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קידוש השם פין הצלה

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נשלח ב-12/2/2004 21:30 לינק ישיר 
קידוש השם פין הצלה

Dickter - Staff Writer



Chasidim generally don't congregate at the corner of Marcus Garvey Boulevard and Lexington Avenue in Brooklyn.

According to the Bedford Stuyvesant Volunteer Ambulance Corps, whose headquarters are located there, it's the heart of one of the most dangerous inner-city neighborhoods in America.

Yet starting this month, a ''Jewish division'' of some 30 male volunteers, most of them chasidic, have begun reporting there for medical training, meetings and patrols.

Coming from as far away as Borough Park or as near as adjacent Williamsburg, the Orthodox volunteers have been leaving their low-crime communities to be part of what is believed to be the first minority-run volunteer ambulance corps in the nation.

Some of them will answer emergency calls on the streets of Bed-Stuy along with African-American counterparts, ready to save lives while gathering valuable field experience.

''Unfortunately, this is where the action is,'' said Tamsin Wolf, an Orthodox lawyer from Washington Heights in Manhattan and a longtime supporter and fund-raiser for the cash-strapped Bed-Stuy Vollies, as they are widely known.

Although crime in general, and gang-related violence in particular, has decreased markedly in recent years, it is not uncommon to find shooting or stabbing victims on the streets of Bedford-Stuyvesant. The volunteer corps says it is still more likely to answer an assault call on any given day than a stroke or heart attack.

Wolf, who is not a medic, has been helping to coordinate the new Jewish division. She recently persuaded the corps to reschedule a training meeting set for March 7, which is Purim.

''They wanted to show sensitivity to the Jewish volunteers,'' Wolf said.

And though there is no Jewish community to speak of in Bed-Stuy, members of the fledgling Jewish division say they want to pitch in to make a difference.

''You want to do something for society,'' said Benjamin Fish, who lives in Borough Park and runs a kosher restaurant in Williamsburg. ''You want to help other people who are in need.''

Many of the members say that Hatzoloh, the Orthodox-run corps that has chapters in virtually all Jewish neighborhoods, has enough volunteers.

''Hatzoloh is too big, they have too much going on, they have enough help,'' Fish said. ''This is a small organization and they can use the help.''

Yet in an indirect way, Hatzoloh has played a role in this new frontier in black-Jewish cooperation.

James ''Rocky'' Robinson, who founded the Bed-Stuy corps with Joe Perez, said he was inspired by Hatzoloh during his long career with the city's Emergency Medical Service.

''I was amazed that every time I would respond to a call in a Jewish neighborhood, the patient had already been removed by Hatzoloh,'' said Robinson, relaxing in an office that doubles as his home in Bed-Stuy's Lexington Avenue, which is a far cry from its Manhattan counterpart. ''In 1998, I decided to see if I can do it in Bed-Stuy. Now I try to pattern everything I do after Hatzoloh.''

Robinson, who retired from EMS three years ago, now spends his time running the volunteer corps. The new Jewish division, he said, will make the corps ''a multicultural organization, not just in words but in deeds.''

It's not the first time Robinson has tried to build bridges. Following the 1991 riots in Crown Heights, he provided an ambulance, refurbished by Hatzoloh of Williamsburg, that would be used jointly by black and Jewish volunteers.

Robinson hoped to dispel bad feelings resulting from the myth that Hatzoloh medics refused to treat a fatally wounded black child.

The Crown Heights effort never got off the ground, however. ''It went down the drain,'' he lamented. ''They needed some leadership.''

This time it's not leadership but cash that is lacking. Only one of Robinson's four ambulances is in running order, leaving volunteers to dash around the neighborhood on foot to answer calls. Wolf and Robinson are trying to raise enough money to get the disabled vehicles — known in medic shorthand as buses — back on the street.

''The goal is, in the very near future, to get at least one more bus running,'' said David Mandel, deputy chief of the Jewish division, adding that the chasidic volunteers ''probably open a door for sponsorship in the Jewish community.''

Adds Wolf: ''This is a challenged community, economically. You can't get blood from a stone. We have to go to foundations, churches and synagogues.

''They've been shy about asking for money,'' Wolf said of the Bed-Stuy corps. ''But I'm not a shy person.''

While Robinson initially intended for the newcomers to work separately because of ''sensitivity of their cultures,'' they explained that they needed no special considerations, said Mandel.

''They may have thought we might not be able to treat female patients,'' he said.

Mandel, 30, of Borough Park, said the volunteers explained that saving lives superseded nearly all other considerations, including the halachic restriction on contact between the sexes. But although the Jewish volunteers will patrol alongside other members, Mandel said that ''when we finalized it, the name Jewish division kind of stuck.''

Unlike Hatzoloh volunteers, Mandel said, the Jewish volunteers in Bed-Stuy will not be available on the Sabbath and Jewish holidays.

After meeting the chasidic trainees on Sunday, Brandon Shelly, 28, a longtime African-American volunteer with the Bed-Stuy Corps, said: ''I was impressed. They look like they're ready to go and ready to help get Bed-Stuy back on track.''

Wolf became involved with the Bed-Stuy Vollies in 1987 as a pro bono lawyer helping the group obtain tax-exempt status after volunteers showed up in her office with shopping bags filled with documents.

She has remained in close contact and now handles everything from publicity to recruitment, as well as fund raising and legal counsel.

