
Jay Feinberg and Ron Rifkin
|
GIFT OF LIFE
Giving Of One’s Self
To Save Another
by Tim Boxer
ON RIFKIN
didn’t hesitate to serve as
emcee for the third year at the Gift of Life Bone Marrow Foundation
dinner at the Grand Hyatt. The star of ABC’s Alias told
executive director Jay Feinberg, "It is an honor to give
when someone needs to receive."
Feinberg founded the organization after his own bone
marrow transplant 10 years ago. He now has a registry of 100,000
donors in 40 countries.
I thought it was odd that in addition to the
requisite floral centerpiece, each table held a box of Kleenex.
Ordinarily, when one makes a bone marrow or blood
stem cell donation to a recipient through the Gift of Life program,
neither person knows the identity of the other. They may find out a
year later, with mutual consent, at the organization’s annual
dinner.
Ruth Madoff introduced Raphi Weitz to his
donor, Robert Eppenstein, a court reporter in New York.
Weitz, director of the Neurology Institute at
Schneider Children’s Medical Center in Israel, was diagnosed with
acute leukemia three years ago.
Weitz embraced life as he hugged his savior.
"Without your gift I wouldn’t be here," Weitz said.
Warren Spector, president and Co-COO of Bear
Stearns (his wife calls him "Cocoo"), introduced another
recipient to her donor.
Irene Berg of Hyde Park, N.Y., a nurse for
United HealthCare, got a stem cell transplant that saved her life.
Her anonymous donor turned out to be Mark Waldman, owner of
Pacific Engineering and Construction Co. in San Francisco. He came
bearing a bouquet of long-stemmed roses for the person he saved.
"I’m glad we met," Waldman said.
"We are family – in fact, blood relatives."
Now I understood why Kleenex was the centerpiece.
|