JMF Makes Gift to Danny Siegel’s Mitzvah Work in Israel

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DannySiegel.01For decades, one of our personal mitzvah heroes, Danny Siegel, has been teaching young people how and where to make an impact with their tzedakah work. This summer, he is returning once again to Israel where he will mentor his newest group of would-be mitzvah heroes.

The Dreskin family has known and admired Danny for many, many years. The Jonah Maccabee Foundation is honored to partner with Danny in his holy work.

BillyJMF Makes Gift to Danny Siegel’s Mitzvah Work in Israel
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Thank you … to those who, in 2016, have provided funds so we can make a difference in young people’s lives

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Jonah.2008.04.#008a.NFTY-NAR.SpringKallah

Rabbi Joe Black … in honor of the Dreskin family

Rabbi Mo Salth

Cantor Suzanne Bernstein … in honor of Aiden Dreskin

Stacy and Bruce Beyer

Noah Budin

Liz and Mike Scafidi

Kathy Glass

Emily Rosen and Dan Gorka … in honor of Rabbi Billy Dreskin … thank you for all of the time you spent with us this year and for your beautiful participation in our wedding ceremony … we are so grateful for your support

David Paul

Larry Grossman

Eli Malakan … leilui nishmat my grandfather Shimon ben Yehzakel … leilui nishmat Jonah

Rabbi Norman Cohen

Madelyn Katz

Sheldon Low

Ben & Jerry’s of White Plains

Chuck and Jessica Myers

Am Shalom, Glencoe, IL

David and Linda Altshuler

Rabbi Marc Margolius

Karen Steele …. in memory of Sean

Michael Skloff

Harriet Lewis

David and Kathy Gelfand

… and growing!

BillyThank you … to those who, in 2016, have provided funds so we can make a difference in young people’s lives
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Seven Years Gone … But No Way Are You Forgotten

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Dear Jonah,

Jonah.2008.08.23.#001a.UBPretty much from the moment that you died, I would wake up in the morning and experience a pair of responses to each new day … in this order. First, there would be 2-3 blessed seconds during which I hadn’t yet remembered that you’re gone. I actually looked forward to waking up and that brief illusion when it seemed as if you were still here. Then the second response would come: I remembered. All the air would seep out of me as my spirit flattened and I would sigh, “Still dead.”

That hasn’t happened for quite a while although, every now and then, I do feel a milder punch in the stomach when some sudden acknowledgment of your absence sort of drops on me from out of the blue. I mostly just shake my head and try to get back to whatever I’m doing. But the feeling of missing you lingers. You’re a hard guy to shake.

I’m pleased to say that, more and more, my memories of you are filled with a restrained delight and timeless love. That’s a pretty significant achievement, I think. I can certainly conjure up the worst of what I recall about your dying, but I’m glad that’s something I have to work at. More common are the moments when best memories surface and I’m reminded how fortunate I am to have had you in my life.

Part of learning to live without you is processing those moments when I think, “Jonah would have loved this!” They’re bittersweet, of course, as they bring a smile (because I love when you come to mind) along with a tear (that once again you’re not here to share it with me). I manage these not unwelcome interruptions by acknowledging that they’ve happened and then (pretty much always with a sigh) moving on.

Sometimes I write them down before I let you go.

Jonah.2007.01.#006.WinterKallahI remember in August 2009, about five months after your death, Ellen had posted on Facebook an incredible 4-handed guitar duet that was performed by two remarkably accomplished Brazilian musicians but on a single guitar (goo.gl/5qckDh). Most of the time, the two instrumentalists played independently of each other. But sometimes, the one’s left hand fingered for the other’s right hand. I thought to myself, “I need to share this with someone!” But I couldn’t think of anyone to tell. And then I remembered. The person I loved sharing amazing instrumental music with was you.

About a year after that, in August 2010, our family visited England and Ireland. You, of course, came along with us riding in my heart. We toured Liverpool, birthplace of The Beatles whose music you and I both loved. I brought you home some guitar picks and a Sgt. Pepper’s refrigerator magnet, fully aware that you’d have preferred a poster for your room. I had the presence of mind not to buy something for you but to get something for me that could remind me of you. The picks and magnet did the job.

