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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
Why does the weather forecast interest organizations like
Ezra Lemarpeh, Ezer Mitzion or Yad Sarah? Every Jerusalem boy
knows the answer. The snow.
These chessed organizations were hard at work on the
day snow fell in Jerusalem this past winter, helping
housebound Jerusalemites cope. It served as a reminder of the
special blessing the chareidi community enjoys thanks to its
many organizations dedicated to chessed.
To write a comprehensive article about chessed
organizations is impossible, for an entire encyclopedia could
be written on this topic. Therefore here we will focus on
just a few organizations in the area of medical care, to shed
some light on the chessed in Eretz Yisroel.
Yad Sarah
When asked what they did on the day the snow fell, Yad Sarah
Spokesman Dovid Rotner began to rattle off a list of
activities. "There are people in need of crucial medical
treatment. On a normal day they can get to the hospital on
their own, perhaps with the help of a family member, by taxi
or by bus. On snow days, when transportation in the city
shuts down almost completely, people get panicky . . . Some
of this distress we solve with our special vehicles."
Few taxis were running while Jerusalem was covered with snow,
but there were plenty of ambulances on the roads. "We put
special snow chains on our ambulances' tires. We transported
people to receive treatments and also brought medical staff
members to their places of work, for doctors and nurses also
had trouble moving around the city. We took a few people who
got injured, although we do not have a real ambulance service
but rather just transport vehicles. We also took family
members to hospitals to stay with their loved ones."
People not usually defined as needy also benefited from Yad
Sarah's transportation network.
"Throughout the year people are asked to pay one-third of the
cost of a ride, which comes to NIS 25-30 inside the city,"
explains Rotner. "But on the day of the snow we didn't charge
money. This was the organization's decision. Whoever wanted
to make a donation was, of course, free to do so."
Did people ask about the cost of the special service they
received?
I didn't hear of people asking, but there were people who
sent contributions after the snow. They wrote, `You helped us
out with the snow.' The letters that arrived were very
standard. `You were fabulous.' `You were our only support on
the day of the snow. Thank you for giving us a ride to the
hospital. A 100- shekel donation is enclosed.'
"True, this was not a matter of life and death, but when you
have to relieve a family member sitting at the patient's
bedside and there are no taxis or buses, the need is still
urgent.
"We also did other things at Yad Sarah. We have devices
called oxygen systems. In one of our vehicles we have an
oxygen setup. This vehicle's task is to go around the city
supplying oxygen services.
"When snow or difficult weather is forecasted we try to
publicize our special number, *6444, in the media. This
number is always in operation. On regular days callers reach
our secretary pool, but on the day of the snow, calls are
routed directly to our transportation department. And there
were a lot of calls.
"We got many calls from people who subscribe to our emergency
push buttons. We have an emergency hotline that operates 24
hours per day, all year round. On the day of the snow the
number of calls increased and the hotline [staff] was boosted
in accordance. These people were unable to leave the house.
Some were in need of medication. Some of them simply asked
for support from us or from their family. Suddenly someone
discovers there's no food in the cupboard. Somebody has to
help them. In many cases they also get panicky simply due to
the fact that they are cut off.
How many vehicles do you have? Can you cover the entire
city?
Our resources are limited, of course, and therefore on
special days like this we activate our volunteers. If, for
instance, an elderly man from Sanhedria calls and he needs
medicine, we call a volunteer who lives in the area and say,
`Your neighbor at this address needs medicine. Is there
something you can do to help him?" This is how volunteers are
activated throughout the city. It's a big setup."
And this big setup goes on alert when the snow forecasts
start to come in. "Snow chains donated by our friends, Yad
Sarah of Switzerland, are put on the vehicles, the gas tanks
are filled up, assignments are delegated and the hotline
centers are sent extra manpower.
"We have people who come to Yad Sarah from outside the city.
They arrive in the city before the snow is expected to fall
and they stay at Yad Sarah. It's not like at the municipality
or other places of work where a snow day is a reason to stay
home from work. Here it's the opposite.
"Lending out medical equipment also continues on snow days,
although less than on regular days. We must continue to
function because even on snow days, or maybe particularly on
snow days, there are people who break their leg and are in
need of the appropriate medical equipment."
These are paid workers?
"I'm speaking about volunteers, and I stress that they are
volunteers. Everybody who comes in on a snow day, including
those who live outside of Jerusalem and arrive in advance --
all of them are volunteers. We also have paid workers, but
they are extremely few in number. The vast majority are
volunteers. In my view, at least, this is chessed at
its best."
