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You are here: Home / Archives for 2009

Archives for 2009

    Say Cheese…

    May 11, 2009

    On February 24 we shared the story of Darla Oz, a Jerusalemite who with her husband began a small organization called House to House. House to House provides food assistance, clothing, shoes, help for elders including Shoah survivors, and other basic needs to people who would otherwise "fall through the cracks". Our original donation underwrote the costs of cab rides which many elders must rely upon to get around.

    While catching up with Darla in an early morning call today, we learned about a small hotel in Jerusalem which is home to almost 200 elderly Shoah survivors, many of them ill and lonely. Darla shared that in a conversation with the social worker at the site, she learned a few things that were truly sad. The first point shared was that for many of these elders birthdays are rarely celebrated – no gifts, no cards…just a lonely day like any other. The social worker also told Darla that many residents wished that the local grocer (who brings basic food items to the hotel lobby each Friday so that everyone can shop) would include fresh cheese in his weekly visits. They truly missed enjoying a piece of cheese! In about 30 seconds Darla and I decided that each of these residents should enjoy this treat, and what better time for them to receive it than on their birthday? Darla also asked if it would be possible to get birthday cards for each of them, and we promised we would enlist as many religious school teachers and students as possible in this simple act of chesed.

    We have sent Darla gift bags and curling ribbon and expect to hear shortly that the first residents are getting their wish for a piece of fresh cheese and some crackers to go with it. Such a simple wish – such a simple solution.

    Filed under: Good News Update

    Israel’s Young Activists-Part II

    May 7, 2009

    On February 15 in our entry entitled "Israel’s Young Activists" we described our meeting with Jesse and Steven Fox and Gilli and Daniel Cherrin, young Tel-Aviv residents who began Fugee Fridays. The all-volunteer group picks up leftovers from the Carmel Market on Friday afternoons and delivers them to many of the African refugees who are living in nearby shelters, as well as to many poor residents in South Tel-Aviv. The group is engaged in several other beneficial activities including interaction with many of the immigrant children in both play and study.

    Impressed with what the group has accomplished, we promised to underwrite the cost of t-shirts which would be printed with the group’s logo. With the imprinted shirts the volunteers would be more easily recognized by the market’s merchants and give their efforts a bit more of a formal tone.

    We were so happy to just receive this picture and agree that the volunteers look very professional as they pick up the luscious fruits and vegetables that will feed many hungry people who have come to rely upon this dedicated group.

    Filed under: Good News Update

    A New Addition

    May 4, 2009

    We are pleased and honored to announce that the Good People Fund’s board will be enhanced as of this month by a new member who has agreed to join us in our work.

    Allen Katzoff brings to our work a critical mix of experience in both the for-profit and non-profit world, specifically in the areas of marketing and strategic planning. In addition to management positions in technology companies, he has served as the Director of Camp Ramah in New England as well as the Director of the Center for Adult Jewish Learning at Hebrew College in Boston. A graduate of the State University of New York at Stony Brook, Allen also holds an MBA from Northeastern University. Allen and his wife, Joan Leegant, are the parents of two sons. Currently, Allen and Joan reside in the Boston area.

    We are honored and excited to have Allen on board. We know that his areas of expertise and his commitment to tzedakah and tikkun olam will serve the Good People Fund well.

    Yasher koach, Allen! We look forward to having your insights and experience as we go forward.

    Filed under: Good News Update

    A Different Kind of Seder

    April 7, 2009

    Back in the 1980’s, Larry Linkov and Phil Lefton were retail business partners in a small NJ community. Eddie Lewis was initially a customer who soon became a friend. In time, the three extended their friendship and home visits eventually grew to sharing their religious experiences as well. The more time they spent together, the more they realized "we are more similar than different." The African American Jewish Coalition was the product of their friendship. AAJC typifies the true meaning of grass-roots activism and desire to promote racial harmony on the local level.

    Though many years have passed since the group’s inception, the founders’ goals still guide their work. Their non-religious focus includes three programs each year which bring together Jewish Americans and African Americans in a bond of true brotherhood. A Freedom Seder, celebration of the life of Dr. Martin Luther King, and a mid-December multicultural holiday celebration are programs implemented by not only the adults in this group but also by the youth group which they have developed and encouraged.