Then, in Ireland, we spent an evening doing a “pub crawl,” visiting Dublin’s saloons and listening to Irish folk music while downing a draught of beer in each pub. I detest alcohol and had to demur each time a server took our orders, a scene whose humor was not lost on your siblings. You didn’t like beer either but very likely would have ordered at least one even though you wouldn’t have drunk much more than I had. You would have loved that evening, Jonah. You’d have been drawn in by the songs, and by the stories that frequently accompanied them. And you’d have been the first to want to purchase the musicians’ CDs because you’d have really enjoyed bringing home some music from Ireland, especially after hearing the singers perform live.

Jonah's 1st haircut. His evil twin emerges.

Jonah’s 1st haircut. His evil twin emerges.

Over Thanksgiving weekend in 2011, we celebrated a babynaming at Shabbat services. A little infant girl was joined on the bimah by her mom and dad along with her four-year-old brother. The brother had the sourest look on his face, with arms crossed to make absolutely clear his unwillingness to play along. There was nothing about this that he wanted to enjoy and he was determined to be the best sourest four-year old that he could be. He was great at it. Which brought back startlingly clear memories of you, when your baby brother was named at temple in Cleveland and you lasted maybe thirty seconds before storming off the bimah. You took up an offensive position in the center aisle where you set about your self-assigned task of ruining whatever decorum might have been part of our celebration that evening. I remember having crafted a written blessing for Aiden but throwing my note-cards into the air as I launched into something that might out-do your performance and somehow rescue this important ritual moment. There was no saving it, of course, and that simply made it one of those family memories we can only laugh at years later. And guess what? I’m glad I can see you so very clearly in my mind’s replay of that evening. If you’d behaved yourself, I’d have nothing of you from that night to remember.

Dane Cook t-shirt Katrina Relief 2007

Katrina Relief 2007

And then just this week, I’m out walking Charlie and, boom, there you are. I often listen to podcasts along the way and I like to cycle through different ones. Today, up comes a fabulous old radio program called Car Talk, which ran from 1977 to 2012 and featured “Click and Clack, the Tappet Brothers,” better known as Tom and Ray Magliozzi, two fairly certifiable but brilliant car-nuts. They diagnose callers’ car problems while having a riotously funny time along the way. I wondered what my neighbors were thinking as Charlie and I came walking by and I was belly-laughing at what, to them, must have appeared to be nothing at all. How I would love to email you a link to the broadcast. I remember how much you enjoyed comedians as a kid: Monty Python, Steve Martin and, back when his name wasn’t a dirty word, Bill Cosby. In high school, you were frequently spotted wearing your Dane Cook t-shirt. Was that because he was funny or because the shirt flipped the world a bird? Probably both and, either way, I think you would have loved Car Talk, even though your and my ignorance about cars was surpassed only by that of sports, and that’s only because we had to know where the gas tank was

Seven years you’re gone now, JoJo. That’s simply stupefying. You were just here. But like the scent of the vanilla yahrzeit candle I’m burning today, you do have a way of lingering.

Aviator, adventurer and racehorse trainer Beryl Markham once wrote, “Never believe that an hour you remember is a better hour.” In truth, I try not to live in my memories of you. I do my very best to keep moving forward, and to meet each day with eagerness and curiosity. But as I’ve said, you do linger. And you manage to show up without calling first.

I’m pretty sure I’d have it no other way.

Love you forever,
Dad

BillySeven Years Gone … But No Way Are You Forgotten
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A Valentine’s Day Card

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Jonah on Feb 14, 1990. Minutes young!

Jonah on Feb 14, 1990. Minutes young!

Dear Jonah,

When you were born on Valentine’s Day, one of my first thoughts was, “Your girlfriends are going to love your birthday!” Well, as things go when you’re the dad, I was never much privy to those details of your life. But I never stopped thinking how cool it was that you were born on the day of love.

