Total Pageviews

Sunday, 28 July 2019

WE HAVE TO BE DEAD OR DYING TO WAKE UP OUR PITY

A Chai Lifeline Girl’s Wish & The Rosh Yeshiva’s Bracha [VIDEO & PHOTOS]





A powerful video of the Lakewood Rosh Yeshiva Harav Yeruchem Olshin shlita’s bracha to a little girl at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia was shown to a crowd of thousands last night at the Chai Lifeline dinner in Ateres Chana – Bais Faiga hall in Lakewood, NJ.
A young girl with a brain tumor who had been confined to the hospital for weeks asked the rosh yeshiva, who visited her in the hospital, for a bracha to be able to go to Camp Simcha. Although the doctors did not think it was likely, she held on to the Rosh Yeshiva’s bracha and continued to hope. When the first day of camp arrived and she was unable to leave the hospital, dedicated Chai Lifeline volunteers brought Camp Simcha activities to her hospital room. However, she still dreamed of going to camp because, in her own words, “It’s a place where I feel understood.” With intervention from the Chai Lifeline case managers, she was able to leave the hospital and go to Camp Simcha for the last two days of camp.
The video was the highlight of the evening’s program, which opened with divrei bracha from the Lakewood Rosh Yeshiva Harav Malkiel Kotler shlita. The Rosh Yeshiva expressed how Chai Lifeline’s chesed has impacted hundreds of families in the Lakewood community.
Rabbi Simcha Scholar, CEO of Chai Lifeline, then spoke about how Chai Lifeline exists for a single reason: to be there for families battling illness in our community. “The rising needs of the Lakewood community are very significant. The number of new cases rises each year,” he said. Rabbi Scholar stressed that every member of Chai Lifeline is focused on filling the growing need and ensuring that every family affected by illness receives the help they so desperately need.
The Master of Ceremonies Harav Baruch Rabinowitz shlita, Rav of Talymwar in Toms River, shared how Chai Lifeline has been there for his family with attention to even the tiniest details. The crowd was moved by his personal stories and heartfelt words of gratitude for all Chai Lifeline has done for his family.
Dr. Robert Berg, Division Chief of Critical Care at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and Professor of Anesthesiology and Critical Care at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, accepted the Community Service Award on behalf of the entire team at the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit in Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. The award was presented by Rav Yitze Scheinerman and Rav Dovi Sorotzkin, who described how the PICU is not only one of the foremost pediatric intensive care units in the world, but also leads in culturally sensitive, humanity-centered care. He emotionally shared how his son has been personally impacted by the deep sensitivity of the doctors and nurses in the unit. He also praised the steadfast partnership between Chai Lifeline and CHOP, which has benefitted many patients and their families.
Dr. Berg also presented on recent advances in pediatric critical care to over 50 local rabbanim prior to the dinner.
The large turnout at the dinner was a source of chizuk to Chai Lifeline’s volunteers, staff, and most importantly, the families battling illness who have come to rely on Chai Lifeline at every step of their medical journey. As Rabbi Scholar said, “It’s only through the unified support of the entire community that we can continue to service and help this population in their most difficult situations.”
To learn more about Chai Lifeline, please visit www.chailifeline.org.

6 comments:

Rabbi Gaby Lock said...

IT IS INTERESTING WE ALWAYS SEE PITY IN OUR COMMUNITY WHEN SOMEONE IS ILL OR DYING

AND WE THINK BY GIVING MONEY, WE CAN MAKE IT ALL GO AWAY, EVEN THE RABBIS AND RABBONIM THINK SO.

THE TRUTH IS WE HAVE NO PITY FOR THE LONELY, NONE OF THE PEOPLE OR RABBONIM AT YOUR FUNCTIONS THINKS THAT BY GIVING, A BIT OF TIME TO A HEALTHY LONELY PERSON IS IMPORTANT, YOU HAVE TO BE DYING OR HALF DEAD, OR DEAD THEN THEY ARE ALL THERE APOLOGIZING THAT WE DID NOT GIVE THIS PERSON ENOUGH ATTENTION WHEN HE WAS ALIVE. THEY MAKE ME SICK.

