tzvah Hero PHOTO BY DAN IEL L IPPITT JULIE WIENER STAFF WRITER t age 14, Jeffrey Lazar was honored as a "mitzvah hero" by The Jewish News. The summer before entering ninth grade, while classmates were attending camp or play- ing sports, Mr. T a zar organized a back yard A carnival raising over $6,000 for muscu- lar dystrophy research. Seven years later, the 22-year-old is still a "mitzvah hero," working as a part-time coordinator for the National Council of Synagogue Youth's chesed (community service) program and chapter fund-rais- ing. And as a ba'al teshuva (newly Or- thodox Jew), fulfilling mitzvot has taken on an even deeper meaning for him. Throughout high school, Mr. Lazar baby-sat chil- dren with special needs and fre- quently went into Detroit to help the home- less. "I was going down into the Cass Corridor at all hours of the morning, feeding people in the streets," he said. "I was literally just walking the streets, going into different places to see if there were people who need- ed food." Jeff Lazar At age 15, now... he won a na- tional Giraffe Award and was one of 30 youth selected by Ben and Jerry's ice cream company to travel all-expenses paid to the former Soviet Union to speak to kids there about volunteerism. At the same time he was reaching out to people in need, Mr. T czar's own childhood and adolescence had its share of hardships. While Mr. Lazar was growing up, his father, Al, suf- fered from several heart attacks, a blood clot and severe intestinal problems. When Mr. Lazar was 12, his mother, Sema, was diag- nosed with ovarian and thyroid cancer. She is currently in remission. The pressures created by these illnesses made for "a stressful home," says Mr. Lazar. Many youth from stressful homes turn to destructive behav- ior, but Mr. Lazar turned to chesed. "People are always like, 'Why do you do all the charity work?' " he said. "Everyone always wanted to say, 'It's because he has a great heart.and his father's sick and he cares.' I can't tell you why I do it. I love being able to help people and just to know that I've made a dif- ference and they're going to go away with a smile." Growing up in Oak Park, Mr. Lazar was brought up Conserva- tive but was exposed to Orthodoxy through his neighbors. As a teen- ager, he grew interested in becom- ing more religiously observant, but worried the change would upset his parents. "I really couldn't make the transition from wanting to [become and then... more observant] and thinking about it to actually going through with it," he said. Ironically, the person who ultimately pushed him to become more religious was a Christian. One night at a gas station in South- field, 18-year-old Mr. Lazar got into a con- versation with an African-American cashier who was knowledgeable about Judaism. "I was floored by this guy," said Mr. Lazar. "He knew all these Jewish words. He started pulling out Bibles and was asking me sim- ple questions about the Chumash, about the Torah ... I couldn't answer, and it was em- barrassing." The cashier then lectured Mr. Lazar about assimilation and intermarriage. "I said, 'If you like [Judaism] so much, why don't you convert?" recalled Mr. Lazar. "But he said, `If God wanted me Jewish, He'd have done that on the first day, .W,,t not the second day. You were born \.t,,` a Jew and you don't even care." At the urging of the cashier, Mr. Lazar started learning more about Judaism, studying through Machon L'Torah and with indi- viduals in the community. Two years later, he was studying at Ohr Somayach, a yeshiva in Jerusalem. Despite Mr. Lazar's worries, he says his family has been supportive of his increased observance. His mother now keeps a kosher kitchen and tries to observe Shabbat. "They take a lot of things on for themselves," he said. "In the time I've been home from Israel [my mother] has missed Shabbos only a couple of times, and she gets very upset when she miss- es it." As coordinator of NCSY's chesed program, Mr. Lazar takes teen-agers to volunteer at agencies throughout the community, such as Menorah House and Yad Ezra. He also as- sists teen-agers who are looking for an indi- vidual volunteer placement. "It's important that kids understand they have a moral and social obligation to the com- munity ... also, for a person to do chesed. It gives them such a sense of achievement," said Mr. Lazar. "I had a kid last week say to me, `Why don't we do more stuff like Yad Ezra, because I actually feel like I've accomplished something when I'm there." According to NSCY's regional director Rab- bi Tzali Freedman, Mr. Lazar is a source of inspiration to the youth-group members. "His unbelievably good heart inspires other kids to be more giving," said Rabbi Freedman, adding that while NCSY has always had so- cial action programs, it was Mr. Lazar's idea to create the weekly chesed program. A graduate of Berkley High School, Mr. Lazar is studying business administration in a program run jointly by Oakland Commu- nity College and Walsh College. He's hop- ing to supplement the business degree wit' a degree in fund raising, possibly launching a career within the Jewish community. "The ultimate job to me would be a pro- fessional volunteer," he said. "I want to be able to work in a place where I make a dif- ference."