In February 2012, the night before Valentine’s Day and what would have been your 22nd birthday, my mood was subdued (if not outright sullen) when Jim Croce’s music came up in my iTunes collection. I’ve always loved his songs and I wondered if you had ever heard any of them. Soon, I was trolling around the internet to see if there were any old videos that showed Jim Croce doing his thing. I had never seen anything but pictures of the man, so I was fairly mesmerized by the opportunity to watch him perform. As I viewed the video, however, I noticed a second guitarist who played brilliantly alongside his boss. And all I was thinking was that you would have loved listening to these guys. And I couldn’t help but wonder who the second guitarist was and if he had also died in the 1973 plane crash which took Croce’s life. I was saddened to learn he had.

Not every death links back to you, Jonah. But when it’s someone whose age was close to yours, and whose interests intersected with yours, my heart and mind make the connection.

The second guitarist’s name was Maury Muehleisen. In 1970, he and Jim Croce met, became fast friends and, soon after, Croce began playing backup for Muehleisen. You read that correctly. Over time their roles would switch, and Maury Muehleisen became the man whose exquisite guitar work made Jim Croce’s music “sing.” With the success of their recordings, frequent touring and television appearances followed which, on the evening of September 20, 1973, brought them to Northwestern State University. After their performance, the small chartered plane that was carrying them to their next gig in Sherman, Texas, crashed. Everyone on board perished.

As I pondered all of this on that pre-Valentine’s Day evening in 2012, I learned that Maury Muehleisen had recorded an album of his own. I immediately ordered it at maurymuehleisen.com and was surprised to receive an email soon after from his sister, Mary. Her note read, “Hi. Thank you for your interest in my brother Maury’s music. I am getting your order ready to mail out tomorrow morning. With gratitude, Mary.”

Well, that piqued my curiosity. A personal note with every order? But I’d become acquainted with the behavior of those remembering loved ones and I suspected Maury’s sister was selling her brother’s CDs to keep her connection to him strong.

Maury Muehleisen and Jim Croce

Maury Muehleisen and Jim Croce

I couldn’t resist and sent her a follow-up note: “Hi, Mary. I love that you’ve written me yourself. I only ‘met’ Maury yesterday in a number of YouTube videos of him with Jim Croce. I know it’s been a long time since he died, and I couldn’t presume to know what that feels like nearly 40 years later, but my 19-year-old son died three years ago (his 22nd birthday is actually today, Valentine’s Day) and that heart-tug is still ever-present. It’s great that Maury left a beautiful legacy of his music. My son is remembered dearly by his older sister and younger brother, along with me (his pop) and his mom. A zillion friends just starting out in life adored him, and we all wondered where life would lead him. Alas, a forever mystery. So it’s especially meaningful for me to be able to connect a little bit to Maury’s life, his music (amazing guitar work!) and your continuing love for him. I look forward to welcoming the CDs into my home. Wishing you every goodness in life, Billy Dreskin.”

Well, sure enough, she wrote me again, with an incredible story to tell. “Hi, Billy. I don’t always write before I send out CDs. But I send a card with each one and wanted to see if you would write back so I would know if you went by William or Bill or Billy. I am so glad that I wrote and that you responded, especially today – February 14th – especially since you shared your story about your son and this date. I will share a story that few fans know. I was pregnant when Maury died and had identical twin girls a few months after. I named the first one after him. The girls were raised listening to his music and learning all about the Uncle Maury they would never meet. When they were eleven, that twin died and her funeral was 27 years ago today, Valentine’s Day. Maybe the mystery of life is that we are all connected after all, and sooner or later. Hopefully, our young ones are now introduced and exploring all the corners of heaven together. Connected now to you and yours, Mary.”

I couldn’t help myself. I wrote once more: “Oh, Mary. The loss you’ve known. Deepened, I imagine, by the beauty your brother and daughter brought into your life. The loss and the beauty live side by side now, I guess. I rarely cry anymore for my Jonah, but I miss him every day. At the same time, I never forget the goodnesses he shared with all of us. It was a privilege to have known and loved him. That may not balance out with his death, but it sure is nice to have those great memories. And the love, of course, lives on and on. So my heart is with you on this, and now, every Valentine’s Day. Unbelievable that our lives should intersect in this way. I’ll take it as the blessing that comes with everything else. It’s an honor to make your acquaintance.”

