Subscribe to The Jewish Standard free weekly newsletter

 
font size: +
 

Taking the chai road

Local cyclists bike for days to raise money for ALYN Hospital in Israel

 
 
 

JERUSALEM – Eleven riders from Bergen County last week completed a five-day, 300-mile bike ride benefiting the ALYN Pediatric and Adolescent Hospital and Rehabilitation Center here.

The 10th annual Wheels Of Love charity ride attracted 370 international riders, 250 one-day Israeli riders, and 35 volunteers from around the world, making it Israel’s largest charity sporting event. The youngest biker was 15; the oldest was 76.

image
Cyclists make the descent from the Golan toward Ein Gev.

“I call it a moving caravan,” joked Cathy Lanyard, executive director of American Friends of ALYN Hospital in Manhattan, who went along. “The logistics of this are quite enormous. It’s a small country and we’re a lot of people.”

Two professional management teams arranged details such as ambulances, bike trucks, and mechanics to accompany each of four riding groups (off-road, on-road, challenge, and touring), accommodations, and meals.

The payoff? The final number is still to be tallied, but Lanyard was hopeful that it will total between the $2 million raised last year and the record-breaking $3 million raised in 2007.

“Cumulatively, we’ve raised $15 million,” said Lanyard. “Each participant commits to raising a minimum of $2,000 in sponsorships, but the average sponsorship is over $5,400.”

The rehab center’s annual operating budget is $10 million, 60 to 70 percent of which is reimbursed by referring health insurance companies. Wheels of Love was conceived as way to make up the shortfall. In its first year, nine Israeli riders contributed $55,000.

image
From left are Harman Grossman, Ray Goldberg, Andrew Schiffmiller, and David Mirchin.

Teaneck resident Jeff Erdfarb is one of only two American bikers who have been participating in Wheels of Love for nine years in a row. Not missing an event, even during the time he was undergoing cancer treatment, he has contributed about $50,000 altogether.

“The ride is an exceptional challenge for me physically,” said Erdfarb, who this year battled rain, mud, and sleet during his first off-road day in the Golan Heights. He draws strength, he said, from his annual visits to the hospital. “I see how the lives of the children are improved. I can actually see how the donations are used.”

ALYN is a 200-bed private, non-profit comprehensive rehab center for disabled or injured patients from birth to age 21, of any ethnicity and religion. Many of the inpatients and 10,000 outpatients each year are unable to pay for their care, said Lanyard, yet each has equal access to treatment, including physiotherapy, occupational therapy, hydrotherapy, speech and language therapy, computer technology therapy, animal-assisted therapy, and humor therapy.

“Just like every one of the kids at ALYN has a different background and profile, so it is with the riders,” she added. “This year, we had several parent-child teams and three teams of sisters.”

Harman Grossman and Ray Goldberg of Teaneck dubbed themselves Abbas (Fathers) on Bikes. Grossman is a lawyer for Johnson & Johnson cardiology franchise Cordis, which has a research-and-development facility in Israel and was a corporate sponsor of the ride. Many of his coworkers contributed as well.

image
Yehuda Blinder exults after climbing to the top of Mevo Hama on Day 4. Lake Kinneret and Tiberias are in the background.

“Between us, Ray and I raised slightly over $23,000, and there is more coming in,” said Grossman. “People disagree passionately about all sorts of things, but this a cause everyone can fully get behind.”

He and fellow Teaneck rider Rhonda Avner discovered that they had gone to camp together as teenagers and hadn’t seen each other since, although they live in the same neighborhood.

Avner, a school nurse at Abraham Joshua Heschel School in Manhattan, sent 130 letters soliciting sponsorships and so far has raised $8,000 for ALYN.

“This was my first time,” said Avner, a marathoner who bought her first bicycle in August. “I’d heard about the ride a couple of years ago and now I’m turning 50, so I decided to do it.”

It was also the first Wheels of Love for Yehuda Blinder, a member of this year’s Team Englewood along with Brian Haim; Blinder’s brother, Yaacov, who lives in Israel; and David Garber, who made aliyah last summer from Englewood. (A three-time Team Englewood participant, Dr. Asher Kornbluth, ran in the New York City Marathon that coincided with Wheels of Love this year, but he dedicated his sponsorship money to ALYN and matched 18 percent of it himself.)

“We raised $30,000, which I believe was the highest amount raised by any team, and Brian did most of that work,” said Blinder, one of 50 participants on the challenge route.

“For me, the nicest thing was the religious and geographic diversity of the group. There were people from all over the U.S. and Canada, South Africa, and Europe. There were people who had very little religious observance and a Lubavitch chasid from Chicago,” said Blinder. “And everybody got along very nicely, during a grueling week of waking up early and riding hard all day.”

Ray Goldberg described the curvy roads of the Galilee region that “resulted in a stretched-out line of cyclists around the bends, just like in Tour de France photos — inspiring to behold, if a lot slower.”

