Just say you have one or two million dollars to give away.
It was a good year and now it is time to give back; time to do some “tikkun,”
improvement. The first decision you need to make is how to best use such
a goodly amount. After all, being a good entrepreneur with solid business
skills, you know that giving money must also be solidly researched and
well-thought. So you begin to think of all the worthwhile charities you can
donate the money to with an awareness that the money must make a real and significant
difference for your people. You want to give it to Jews.
The next decision is how best to allocate the money; there are
many worthwhile causes. Among them are programs and activities for the
infirmed. The money could go a long way toward giving meaning to the
elderly. Israel is a possibility too. With years at war and ongoing
economic as well as frontal assaults, such an infusion of cash would give much
needed money along with an unspoken statement of support. Youth programs
are certainly worthwhile. Recreational and sports activities for
children. So many things to choose!
You could even decide to divide the money up among the many
willing and noble causes. Why not give a little to each? The only
problem with that is that he greatest effect of the donation will not be
met. A single lasting contribution by you cannot be achieved when the
money is thinned out among different agencies. What do you do?
The one area so often overlooked when philanthropists seek ways
to contribute to the welfare of the Jewish people is through the
synagogue. Odd, isn’t it? In the past twenty years memorials and
museums have been constructed to the memory of the Six Million in metropolises
throughout the world. Relying on deep pockets these buildings rise on
significant gifts and bequests. Massive JCCs have been built in virtually
every city through the nation costing many millions of dollars. At
the same time, most religious institutions continue to exist on a shoe-string
budget. They barely balance their meager balance sheets. And yet
synagogues are the most meaningful contributors to Jewish survival!
The fact that there are philanthropists at all that still
remember they are Jewish is because of the shuls they were brought up in.
They never forgot the lessons of cheder (religious school). Their
teachers were insistent that tzedaka is humanity’s redemption.
Ingrained in their memory are sitting at shul and crying to God. They
will never forget the serious learning the long impassioned discussions about
tzedaka and justice. Wrapped in a tallit, benching licht (candle
lighting), full emotional outpouring of the soul are all memories which inform
the present.
It is usual too see sprawling hospitals in large metropolitan
areas named for Jewish contributors. The same is true of our
universities. A few years back a very rich and giving philanthropist
died. He donated millions to museums, institutions of learning. One
of his many legacies is the Annenberg Foundation which gives away grants and
affords opportunities for many people throughout our country.
Training programs, educational media, communications and so much more were left
by Walter Annenberg. The name will be familiar if you watch PBS.
Little was given to Jewish causes. Nothing at all that I am aware of was
given to synagogues. Why?
The same question can be leveled at many Jewish
do-gooders. Why do they ignore the fountain which feeds all the
tributaries If it were to dry up, rest assured the balance of the Jewish
landscape would wither in its wake. The Day Schools are in a similar
quandary. While they nurture the youngest shoots of the flower they
receive scant attention from big donors. Millions are given to create a
chair at a university which does nothing to foster Jewish identity while rabbis
and principals go about with their hands out.
Another oddity: all the afore mentioned buildings and programs
will eventually fall away. As proven through the epochs the only
remaining feature of Jewish life are shuls and their educational
appendages. Need proof? Think of the last time you traveled.
What noteworthy Jewish sites remain for more than a century? Almost
without exception they are synagogues. What happened to the rest of their
communal activities and structures? We do not know. They did not
survive.
So why do the moneyed forget the
place where the future is to be written? I do not know. But if
anyone has an answer I would love to hear it.
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