NATIONAL JEWISH OUTREACH
PROGRAM
A Tsunami Of Money
Pours Out Of Pocket
Story and Photos by Tim Boxer
ONEY
flowed like water at a parlor meeting in November at Sam Domb’s
West Side
town house. Domb, a wealthy
New York
real estate operator, invited his friend, Rabbi Ephraim Z.
Buchwald, founding director of the National Jewish Outreach
Program, to the meeting, a benefit for Yeshiva Ketana of
Manhattan.
Rabbi Buchwald watched in admiration as Domb
reached in his pocket and took out a check for five figures for
the yeshiva. He proceeded to raise a total of $450,000.
That’s not all. “There’s another school
in our neighborhood that needs our support,” Domb said, and
pledged an equal amount to the
Manhattan
Day School.
Wait there’s more. Domb looked at his
friend and announced, “Rabbi Buchwald is helping to save Jews so
I’m giving him a check as well” for such NJOP projects as
Shabbat Across America, Hebrew crash courses and the beginner’s
minyan.
Next day, when Rabbi Buchwald told
Manhattan
Day School
’s chairman Elliot Gibber and president Eli Salig
of Domb’s largesse, they were in shock. It was benevolence they
hadn’t expected.
Domb asked one of his employees, a Sri Lankan
named Boodie, to call a meeting at Domb’s office at the
Travel Inn Hotel for victims of the Tsunami tragedy. Many came,
including the
Sri Lanka
ambassador.
Domb, whose mother was shot when he was three
months old, looked the ambassador in the eye and said, “When the
Germans murdered our wives and babies, no one spoke up on our
behalf. Although no one cared about us, we care about your
people.”
With that he gave the ambassador a check and
raised a great deal more at the meeting.
The six-foot tall Boodi, who towers over his
diminutive boss, muttered through his tears, “Mr. Domb, I am
very proud and very lucky to work for you.”
Rabbi Buchwald recounted these events at
NJOP’s 11th annual dinner at the New York Hilton
saying, “It was the charitable equivalent of a hat trick –
something that we rarely see.”
The rabbi introduced the Domb at the dinner,
to a standing ovation. But Domb was not one of the honorees. He
doesn’t seek honors. Instead, the rabbi paid tribute to Fannie
and Zenek Podolsky, Janet and Saul Spitz, Eliana
and Vladimir Gutin, and Batya and Eddie Jacobs.
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