A top priority now is trying to retain the city-owned lot where the corps stores its ambulances and a trailer used as a dispatch center. Wolf said the lot, now on the auction block, has become a de facto first aid station.

''Back in October, a man who had been shot staggered in and the volunteers were able to take him to the hospital,'' Wolf related.

Both sides acknowledge that there may be some bumps in the road ahead.

''I tell my guys, don't think you're not going to run into racial prejudice [on the streets], because you are,'' said Robinson, who recalls his own negative experiences in white neighborhoods. ''I've told people don't quit because someone called you a 'Jew bastard,' just like I didn't quit when someone called me a 'black bastard' … You've got to be able to say the patient needs the help, not this idiot behind me.''

Early enthusiasm, says Mandel, may evaporate for the Jewish division once the volunteers spend some time on the streets.

''I have a feeling at a certain point not everyone is going to end up staying,'' he said. ''After a trial basis they'll say this is not for me.''

One knowledgeable observer in the Williamsburg chasidic community said ''a lot of these guys will end up in Hatzoloh'' after gaining more training and experience.

But for now, the show of solidarity is being praised by black and Jewish elected officials.

''It shows the diversity of New York coming together for the good of the community, and I think that's a good thing,'' said Councilman Charles Barron, who represents East New York and other heavily minority communities.

Borough Park Councilman Simcha Felder noted that members of his community had a history of volunteering with another non-Jewish volunteer ambulance corps in Bensonhurst.

''This just goes to show that the best of people comes out when it comes to saving lives, no matter what community,'' he said. ''Nothing is more important.'' n




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מנותק
נשלח ב-13/2/2004 02:26 לינק ישיר 

ekstein
how about posting the source



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נשלח ב-15/2/2004 05:01 לינק ישיר 

the source is the jewish week and you can find it at your local news stand or at wwwjewish week .com



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מחובר
נשלח ב-15/2/2004 05:04 לינק ישיר 

''The goal is, in the very near future, to get at least one more bus running,'' said David Mandel, deputy chief of the Jewish division, adding that the chasidic volunteers


who is this chief david mandel



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נשלח ב-27/2/2004 03:13 לינק ישיר 

מצורף קובץ

York Daily News - http://www.nydailynews.com
Ambulance vols believe
in God - & saving lives
By YOAV GONEN
DAILY NEWS WRITER
Thursday, February 26th, 2004

When an elderly congregant of the Church of the Nazarene in Bedford-Stuyvesant collapsed Sunday morning, it was no surprise to see the Bedford-Stuyvesant Volunteer Ambulance Corps arrive first on the scene.
But what may have been surprising to some onlookers in the largely black neighborhood were the two bearded, bespectacled Orthodox Jewish men who stepped out of that ambulance.

"It was awkward at first. Everybody came up to see what was going on," said David Mendel, 30, deputy chief of the Bed-Stuy Vollies, as the ambulance corps is known. "But we had our uniforms on and everybody realized help was here."

There are 30 Hasidic and Jewish Orthodox volunteers working for the corps' two-week-old Jewish Division. They hail from Borough Park and Williamsburg, and while several are certified emergency medical technicians, most signed on to be trained in CPR and first aid in order to serve as first responders.

Although the Jewish Division includes Jewish and non-Jewish volunteers, the name has stayed on as an indication of scheduling considerations, which excludes Saturdays and Jewish holidays from the rotation.

The Bed-Stuy Vollies was started in 1988 by James (Rocky) Robinson, a retired Emergency Medical Service captain, in reaction to the city's slow response time to emergencies in Bedford-Stuyvesant. Robinson, a hulk of a man at 6-feet-3 and 240 pounds, parked a dilapidated white trailer on a vacant lot on the corner of Greene Ave. and Marcus Garvey Blvd., and set up a makeshift volunteer operation that was not well-received at the time.

"They used to threaten us, shoot out our windows, and slash our tires," said Robinson, 63. "They tried to discourage us, but we stayed."

Over time, the Vollies managed to win over the trust and respect of the community.

Robinson said the idea for the Jewish Division arose from the steadily increasing number of Jewish volunteers in Bedford-Stuyvesant, something he credits to the reputation of his organization as a good - and very busy - training ground.

Despite a continual shortage of resources, Robinson estimates that the Vollies respond to approximately 1,800 calls a year, within three to five minutes of being called.

They work closely with the 81st and 79th police precincts, listen to the city's EMS radio for distress calls, and have a direct number that people can call for help.

One new Jewish volunteer, Sammy, is a 19-year-old rabbinical college student from Borough Park. Sammy, who asked that his last name not be used, was one of the responders at the Church of the Nazarene on Sunday.

"We're all volunteers for the same reason: to save lives," said Sammy, who comes from a family of EMTs. "It's a natural thing for me."

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נשלח ב-27/2/2004 03:27 לינק ישיר 

א שיינעם דאנק עקשטיין, פאר שיקען דעם לינק, אבער פליז, שיק נישט נאר פון וועלכער צייטונג עס קומט, ביטע שיק דעם דירעקטען לינק.

זיי מענטשליך, און ביטע טו עס יעדעס מאל ווען דו שיקסט אן ארטיקעל. נאכאמאל יישר כח!


תוקן על ידי - אבי_געזונט - 27/02/2004 3:30:57



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