DO YOU KNOW HOW MANY OF THESE SO CALLED DO GOODERS DO NOT HAVE TIME TO LISTEN AND TALK WITH AN ORDINARY PERSON, DO YOU KNOW HOW MANY OF THESE SO CALLED DO GOODERS, DO NOT ANSWER AND SAY GOOD SHABBOS TO A PERSON IN THE STREET

MY ADVICE IS TO OBSERVE YOUR SELF IN THE STREET ON SHABBOS AND SEE HOW MANY PEOPLE YOU DO NOT SAY GOOD SHABBOS TOO.

WE THINK HAVING MONEY AND GIVING MONEY IS THE MAIN AIM OF YIDDISHKEIT
WE ARE SNOBS RABBIS AND RABBONIM AT THE TOP, AND THEN THE STUPID YIDDEN FOLLOW,WHEN YOU CAN DO A CHESSED WITH YOUR BODY, WHICH NO ONE SEES

shimon B said...

IF YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT YOURSELF STOP SWEARING LIKE A GOY, AND STOP YOUR STUPID BLOG AND PEOPLE MIGHT BE A BIT WARMER TO YOU. YOU SHOUT AT PEOPLE IN PUBLIC AND MAKE A COMPLETE IDIOT OF YOURSELF. BEHAVING LIKE A CHILD AND SEEKING ATTENTION IS NOT GOING TO MAKE YOU LIKED.

shimon B said...

IF YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT YOURSELF STOP SWEARING LIKE A GOY, AND STOP YOUR STUPID BLOG AND PEOPLE MIGHT BE A BIT WARMER TO YOU. YOU SHOUT AT PEOPLE IN PUBLIC AND MAKE A COMPLETE IDIOT OF YOURSELF. BEHAVING LIKE A CHILD AND SEEKING ATTENTION IS NOT GOING TO MAKE YOU LIKED.

Rabbi Gaby Lock said...

SHIMON. B.

I DO NOT KNOW WHY YOU SENT HIS TWICE BUT AS YOU DID I WILL LEAVE IT ON .

I SEE YOU KNOW VERY LITTLE ABOUT PEOPLE AND HOW THEY BEHAVE, IN THIS WORLD AND ESPECIALLY THE JEWISH WORLD, THE BLOG AND SWEARING MAKES YOUR POINT NOTICED.
SEEKING ATTENTION IN MY WORLD, ( I KNOW YOU THINK DIFFERENT THEN ME ) AND SHOUTING AT PEOPLE IN PUBLIC, AND MAKING AN IDIOT OF MYSELF
IS NOT GOING TO GET ME LIKED, BUT IT IS GOING TO GET ME THE ATTENTION I WANT.

I WANT YOU TO THINK IN TO ONE LINE.

IF I AM MAD AND THINK I NORMAL THEN I AM MAD
BUT IF I AM MAD AND KNOW THAT I AM BEHAVING MAD THEN I AM NORMAL.

Malka Batsheva said...

If a person is lonely, writing blogs and going on social media lets them connect to other people. If people swear it’s because they are angry or want to get a point across. I find it strange that Jews are so offended by swearing but not by other types of bad behaviour. There are quite a few people I want to shout at in public as well.

Rabbi Gaby Lock said...

MALKA BATSHEVA

THANK YOU FOR YOUR COMMENTS YOU ARE NOT LIKE A LOT OF JEWS ESPECIALLY FRUM ONES, WHOSE AIM IN LIFE IS THAT WE MAKE A GOOD IMPRESSION ON THE WORLD.

THEY DO NOT CARE THAT A PERSON IS LONELY ETC, ETC, I USE THE BLOG TO SHOUT AT PEOPLE AND TELL THEM THAT THERE BEHAVIOUR IS NOT RIGHT.
AND I DO NOT CARE IF I AM WASHING MY DIRTY CLOTH IN PUBLIC, AS THIS IS A CALL FOR HELP, AND STUPID FUCKING SNOBBISH JEWS DO NOT SEE IT.