Richard Bernstein A Passion For Making A Difference His days start at the health club around 5 a.m., where he runs 13 miles a day. He Karen Schwartz Special to the Jewish News A sk Richard Bernstein to talk about himself and he'll likely change the topic. He would rath- er talk about the causes he's fighting for, the communities he wants to build and the people he wants to connect. But Bernstein, 33, who grew up in West Bloomfield and lives in Birmingham, has no shortage of awards and accomplish- ments. He was honored recently by CNN's Anderson Cooper, is training for his fifth marathon and has been recognized for his community service efforts by groups around the state. He is scheduled to run in his sixth marathon in March in Los Angeles and hopes to participate in August in an Iron Man competition in Oahu, which entails swimming 2.5 miles in the ocean, biking 110 miles and then running a 26.2-mile marathon. "Because it's the next challenge said Bernstein, who is blind. His friends talk about him as a person who inspires others and makes people feel comfortable, a person who takes on chal- lenges and steps up to the plate without a second thought when it comes to leader- ship. To him, though, it's not about being a leader. "I just think you go out and do things," he said. goes to work, meetings, events and holds class, then is not surprised to find himself heading home at 11 p.m. Currently, he's working to start a Detroit chapter of the Achilles Track Club, which brings people with disabilities together to participate in mainstream athletics, and he's preparing to file a complaint against the University of Michigan regarding mak- ing the football stadium more accessible to disabled students. Even on weekends, when he travels to New York to run in the freezing cold with the Achilles Track Club in Central Park, he's thinking about ways to bring people together: Last weekend he was busy dis- cussing ways young Jews from Detroit who come to New York can get involved with Manhattan Jewish Experience, a Manhattan-based group for young Jewish professionals. He also wants to urge the Jewish corn- munity to use its influence and resources to get government to work better for everybody. "This is my passion; you focus on issues that are going to make a differ- ence for people in a very empowering, very constructive and essential way," he said. "That's the key." It is a passion that runs through his work and activities. He heads up the pro bono division of the Law Offices of Samuel I. Bernstein, his father's Famrington Hills law firm, putting in 15-hour days to rep- resent people who would otherwise not be able to afford representation on issues with large-scale policy implications. Bernstein has gone up against the airport authority to fight a ban that would have kept commercial drivers from coming into the terminal at Detroit Richard Bernstein running the Los Angeles marathon. Metropolitan Airport, fought against former Gov. John Engler's proposed reor- ganization of the state's special education system and fought for working wheelchair lifts on city buses. Issues of public transportation are still of great concern to him, he said, because of the role public transportation plays in people's independence. Bernstein, who relies heavily on memo- rization to complete his legal work, said he feels a responsibility to make change. "To whom much is given, much is expected:' he said. Among other affiliations, he sits on the Board of Governors at Wayne State University in Detroit and teaches a senior-level seminar on social change at the University of Michigan. He attended Northwestern University for law school. He hopes to continue to do the work he does now and to continue fighting for disability rights. "That's why I became a lawyer," he said. "That's who I are February 1 • 2007 17