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12/05/2007
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Giving Small, Making A Big Difference

Dr. Robert Ivker, holding a photo of his infant son, meets with Russian Holocaust survivors at the Jewish Community House of Bensonhurst. His fundraising efforts have already made a difference in the lives of 20 people.  Photos by Walter Ruby
Dr. Robert Ivker, holding a photo of his infant son, meets with Russian Holocaust survivors at the Jewish Community House of Bensonhurst. His fundraising efforts have already made a difference in the lives of 20 people. Photos by Walter Ruby

by Walter Ruby
Special To The Jewish Week

The newspaper story gnawed at him.
How is it possible, Robert Ivker thought, that in a city as affluent as New York, Holocaust survivors from the former Soviet Union can live in such grinding poverty? This despite efforts by agencies like the Jewish Community House of Bensonhurst (JCH) to provide hot meals, transportation to doctors, and free English-language instruction.

Last winter Ivker, 43, a radiation oncologist at Beth Israel Hospital in
Newark who lives in Lower Manhattan, clipped the story, chronicled in The
New York Times’ Neediest Cases series. It detailed the financial straits these
elderly and often frail Jewish immigrants face, their sole form of income being monthly government SSI payments of $700-$750 for individuals and $900-$950 for couples. That money barely covers the cost

of their rent, let alone heating, utility, telephone and cable television bills.

Ivker put the piece aside, but his conscience wouldn’t let him rest. “I have
to help these people now,” Ivker told The Jewish Week, recalling his
reaction at the time. “I put aside what I was doing at that moment and
picked up the phone to call JCH.”

Within a few months, Ivker and a group of about 10 friends had raised
$12,000. It was enough to provide each of the first 20 people on a list of
survivors provided by JCH (which gets funds from UJA-Federation of New York) with $50 a month supplemental income for a year.

Ivker’s story is a simple yet powerful reminder of the efficiency of
small-scale, grass-roots philanthropy, even in today’s world of
multimillion-dollar philanthropies with vast overheads.

Ivker was honored last month at an event at JCH that included the
participation of many Holocaust survivors now receiving support from
the funds he raised. He has decided to continue his fundraising
efforts during 2008, hoping to double what he raised this year so
that he will be able to provide $50 a month to 40 survivors, instead of 20.

Asked what motivates him to raise money for elderly Russian Jews, Ivker
said, “I feel personally offended that people who went through the Holocaust
and so many other difficulties in their lives are being forced to live like
this in their later years. The fact they have to worry whether they will be
able to pay their heating bills is unconscionable.”

Ivker is a self-described iconoclast given to undertaking lonely
causes — he proudly notes that he is one of the few members of the
Republican Jewish Coalition living in Soho. Which helps explain his philanthropic approach.

“I am aware UJA-Federation and other Jewish organizations have done a lot to
help elderly Holocaust victims, and they are to be commended for that,”
Ivker said. “Yet I prefer to work together with a few friends because when
you raise money in the way we are doing, you know exactly where your dollars
are going. Also, it doesn’t take $1 million to make a difference. With $50,
you can pay a survivor’s heating bill for a month. That’s a big deal.”

Asked FOR his reaction to Ivker’s “go it alone” approach, UJA-Federation CEO John Ruskay said, “Is it good that an individual [like Ivker] becomes directly involved in helping Holocaust survivors in need? Of course it is. What he is doing and what our campaign does are different ways to express the same core values. But it should not be forgotten that without our capital campaign, the JCH of Bensonhurst would have been forced to close its doors in the 1990s.”
One of the people who joined with Ivker in contributing to the fund is
Dmitri Salita, a Russian Jewish immigrant boxer in his early 20s who is
ranked as the No. 3 junior welterweight in the world. According to
Salita, with whom Ivker connected after he watched one of his fights in
Atlantic City, “When Robert told me about this cause, I decided to help
because I am myself from the Russian Jewish community. And I understand it
is essential to help these people who sacrificed and suffered their whole
lives and now, in their old age, must endure terrible poverty.”

For his part, JCH Executive Director Vladimir Vishnevsky said, “Despite all
the fine work that organizations like UJA-Federation and Blue Card are doing to aid Holocaust survivors, it is disturbing that so many survivors in our area are
living below the subsistence level. So we are heartened by Robert Ivker’s
generous gesture, which will provide an ongoing means of support to those
survivors in the most catastrophic situations.”

For Khana Kharenko, a 79-year-old widow who has been in the U.S. for eight
years, the $50 she receives each month due to Ivker’s fund-raising effort
has made a decided difference in her quality of life.

Kharenko, who escaped from Kiev at age 12 with her family the day
before the Nazis occupied the city and exterminated its entire Jewish
population, survived the war years amid disease and hunger in the Urals.
She eventually returned to Kiev where she taught German in elite schools for
decades before moving to New York in 1999, three years after her husband’s death.

Kharenko receives $710 a month from SSI and pays $625 of that amount for
rent on her studio apartment in Bensonhurst. She receives enough food stamps
every month to feed herself, but points out that the $85 left over after she
pays rent is not enough to pay her bills; these include electric, gas,
telephone and $54 a month for Russian cable television.
“I live by myself so it is important for me to have television programming I
can understand and relate to,” she said. “The $50 I receive from Dr. Ivker
nearly pays my TV bill, which is a great relief for me.”

Kharenko has two children, Yuri, 49, a violinist for the Hartford Symphony
Orchestra, and Valentina, 56, who teaches English as a Second Language at
JCH, but each of them has two children. “My children are struggling financially themselves and cannot help me much.” Consequently, Kharenko has had to borrow considerable sums to pay her bills, money she hopes to be eventually able to pay back, if and when she receives a Section Eight subsidized apartment she has applied for.

Despite the many difficulties she confronts daily, Kharenko believes she has
much to be thankful for. “The life of an immigrant — especially that of a
retiree like myself — is not easy, but I never forget that I am provided with
a home attendant and have access to first-rate medical care. So I bless
America every night.”

Kharenko added, “I am also thankful that there are Americans like Dr. Ivker,
who understood our plight and decided to help us. I hope others are inspired
to follow his example, because there are so many other elderly Russian
Jewish immigrants like me who simply don’t have the means to scrape by each
month.” n


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