    Several weeks ago the group held its annual Spring Freedom Seder which drew almost 150 people for an evening of traditional Passover food and reflections on freedom and mutual understanding. It was the Good People Fund’s honor to be a part of this meaningful celebration and to contribute to the costs of the evening’s Seder fare.

    Check out the group’s simple website, http://www.aajcnj.org. Perhaps this is something you can do to foster good will and harmony in your own community.

    Filed under: Good News Update

    There are Real People Behind the Numbers

    April 6, 2009

    How many of us follow the news coming out of Iraq or Afghanistan and really stop to think about the human toll these wars have taken? Other than the details shared by our local papers when a local soldier is killed or injured, do any of us fully comprehend what is behind the numbers and the headlines? What toll is taken on the families of those who are killed? Or maimed, or wounded? Do we ever really learn the disturbing details, the very human details? Most likely, not.

    Ranya Kelly, founder of The Redistribution Center in Denver knows exactly what this toll involves. We have written about Ranya in this Diary many times. She is the dedicated, hard-working champion of taking what others (manufacturers, retailers and so many more) are going to toss into landfills and delivering it to people who live in extreme poverty and despair. In truth, The Redistribution Center is one of the first ecology programs ever found in this country. In addition to rescuing perfectly good items Ranya has also started a small food bank which steps in when some of the larger entities nearby find themselves without sufficient supplies to feed all of the hungry people who come to their doors.

    In recent times, though, Ranya has reached out to another forgotten segment of our population-returning veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan who have sustained unspeakable injuries while fighting, and are now back home with insufficient resources to help them get on with their lives. As we listen to Ranya share their stories we shudder at the sadness and the horror of it all. In a phone conversation last Thursday, Ranya shared the story of a female soldier who, after returning from Iraq, resumed her life, became pregnant and delivered a baby girl. Soon after, she was diagnosed with colon cancer, she and her husband lost their rented home and her husband lost his job. What did they need? Diapers. They did not have enough money for diapers.

    Ranya tells us that she has six veterans waiting for couches…couches! While the VA may get them a place to live, they do not necessarily furnish it for them and many soldiers need those couches because that is where some of them are able to sleep more comfortably, rather than in a traditional bed. In another case, a wounded Purple Heart veteran returned home to find his wife had left him and in the process destroyed their home leaving him and their child nothing but mold and mildew and nothing to salvage. In that case, Ranya provided him with everything he needed to fill his home and start over again.

    There is no shortage of stories like these. Ranya could probably fill a book with them. The Good People Fund is committed to helping where we can and we have just sent funds to cover the cost of a new couch and diapers for the ill soldier described here.

    How many of us knew about these situations? How many of us could help?

    Filed under: Good News Update

    Hospital Leftovers

    March 27, 2009

    Conservation, ecology, green…today’s buzzwords. Finally, the world is beginning to pay attention to preserving natural resources and protecting the environment. In truth, many people promoted these values for years; and some even put their beliefs into very substantial efforts. Dr. Will Rosenblatt of Yale-New Haven Hospital was one of these visionaries. As an anesthesiologist at that hospital, Dr. Rosenblatt saw first-hand the waste that accumulated in the hospital’s operating rooms…and waste in this instance refers to equipment and supplies. Critical, open-but-unused medical supplies from operating suites and other medical locations nationwide often go into our nation’s landfills due to stringent insurance and legal restrictions that do not allow them to be used in other procedures even if they were never touched. REMEDY, Recovered Medical Equipment for the Developing World was started by Dr. Rosenblatt in 1991. In that time, millions and millions of dollars worth of equipment and supplies have been recovered and shipped to poor medical facilities around the world where they are desperately needed.

    What makes REMEDY even more important is that their efforts have been adopted by hospitals across the country, thus compounding the benefits of this program many times over. The REMEDY website (www.remedyinc.org) serves as a link as well as a teaching tool for other facilities that have joined or are interested in becoming a part of the network.

    Now to the very unfortunate reality-REMEDY is one of the many, many small non-profits that has been impacted by the current economic downturn. Despite their very modest budget, shortfalls in fund-raising have forced them to make several changes including the cut back of their very minimal staff. The Good People Fund grant was designated to help them wherever the need was greatest. We believe that this is a program that must continue its good work which impacts both our environment and the well-being and health of people around the world.

    Filed under: Good News Update

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