Yad Sarah, which got started in Rabbi Uri Lupoliansky's
little apartment in the Jerusalem neighborhood of Sanhedria,
is now located in a large, impressive building in Beit
Hakerem. If fees are not charged, how is it possible to run
such a large array of services?
Yad Sarah has done some very original thinking on this topic.
Funding is based primarily on contributions. When people are
in need of services they often make a donation.
But that's not all. Some people donate a certain piece of
medical equipment they no longer need, and businesses are
recruited to help. Tnuvah workers, for example, donated the
holiday bonuses they received from the company, Cellcom has a
special arrangement to help Yad Sarah, and Visa Call
transfers calling points to Yad Sarah. High school students
from Tzfas who wanted to contribute to Yad Sarah gathered
empty bottles for several days and gave the NIS 100 ($45) in
accumulated deposit money to Yad Sarah.
Today Yad Sarah has at least 92 branches around the country.
Yad Sarah operates a geriatric clinic and a transportation
service for the handicapped, distributes hot meals and
provides a variety of services for elderly people living
alone. The Dachaf Institute once conducted a survey that
showed that every other family has taken advantage of Yad
Sarah's services at one time or another.
Yad Sarah has calculated the total value of all its
operations if people or government had to pay for them and it
came out to over $300 million a year!
Ezra Lemarpeh
Yad Sarah was not the only organization that sent vehicles
all around Jerusalem following the snowfall. Surprisingly,
ambulances marked "Ezra Lemarpeh," which is known to be a
Bnei Brak chessed organization, were also seen
frequently.
"We have four ambulances," explains Ezra Lemarpeh spokesman
Rav Avishai Bagad. "As you saw, our ambulances worked with
chains on the tires on the day of the snowfall, but without
public announcements."
Ezra Lemarpeh ambulances operate in Jerusalem every day of
the year. "We take patients in need for dialysis, radiation
therapy, physiotherapy, and even take the elderly to their
grandson's wedding. The ambulances are not used only for
those who need an ambulance, but often transport handicapped
people confined to their wheelchair. All this, of course, is
without charge."
Of course. When one considers the activities of this special
organization, headed by Rav Elimelech Fierer, it leaves one
awestruck. "Our organization's banner bears the words, `All
who turn to us will be attended to free of charge,' " says
Rav Bagad.
Consumable items, such as diapers for adults, have to be paid
for, but the ambulance service is free. "So are the flights
abroad. The same applies regarding consultations with Rav
Fierer. We also loan medical equipment, for which the
borrower must leave a check as a deposit. We don't use the
check and don't cash it even temporarily. At the Ezra
Lemarpeh building, no tzedokoh boxes can be found and
there are no solicitations for contributions. It's important
to us that people do not feel obligated to pay because of the
service they receive."
Ezra Lemarpeh's flagship service is Rav Fierer's medical
advice, for which there is no substitute. This Jew from Bnei
Brak, who never studied medicine, was graced from Above with
an amazing ability in diagnosis and understanding of the
science of medicine. He knows everybody who is anybody in the
world of medicine, knows how to read x-rays with astonishing
expertise, and whoever is in need of an operation or
treatment turns to him to receive advice and guidance in
finding the best doctor in the field.
"Even doctors, and not small-time doctors, often consult with
Rav Fierer," says Bagad. "They come to him with x-rays and
with medical data asking for a diagnosis, and they trust Rav
Fierer's diagnosis without being able to explain this
astounding facility of his."
To get through to Ezra Lemarpeh requires a great deal of
patience. The phones ring constantly. "When our electronic
phone system is turned on [that is, on most regular days] we
can get over 10,000 calls," says Rav Bagad. "Not 10,000
callers, of course, but 10,000 calls. Presumably some of them
are repeated attempts to call." Nevertheless the load is
tremendous.
To get through to the center is not easy, but when one needs
to, it can be done. Rav Fierer also meets with people face-to-
face. Urgent cases receive priority. "He's just one person,"
says Bagad, "but he is surrounded by loyal assistants such as
Rav Rafael Wolfe, for instance, who focuses on mental and
other problems."
Just how is this enterprise maintained financially, if
donations are not solicited?
"What else? From donations. I can't recall a single case in
which we refused to accept a donation," says Rav Bagad. "Most
of the donations are from good Jews in Eretz Yisroel, and
some of them come from abroad. But we have a clear
limitation. We will not accept donations from somebody who
suggests advancing his turn in exchange for $10. Not
that."
How can a patient be flown abroad without payment?