I certainly wouldn’t have expected your birthday to include this kind of interstellar contact, Jonah. I mean, she and I live in different universes! Different lifetimes! There’s no reason on earth I can think of that we would find ourselves meeting and sharing our stories. Simply unbelievable.

But this I think is what some people who have known loss will do. Ever hoping to keep our ties strong and secure with those who have died, we reach out for memories and moments that might, in some small but powerful way, rekindle that connection. Maury Muehleisen died when he was 24 years old. You when you were just nineteen. For Maury’s sister and your dad, finding each other across the vast open spaces of time and experience brought us some comfort and kinship. And isn’t that what Valentine’s Day is really all about?

Happy 26th birthday, Jonah. Love you forever.

Dad

P.S. Want to watch Jim and Maury play “Operator”? Here you go!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgMzYAtjfg8

.

BillyA Valentine’s Day Card
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Shop @ Amazon — Support the JMF!

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Banner.01Hi. Here’s an easy way to support The Jonah Maccabee Foundation all year long. Just click on the image at right or the link below and arrange with Amazon.com to send a few dollars our way every now and then. We’ll use it to continue the good works you’ve been supporting all along — helping kids grow healthy, whole lives. Thanks!

https://smile.amazon.com/ch/45-1736178

BillyShop @ Amazon — Support the JMF!
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Thanks to all who contributed to our “Half Off” Fall Campaign!

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2015.11.HalfOffSaleWe got a bit silly on this one. We’re grateful for everyone who had a sense of humor about it and who understood that your gifts are so very much needed and appreciated. You fill our hearts and keep us strong.


Fran and Richard Pursell. In honor of the marriage of Lisa Pursell and Jared Saltman.

Marc Richter. In honor of the birthday and anniversary of Jeff and Fern Richter.

Jane Emmer. Indeed you put a smile on my face. Thanks for your hard work in making our world a little bit better. This donation is in honor of our dear friend and yours Rabbi Marcus Burstein and his hard work fighting a nasty disease.

Doug Passon and “Road to Eden.”

Susan Colin and OySongs.

Rabbi David Saperstein.

Danielle Rodnizki. In honor of Ellen Dreskin and the light she brings to the world (and in gratitude for “So Is Life”). Happy Chanukah!

Samuel David Cohen.

Richard and Naomi Binenfeld.

Alice Passer and Barry Krieger. In loving memory of David Passer.

Chuck and Jessica Myers.

Beth Sperber Richie.

Rick Lupert.

Dale Glasser. In honor of Maya and Zachary Glasser.

Harold and Ellen Rubin.

Rabbi Glynis Conyer.

Cantor Julie Yugend-Green.

Morris Kramer.

Helen Meltzer-Krim.

Rabbi Ramie and Merri Arian.

Ira Lichtiger.

Elliott Rosen.

Dan Lucas.

Yvette Shandel.

Stephen and Sherry Jacobs. In honor of David Wiskind and in memory of Jonah Dreskin.

John Planer.

Seth Kroll.

Aaron Spiegel.

Rachel Mylan.

Rabbi Debra Robbins. In honor of Ellen and Billy Dreskin.

Larry Robins and Debra Robbins. In honor of Molly Zimmerman becoming a Bat Mitzvah.

Rona Oberman and Deborah Franzblau.

Roger and Marilyn Price.

Rabbi  David Komerofsky.

David Hill.

Rabbi Michael Weinberg.

Wendy Jennis and Doug Mishkin.

Daughters Fund.

Beth Sher.

Bari Ziegel.

Herb and Melissa Baer.

Julie Newman.

Susan and David Berger.

Cantor Zoe Jacobs. With thanks for the beautiful music and sending love to you all.

Rabbi Michael Mellen.

Robin Slater-Sherman.

Roberta Roos.

Rochelle Novins.

Neil Weinstein.

Tracy Fishbein.

Tom Schaeffer.

Julie DeWinter Stein.

Merav Gur and Peter Lobl.

