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October 22, 2004 - Image 14

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2004-10-22

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Tom

Beaton
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to buy
your
used
golf
clubs

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The Power Of Karate

Rabbi Elimelech
Goldberg, the Detroit-
based founder of Kids
Kicking Cancer, which
helps sick children cope
through karate, told his
stirring story in an inter-
view in the Oct. 1-3 issue
of USA Weekend magazine,
distributed locally in the
Sunday Detroit News and

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The rabbi said, "I told
him that in martial arts,
you learn that pain is a
message you do not have to
accept. You can blow out
the pain and bring in
power. We meditated on
that for several minutes and
the nurses came back and
inserted the needle."
Rabbi Goldberg
"We hear from doctors all
Free Press.
the time that our kids need
A black belt in karate,
less morphine," Rabbi
Rabbi Goldberg also is an expert in
Goldberg said. "We're even finding
telling how the martial arts inspire
that children taking part are spend-
kids who are battling disease to
ing less time in the hospital."
fight.
He also told Chen about the new
He founded Kids Kicking Cancer
Heroes' Circle. KKC will videotape
in 1998 and left his pulpit at Young
hospitalized kids demonstrating
Israel of Southfield in 2002.
karate, then show these videos in
Participating KKC hospitals are in
urban core schools to teach at-risk
Michigan, New York and
kids about turning their lives around
Massachusetts; California is next on
through the martial arts.
board.
The at-risk kids also will be video-
He told USA Weekend writer Julie
taped. Videos of them will be shown
Chen, anchor of The Early Show on
to the hospitalized kids, the rabbi
CBS, about the time he met a 5-
said, "to show them the impact they
year-old boy at Camp Simcha in
can have on another child's life."
New York, a place for Jewish kids
— Robert A. Sklar, editor
with cancer. The boy was screaming
to avoid a chemotherapy treatment.

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Broader Reparations

Daniel Goldhagen, noted author and
associate of the Minda de Gunzburg
Center for European Studies at
Harvard University in Cambridge,
Mass., said Jews who survived the
Holocaust should not only be reward-
ed monetary restitution, but also the
notion of repair should be broadened
to include political repair (in the form
of support for Israel) and moral repair.
Speaking to a crowd of 800 at the
annual Holocaust Memorial Center

dinner at the Marriott Hotel in down-
town Detroit on Oct. 17, Goldhagen
said those who stood by and said
nothing should "not just say 'I'm
sorry — but speak the truth, the
whole truth, about what they or their
countrymen or their institutions or
their country did."
He also said there should be more
Holocaust museums throughout the
world.

— Harry Kirsbaum, staff' writer

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