"We do not pay for the flight," explains Bagad. "We organize
the logistics of the flight. We transport the patient to the
hospital in an ambulance. In the ambulance we take care of
everything tied to intensive care including incubator,
monitors, intravenous fluids, doctor's kit stocked with
medications and a life- support system. We organize about 200
flights per year."
Each of these flights involves extensive coordination. It's
not easy work. "We have to arrange for a family to receive
the patient upon arrival and accompany him in the airport.
Arrangements have to be made for a family to host the patient
and accompany him during the treatment. In certain cases we
pay for the flight. We get donations of frequent flyer miles,
allowing us to sponsor the flight in special cases."
Ezra Lemarpeh is renowned primarily for its medical
consultations, but its sphere of activity extends to other
areas, including a center for child cancer patients. "The
center was set up based on the view that a sick child cannot
remain in the hospital," says Rav Bagad. "A hospital is a
factory for bacteria. For every problem he already has, the
child can latch onto several more in the hospital.
Hospitalization is also liable to destroy the family unit.
Parents have to sit beside the child and in the meantime the
home falls apart.
"Therefore we supply many children with full treatment kits
outside of the hospital. It goes without saying that
sometimes hospitalization is indispensable, such as when the
patient undergoes surgery or chemotherapy treatment. But
hospitalization should be minimized as much as possible."
By arranging for doctors and nurses, medical care can be
provided. But there's more. "We also have didactic equipment,
learning programs and games. All of it is checked, of
course."
There is even a special department for children whose parents
are hospitalized. "When a parent is hospitalized, sometimes
the children do not receive proper care. Is there somebody to
greet the child when he comes home from school? Someone to
see whether he has homework? Someone to make him a hot meal?
Sometimes there are relatives or neighbors, but not always.
We have a pool of women volunteers who receive the child and
take care of [him or her] from 3:00 in the afternoon until
8:00 at night, when [he] returns home after dinner."
Ezra Lemarpeh has its own department for equipment loans. "We
have very expensive pieces of equipment," says Rav Bagad.
"Automatic physiotherapy devices, for example. Somebody
breaks his elbow, for instance. It has to be moved constantly
to restore its function. This kind of physiotherapy hurts and
people avoid taking it on. We have an automatic physiotherapy
device whose speed of operation is slow and set to the
patient's needs. The arm is moved constantly, without pain,
and this is an excellent solution."
This is just one example among Ezra Lemarpeh's vast array of
services, which are run by some 300 volunteers. The
organization has only a handful of paid workers, such as the
spokesman. "Before I began receiving a salary I worked as a
volunteer for four years," he recounts. "And my salary is
nothing to envy. Rav Fierer saves money on these kinds of
expenses. If someone is thinking of working for us because of
the pay, he'd better think twice."
Mogen Lecholeh
In Jerusalem Rabbi Benny Fischer runs a chessed
organization called Mogen Lecholeh, whose main mission is to
provide consultations for people in need of medical services.
Rabbi Fischer knows which doctors to recommend and which
doctors not to recommend. He has connections with the city's
hospitals and a word from him can sometimes shorten
procedures and help get a tormented patient onto the
operating table faster.
"Mogen Lecholeh does not raise funds and does not pay to fly
patients abroad for treatments," says Spokesman Avi Levy. The
emphasis is on advice and guidance. In certain cases, such as
brain surgery, suitable medical care may not be available in
Eretz Yisroel, and then the patient must be flown abroad.
Some brain surgeries are difficult and require tremendous
precision and the biggest experts in the field operate in
Germany or the US. Rabbi Fischer refers the patient to the
right surgeon and then Mogen Lecholeh activates a well-oiled
apparatus. Luxembourg, a Bnei Brak travel agency, has
developed a network of ties with different airlines and it
helps arrange quick flights for urgent cases.
Mogen Lecholeh was founded with the encouragement of HaRav
Shlomo Zalman Auerbach, zt"l. The organization had a
modest beginning but today it has sophisticated equipment and
an ambulance with a life-support system. And most important
of all, it has a great deal of knowledge Rabbi Fischer has
accumulated during his years of work.
How is the organization run? The service is provided free of
charge and callers are never asked to make a donation. Like
all chessed organizations in Israel, Mogen Lecholeh
receives crumbs from the budget cake. "The major
contributions come from abroad," says Levy. "Our outfitted
ambulance was donated by a friend of the organization from
abroad. Were we to receive one shekel from every person who
was helped, we would be millionaires. But we don't even hint
to them."