Sally Winter.

Rabbi Renni Altman. In honor of Daniel Wender.

Laura Tobias.

Martha Rosen.

Ilana Matteson.

Don Jones.

Jacob Spike Kraus.

Steven Hagy.

Marc Margolius.

Kathy Tuchman Glass.

Julie and Scott Stein.

Ira and Julia Levin.

Rabbi Robbie Harris.

Lloyd and Roberta Roos.

George Markley.

Aliza Burton.

Donna Spencer.

Matt Grob.

Jan and Alane Katzew.

Wendy and Howard Albert.

Cantor Richard Cohn.

Julie Newman.

Martine Klein and family.

 

BillyThanks to all who contributed to our “Half Off” Fall Campaign!
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JMF Set to Help Syrian Refugees

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According to UNICEF, “seven and a half million children are affected by the brutal four-year-old conflict in Syria.” Their families (if they still have one) worry about the ongoing violence, the destruction of roads, buildings (their homes!), schools, hospitals and vital services like water and sewage.

2 million child refugees whose families have left Syria in search of safe shelter now face the oncoming winter, on top of everything else.

The Jonah Maccabee Foundation is partnering with UNICEF to try and ensure that food, water, education, warm clothing, blankets and so much more get to these kids.

If you’d like to join us, we’ll make sure your donation gets to where it’s needed. You may donate online by clicking here (specify “The Jonah Maccabee Dreskin Social Justice Fund”).

Thanks!

BillyJMF Set to Help Syrian Refugees
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Susan Colin and OySongs Support JMF

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SusanColinSusan Colin is a co-owner of OySongs, the online Jewish music download service. At this year’s URJ Biennial in Orlando, Susan was selling CDs and other music products throughout the convention. Among her wares was the “So Is Life” CD just released by Cantor Rosalie Boxt, Cantor Ellen Dreskin, Josh Nelson and Dan Nichols. She sold a whole lot of them but instead of keeping a portion to run her business, she sent her share along to us as well.

That’s a pretty wonderful thing in our book and we want the whole world to know how grateful we are. To show our appreciation, we are pleased to induct Susan into the Order of Stalwart Friends of The Jonah Maccabee Foundation with a special commendation for awesomeness.

OySongs.logoThank you, Susan. We’re so glad to have you on our team.

Everybody else, go spend money at OySongs!

BillySusan Colin and OySongs Support JMF
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Project Morry Receives Gift from JMF

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final logoWe’re so delighted to have awarded a grant from The Jonah Maccabee Foundation to Project Morry, a nonprofit, year-round youth development organization that helps young people from underserved communities in and around New York City to succeed in school and in life. Each year, more than 400 children participate in enriching learning opportunities at summer camp and throughout the school year.

JMF is honored to support Project Morry!

BillyProject Morry Receives Gift from JMF
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Remembering Iris Siegel

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Siegel&Co.2008.08.#002.IrisWe’re so deeply grateful to everyone who donated in memory of Ellen’s mom, Iris Siegel. Iris was a beautiful soul who lived a long, wonderful life, loved by her family and her friends alike. Everyone who met her was struck by her cheerful grace and unforgettable smile. Her memory is a blessing to us all.


Elizabeth Sher. In tribute to and in memory of Iris Siegel, whose legacy has enriched my life by at least 5 Dreskins so far.

Myron Katz.

Alan and Gwynne Ross.

Fran Rosenfeld.

Melissa Swift and Diane Robertson.

Faye, Evan and Rachel Friedman.

Caryn Roman.

Todd Gordon and Susan Feder.

Jodie and Steven Meltzer.

Don and June Moskovitz.

Nicole Roos.

Herb Friedman.

Ed and Dotty Miller.

Yvette and Larry Gralla.

Andy and Joan Farber.

Pam and Joel Chernoff.

Harriet Kohn.

Roberta and Roger Wetherbee.

Rochelle Novins.

Sheila and Dick Sweet.

Fern and Ira Stein.

Cantor Dana Anesi.

Lisa Sacks.

Barry and Judith Kessler

BillyRemembering Iris Siegel
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