Tzedakah Maven: Danny Siegel Danny Siegel discovers and tells the stories of mitzvah heroes. He has been called The Worldâs Greatest Expert on Microphilanthropy, The Feeling Personâs Thinker and The Pied Piper of Tzedakah.
Traveling Tzedakah The rest started with âtraveling tzedakah.â It is a Jewish custom to give some money to a person going on a trip. That person becomes the shaliâah (messenger) for your tzedakah mitzvah. Some people believe that anyone who is shaliâah mitzvah will have a safe trip. âRather than wait for people to give me a dollar, I began to ask for money and wound up with $955. When I got to Israel, I went in search for the right people and places to give it.â
The Early Years
The search for the right people and places to distribute the money became an ongoing search for mitzvah heroes. Here are some of Dannyâs first finds:
Danny says, âMy abba, Julius, moved to northern Virginia to set up a medical practice as an old-time country doctor. For more than a half-century he would treat, heal, cure, comfort and care for three generations of patients, thousands in all. I rode with my father often. I witnessed the kind of people he treated: kind people, simple people, people who would give you the shirt off their back, bring you in and feed you if you were hungryâŠIn our community he was known as a baâal tzedakah, a person who used his tzedakah money wisely.
âą Hadassah Levi, who made her lifeâs work the rescue abandoned infants with Down Syndrome. âą Myriam Mendilow, who found Jerusalemâs poor, elderly residents on the streets of the city and gave them respect and new purpose in her program Yad LâKashish (Lifeline for the Old). âą Uri Lupolianski, a young teacher who founded Yad Sarah, which lends medical equipment to those who need it.
âMy mother, Edythe Siegel, was the classic tzadeketââânot just because she was so involved in Sisterhood, Seaboard Branch of Womenâs League and Hadassah. She was wise, recognized needs, responded, caredâŠâ
In its twenty-seven-year history Ziv Tzedakah Fund, which Danny founded, gave more than $13,500,000 to mitzvah heroes and organizations. This money, for the most part, was collected in donations of $10, $18 and $25.
USY United Synagogue Youth (the Conservative youth movement) changed Dannyâs life. He was chapter treasurer and president, regional treasurer and president and finally international president, and went on USY Pilgrimage (to Israel) in 1961. In high school, Danny felt the effects of learning differently/ disabilities, ADD (attention deficit disorder), and âpoetic tendencies.â He started but didnât complete, studies to become a rabbi. He holds a bachelorâs degree in literature from Columbia and bachelorâs and masterâs degrees in Hebrew literature from the Jewish Theological Seminary. In 1972 he became a traveling teacher and poet when he drove the Atid (Conservative college program) bookmobile around the country selling Jewish books.
Teaching Tzedakah Throughout the year Danny travels around teaching about tzedakah and Jewish values and reading poetry. Every summer since 1976 he has served as USY Israel Pilgrimage Tzedakah Resource Person. He is the author of twenty-nine books on mitzvah heroes, practical and personalized tzedakah and poetry. Danny says, âThere is nothing magical or mystical about itââânothing requiring two Ph.D.s or expertise in software. Just find some mitzvah heroes, find some money, work with them, give to them and be happy.â
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