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Unique
prescription for Cuban Jewry
The Jewish
Chronicle (Pittsburgh) (from 1999)
by Iris M. Samson
Assistant Editor
Almost three years ago,
Staney Cohen learned of the plight of Cuban Jewry.
A dwindling yet highly-dedicated
and spiritual community, the Jews of Cuba face the harsh
reality of life under the Castro regime: food, fuel, basic
everyday necessities are rationed or totally unavailable
due to a languid economy and a U.S. embargo.
Though the economic situation
may be bleak, the religious spirit that characterizes
this community is strong. Touched by their enthusiasm
and commitment, Cohen made it his mission to publicize
Cuban Jewry's plight, to bring them humanitarian relief.
Nearly three years later,
Cohen is international chairman of the B'nai B'rith Cuban
Jewry Relief Project, and has shepherded efforts to aid
their community "that are making a difference."
"We have shipped well
over 20,000 pounds of supplies in less than three years
- close to $2 million in medicines, food, clothes, and
equipment," Cohen, active in many Jewish communal
organizations here, begins.
Often, it's the one-to-one
contact that gladdens Cohen's heart. Take the recent UJF
mission to Cuba. Briefing the group prior to their trip,
Cohen asked one participant to bring a pair of eyeglasses
to a little girl.
Her eyes were so weak that
conventional glass just wouldn't fit into eyeglass frames
- nor could the youngster wear them comfortably, even
if they could.
"This was a real mitzvah,"
Cohen sighs, "helping a six-year-old girl. I'd bring
her 100 pairs if she needed them."
Cohen enlists anyone and
everyone in gathering supplies for Cuban Jewry. Most recently,
the local humanitarian organization, Brother's Brother,
signed on, donating 250,000 multivitamins. "Cuban
Jews have little or no protein in their diet," Cohen
explains of the need for vitamins.
"We shipped 60,000
down last week." Cohen is a latter-day horse trader,
giving Brother's Brother walkers and crutches for Turkey's
earthquake victims in return for one-a-day vitamins.
"I'm a clearinghouse,"
he says simply, of his matchmaking efforts. But, he notes
with obvious pride, Pittsburgh is the largest supplier
anywhere of relief to Cuba.
While he sends everything
from medicine and Judaica to Cuban Jewry, he's sometimes
asked to bring things back. On his last trip, it was something
very simple: dirt.
A non-Jewish reader of the
B'nai B'rith Jewish Monthly Magazine read about Cohen's
relief efforts on behalf of Cuban Jewry and decided to
contact him.
Pedro Ramirez had left Cuba
quite suddenly in 1962; his parents sent Pedro and his
siblings to the United States to escape an increasingly-hostile
Communist regime.
Ramirez, a boy of 14, was
left in charge of four brothers and sisters, ranging in
age from six on up.
When the kids got to Miami,
there was no one to greet them. U.S. Immigration officials
wanted to split up the family, and farm them out to orphanages.
Only Pedro's efforts kept
the children together. Three long years later, the Ramirez
parents finally made it to the United States, and the
family was reunited.
"He contacted me,"
Cohen says, "and asked if I could bring him back
some soil from Cuba. He told me he regularly dreamt about
his old home, and wanted to know if it was still there."
On Cohen's next visit, he
not only found Ramirez's home, he took pictures and went
inside. It had been turned into a private restaurant.
When Cohen returned to America,
he contacted Ramirez and set up a meeting. "I played
Cuban music in the background, gave him a Cuban cigar,
and showed him a picture of his home," Cohen smiles.
Ramirez was overcome with
emotion for Cohen's gesture. "It brought him closure,"
Cohen muses. "He had been holding all these emotions
inside because it had been a horrible experience for him,
to leave in the middle of the night, not knowing when
he would see his parents again."
"It was so little,
but I got so much out of it," Cohen smiles.
Little things mean a lot
for Cuban Jewry. A local benefactor, John Wolf Jr., recently
sent down art supplies for a talented Cuban Jewish artist,
Jose Farinas. Those canvases and oils were put to immediate
use, with the results to be viewed back here in Pittsburgh:
Farinas' artwork will be featured during a Cuban Exposition,
scheduled for this spring at the Jewish Community Center
in Squirrel Hill.
"We have been collecting
artwork and artifacts that will benefit the Cuban Jewish
community," Cohen notes, adding that supplies are
always needed.
From the Judaica contributed
by Pinsker's to the vitamins from Brother's Brother, to
money and powdered milk, the Jewish community has answered
Cohen's call for aid.
"We still need to do
this," Cohen insists. "Things seem to be a little
bit better, but it will be a long time until things begin
to trickle-down to the people. Everything we do really
helps these people."
To help or to participate in
future missions to Cuba, contact Stanley Cohen through the
B'nai B'rith office, (877)
222-9590.
Copyright by the Jewish
Chronicle, Pittsburgh
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