Moshe Phillips and Benyamin Korn for the algemeiner.com
They don’t have plush offices or secretaries or gala
dinners, but a group of 15 year-olds on Long Island are providing an
inspiring model of leadership for the rest of the American Jewish
community.
Tenth graders at the Rambam Mesivta High School in
Lawrence, New York, recently initiated an online crowd sourcing
campaign, which has raised an astonishing $2.4-million for the families
of the four American-Israeli rabbis, and the Druze police officer, who
were murdered in a Jerusalem synagogue last month.
We were all horrified and saddened by the news of the Har Nof
massacre. But most people quickly returned to their usual daily affairs.
The grim reality of what the widows and orphans will endure for the
rest of their lives didn’t attract much attention.
When the Rambam students heard about the massacre, they asked: What
can we do? And then they did something – something that will make a real
difference in the lives of the victims’ families. They can’t bring back
the innocents who were massacred by Palestinian terrorists. But they
can ease the pain of their widows and orphans, just a little.
Once the crowd-sourcing campaign began gathering momentum, the
Orthodox Union recognized the importance of the students’ effort and
began assisting it. Hopefully other Jewish organizations will do
likewise.
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