Ezer Mitzion
Ezer Mitzion is truly indispensable. It operates clinics open
during hours when most other clinics are closed and runs a
summer camp for children suffering from cancer, including a
guest house for children from outside of Gush Dan in need of
chemotherapy treatments. When the snow fell in Jerusalem,
Ezer Mitzion also worked overtime. Thousands of people
contacted the organization. Some had been discharged from the
hospital and needed a ride home while others needed
treatments such as dialysis.
Ezer Mitzion is distinguished as a chessed
organization for the range of services offered: mental health
care, handicapped vehicles, meals for hospital visitors
staying at the patient's bedside and help for sick and
elderly people who are housebound. The field of mental health
care has been neglected in the chareidi sector and when it
began to offer support services for mental patients and their
families, even Ezer Mitzion itself was astonished by the
level of demand.
"We have psychiatrists who treat people at a subsidized
rate," says Mrs. Kosover. "The psychiatrists are paid their
fee, but it is lower for those who are referred by Ezer
Mitzion. We have a social worker who arranges for
rehabilitation benefits the government gives to those with
over 40 percent mental disability. Consultation for mental
problems is provided by religious and chareidi psychologists
and a team of professionals. Since this department began
operations, a large number of people have turned to it."
Ezer Mitzion also operates a volunteer section to help in the
event of terrorist attacks. Jerusalem has known its share of
bombings and other attacks. In the early news reports
following an attack, Ezer Mitzion volunteers are often asked
to report to the hospitals. Every volunteer knows exactly
which is "her" hospital.
In addition Ezer Mitzion offers a range of services for
children with special needs, allowing their families a bit of
relief. At a special center, seminary students watch over the
children and tutor them. The children are brought to the
center in Ezer Mitzion vehicles, stay from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m.,
and even eat dinner there. Ezer Mitzion also provides
developmental assistants at subsidized rates. Even
specialized equipment for these children is available on
loan, including small-size reading stands and balls for
physiotherapy treatment.
Small Organizations
There are also many smaller, lesser-known organizations, but
perhaps they are just as important. Yad Eliezer, known for
its food baskets, operates a Unit for Patient Assistance
whose goal is to talk with cancer patients, to listen to them
and to offer support. It was started by Rav Yitzchok Weingot,
a former cancer patient who had a full recovery bechasdei
Shomayim. Later he returned to the oncology department at
Hadassah Hospital to help patients get through difficult
periods.
Rav Weingot is one of the only men on the Yad Eliezer roster.
He set up a pool of women volunteers who visit hospitals to
offer patients encouragement. Besides talking to cancer
patients they also provide wigs for women--mostly secular
women--whose hair has fallen out. The wigs are donated by
Atara. "But most of all is accompanying the patients," says
the unit spokeswoman. "We also obtain bone-marrow
contributions through Yad Eliezer. Sometimes a patient may
urgently need a bone marrow transfusion and we organize the
bone-marrow drive."
The Unit for Patient Assistance sends several volunteers to
hospitals every day, and periodically someone--perhaps an
accordion player--comes in to spread a bit of joy. This may
sound trifling, but those who have been hospitalized in these
kinds of wards, lo oleinu, know the importance of
human contact, empathy and the willingness to lend a hand. It
can even make the difference for patients skirting the thin
line between life and death.
An organization called Bikur Cholim, directed by Rebbetzin
Raizi Rotenberg, relieves parents staying at their children's
bedside in hospitals. This service is also offered by Ezer
Mizion.
This brief list of chessed organizations in the field
of medicine does not even touch the vast range of
chessed organizations in other areas of life. It does
not even cover all organizations that can be considered to
have a connection with medicine, such as Hatzoloh and
Zaka.
Just glance at the many pages of gemach listings in
any chareidi telephone book. Then give the chareidi public a
little pat on the back. Don't we deserve it every once in a
while?
Yishai, an Ezer Mizion ambulance driver, was driving one day
in Jerusalem's Beit Hakerem neighborhood when he noticed an
Ezer Mizion ambulance parked in front of a falafel store.
Wondering what the ambulance was doing there, Yishai slowed
down and saw David, the driver of the parked ambulance. "You
came all the way to Beit Hakerem to buy falafel?" Yishai
teased David.
"Actually, it's not for me," David answered. "A few days ago,
I took a girl to the Alyn Pediatric Hospital and
Rehabilitation Center. This girl had undergone surgery to
remove a brain tumor, and was going to Alyn for therapy.
While she was in my ambulance, I overheard her talking to her
friend on a cell phone. She told her friend that she used to
love buying falafel at the falafel store in Beit Hakerem, and
now she can't go there anymore because of her illness.
"Today, I'm taking this girl to Alyn again," David continued.
"So I figured, why not make her happy and buy her falafel
from that store?"
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