Danny Siegel: Looking For Mitzvah Heroes SLOWER GROWTH FOR FEDERATIONS Although all sides say the newer charit- ies are not in competition with the federa- tions, the addition of the new philan- thropic groups has been a factor in the slowed growth of the mainstream cam- paigns, according to Barry Kosmin of the North American Jewish Data Bank. Major federation campaigns have col- lected more money each year. "But since "There are a number of causes the campaign doesn't cover, like a battered women's shelter in Israel. — Michael Pelavin [the 1960s and early 1970s], they've just kept pace with inflation," Kosmin said. "They haven't really expanded." In addition to the growth of the philan- thropic sector in general, Jewish money is now more "acceptable" in the outside world. Traditionally, organizations have re- warded big contributions with seats on prestigious boards that were often closed to Jews. With an easing of that overt dis- crimination, more financial major- leaguers in the Jewish community are giving big chunks to non-Jewish philan- thropies. Kosmin said his research shows that only about 50 percent of the Jewish phil- Danny Siegel of Rockville, Maryland, is proof positive that one person and one small charity can have an immeasurable impact. This year his Ziv Tzedakah Fund distributed $165,000 to about 70 grass-roots charities in Israel and the United States. The fund is the outgrowth of a 1975 private trip Siegel made to IsraeL Before he left, he collected $955 from friends to distribute for charity in the Jewish state and, once there, he set out to find lit- tle known but worthwhile causes and mitzvah people. Fifteen years later, he's still at it. Siegel has become increasing- ly devoted to his mitzvah work (see Detroit Jewish News story, "The Pied Piper of Tzedakah," Feb. 12, 1988) and has sought and helped fund off-the-beaten track projects and individuals whose work personifies the meaning of tzedakah. His pet projects include Life for the Old in Jerusalem, where elder- ly people gather to eat and par- ticipate in workshops, making everything from toys and sweaters to Sabbath tablecloths; the work of Hadassah Levi, who cares for more than 40 children in Israel with Down's Syndrome; Yad Sarah, an Israeli group that lends medical supplies free of charge; and shelters for battered Jewish women in the United States and Israel. Siegel's funding contributions range from $41,000 for Yad Sarah down to $100 for such funds as The Giraffe Project, honoring people who stick their necks out, and Daddy Bruce Randolph, a Pho to By Cr aig Te rkowi tz ■.■ ants rights project in Harlem, an advoca- cy group for Asian women, and an orga- nization in Great Falls, Montana, that combats housing discrimination against Native Americans were all recent gr antees. One local contributor to the Fund is Michael Pelavin of Flint. A Fund board member for four years, Pelavin was at- tracted to the organization because "it was a way to give in a Jewish manner to general community problems." Danny Siegel: "Just do it." 90-year-old Denver man whose free barbecues feed the hungry on Thanksgiving and Christmas. "I'm proud that over the years, my fund has distributed more than $800,000 raised in the U.S. and Canada and has generated at least an additional million dollars in contributions directly to the charities we support," says the 45-year-old SiegeL Why do hundreds of people give to Siegel's fund? "We're haimish," he says, using the Yiddish word that describes a warm, at home ambience. Many of his contributors have met Siegel and heard him speak about tzedakah in his lectures in Jewish communities around the country. "These people trust me and know that their contribution, ho matter how small, is going to have a direct impact on people's lives," Siegel says. He adds that contributors know he has little overhead — less than four percent — and are at- tracted to his informal, hands-on approach. Siegel, who supports himself through his lectures and writings about tzedakah, says he tries hard not to treat his big givers any differently from those who contribute $10 or $18. If anything, he gives more attention to young contributors by writing personal notes to Hebrew school children or bar or bat mitzvah kids donating a percentage of their gifts. The biggest motivation for young Jews to give to charity, ac- cording to Siegel, is their concern about hunger and homelessness, with environmental issues a grow- ing worry "How do you reach Jewish kids?" he asks. "You take them to a food pantry or shelter for the homeless, and then begin to get them involved Jewishly." Siegel directs most of his fund- ing towards Jewish causes, but not exclusively. "My criterion is simple," he explains. "If they are doing something special that merits support, I try to help." He says that most of his con- tributors also support Jewish federations, but some are "brand new givers, like bar and bat mitz- vah kids, and some are adults who just haven't given." He believes that many Jews simply stop giving charity after their bar or bat mitzvah for the next decade or two. "They think to themselves, 'I'll give again when I can afford it, and just stop." Siegel's whole point is not to wait until you can afford it, or un- til you have more time to devote to a cause, because those times never come. "My message is: Just do it." D THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 29