One of his highlights was the 3,000-foot, 12-mile climb up to the Golan Heights, a two-hour stretch. “We passed beautiful evergreens, streams overflowing with recent rain waters, and headed down the mountains to the Jordan River headwaters. The tight cloud cover gave it a private, peaceful feeling.”

Grossman said he was moved by the “staggeringly beautiful scenery” but mostly by the beneficiary children. “On the last day, you have this great sense of achievement, having climbed the mountains into Jerusalem, and then you see these kids who have a daily challenge. They have been dealt a very difficult hand in life, and to be given the opportunity to help them is a wonderful thing.”

 
 
 
waynegaines posted 13 Nov 2009 at 09:02 AM

You can get instant quality full coverage medical insurance for entire family at the best price from http://bit.ly/39pFJx

The Therapist posted 16 Nov 2009 at 07:38 AM

Great informative post.Thanks for sharing.  We are a directory of licensed and professional counselors, therapists, and psychologists providing services of counseling and therapists.
http://www.theravive.com

 
Add a Comment

Name:

Email:

Location:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Please enter the word you see in the image below:


Auto-login on future visits

Show my name in the online users list

Forgot your password?

 

It was so beautiful

Teaneck youth helps Israeli boys celebrate b’nai mitzvah

At his bar mitzvah at Cong. Keter Torah in February, Teaneck resident Daniel Raykher announced that he’d use a portion of his gift money to sponsor bar mitzvahs for disadvantaged boys in Israel.

True to his word — and with lots of help from his parents and Bris Avrohom executive director Rabbi Mordechai Kanelsky — Daniel and his family traveled to Israel this summer to join 13 young men at the festive occasion.

 

Hudson cultural forum tackles diverse issues

When North Bergen resident Burt Gitlin launched the HudsonJewish social/intellectual salon project in June, he was looking for a way to bring area Jews together.

“I thought this might be an easy, soft sell,” said Gitlin, stressing that HudsonJewish — which seeks to revive local Jewish life by pulling together disparate elements of the community — is not a religious entity but more of a cultural organization.

“We try to be secular,” said Raylie Dunkel, the group’s program director. “The salons take a look at what affects you as a Jew, but not in terms of being a religious person.”

 

Demolitions are at center of battle over Jerusalem

JERUSALEM – Deep in a valley below Jerusalem’s Old City, a narrow alleyway leads to the remains of three bulldozed Arab homes in an area slated to become an archeological park.

The homes, now just slabs of collapsed concrete, are in the eastern Jerusalem neighborhood of Silwan. Despite international protests — including from the U.S. secretary of state — the remaining 85 or so houses there, which were built without permits, are to be demolished to make room for a park the city hopes will be a major draw for tourists.

The dispute over the area, together with recent evictions in the Arab neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah, are the most recent markers in the battle over Jerusalem. Israel seeks to cement its control over the city in part by altering the demographic character of its eastern, Arab neighborhoods.

 

RECENTLYADDED

Reality check: Konrad Adenauer Foundation brings Muslim leaders to Holocaust sites

Rabbi Jack Bemporad wants it known that the visit he organized of eight Muslim-American leaders to concentration camps was a historic success.

Bemporad, director of the Carlstadt-based Center for Interreligious Understanding, called the Aug. 7 to 11 trip to Auschwitz in Germany and Dachau in Poland “a breakthrough in many respects, because … we took imams like [Yasir] Qadhi, for example,” who 10 years ago called the Holocaust a hoax. (Bemporad led the trip, which was sponsored by the Konrad Adenauer Foundation, with Prof. Marshall Breger of the Catholic University of America.)

 

Reality check: Konrad Adenauer Foundation brings Muslim leaders to Holocaust sites

‘Stand up firmly for justice’

Following is a statement issued by the Muslim leaders who visited Auschwitz and Dachau last month.

“O you who believe, stand up firmly for justice as witnesses to Almighty God.” (Holy Qu’ran, al-Nisa “The Women” 4:135)

On Aug. 7-11, 2010, we the undersigned Muslim American faith and community leaders visited Dachau and Auschwitz concentration camps where we witnessed firsthand the historical injustice of the Holocaust.

 

Future of Union for Traditional Judaism sale uncertain

The Union for Traditional Judaism’s Teaneck headquarters sold at auction early last month, but a motion filed last week in U.S. bankruptcy court last week cast doubt on the transaction.

UTJ’s attorney, Janice Grubin, filed a motion on Aug. 27 requesting an extension for her client to file a Chapter 11 plan. Extending this period of exclusivity, during which the debtor can create a plan to pull itself out of bankruptcy without imposed outside solutions, is not atypical in bankruptcy cases, she said. The property went to auction on Aug. 4, which was won by 333 Realty for $1.45 million.

 
 
S M T W T F S
1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30