?

Anyone in on it — you buy ducks, hide ducks, find ducks, photograph them, and pass them along. Quackers are the whole movement. The ducks just float where they're carried.

Who started this?

Cheryl Dorchinsky — Co-Founder and Executive Director of AIC — hid the first ducks herself. Quackers took it from there.