metro L Aw CONGREGATION SHAAREY ZEDEK Book Kick Off PURIM Kids battling cancer teach much about managing stress, pain through martial arts. EXrRAVAGA ► ZA F 0 R FAMILIES WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 2015 6:00-8:00 P.M. Meet Anna, Elsa, Olaf, Spiderman and Batman! Giant Inflatables • 4 Face Painting • Miniature Motorways Indoor Train Rides • Video Game Truck-- Dancing with Star Trax • Free Food, Special Purim Drinks FREE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY PURIM EXTRAVAGANZA IS GENEROUSLY SPONSORED BY THE SIDNEY KATZMAN MEMORIAL PURIM FUND 27375 BELL ROAD SOUTHFIELD, MICHIGAN 48034 248.357.5544 WWW.SHAAREYZEDEK.ORG 4 7. ""st,. .2,•;: .,1,0 1-x4.W t‘,,,„,,, . Wrie . * I ' DS1 Bring this coupon to Purim Extravaganza and redeem for 10 FREE PRIZE TICKETS! 18 February 19 • 2015 I Contributing Writer group that profoundly impacts the lives of thou- sands of kids around the world began with an interaction with a single child. In the 1990s, as director of Camp Simcha, a pediatric oncology summer camp in New York, Rabbi Elimelech Goldberg encountered a frightened young boy fighting a chemotherapy treatment. Impulsively, the rabbi told the child about the first-degree black belt he holds in the Korean art of Choi Kwang Do, asking if he wanted to learn some karate. Goldberg then told him, "In the martial arts, pain is a message that you don't have to listen to. You can bring in this amazing karate energy and blow out the pain." While the two did a simple Tai Chi breathing technique together, the treat- ment continued, after which the rabbi said the young boy looked up at his nurse and asked, 'Did you do it yet?' "At that moment, Kids Kicking Cancer was born:' Goldberg wrote in his new book, A Perfect God Created A Children's Purim Shpiel ,L)?- and Costume Parade Carnival Games Shell! Liebman Dorfman )1:-;• ›r; an Imperfect World Perfectly: 30 Life Lessons from Kids Kicking Cancer, (BH Media, December 2014). Known to thousands of children as "Rabbi G:' Goldberg is founder and international director of the nonprofit organization that helps children bat- tling cancer and other serious chal- lenges manage the stress and pain of their disease and treatments through mind-body techniques found in mar- tial arts. In 1999, Goldberg left a longtime post at Young Israel of Southfield and created Kids Kicking Cancer with a mission "to ease the pain of very sick children while empowering them to heal physically, spiritually and emo- tionally:' At a Jan. 25 book signing at the orga- nization's Southfield office, he launched the 286-page hardcover publication, which highlights lessons from some of the kids involved with the group as well as ways these lessons can be used to help anyone reduce stress. The book's intent, he says, is to share the wisdom of these children and the techniques that have changed their Rabbi Goldberg displays his new book. lives. "When children facing health chal- lenges are given purpose, they have less pain," Goldberg wrote in the book. "When adults learn how to take control of their stress, using simple breathing techniques and meditations, they live longer and better:' First Mentor One chapter in the book describes the journey to the creation of the Kids Kicking Cancer by the child who inspired the foreground for the organi- zation: Goldberg's own daughter, Sara Basya, who passed away from leukemia in 1981, two weeks after her second birthday. He talks of his personal mission and how his young daughter, whom he refers to as "my first mentor; impacted him to work with other children and their families. "There comes a point when it is important to realize that we don't really write the scripts in our lives:' he wrote. "Our greatness is determined by how we respond to that script" Kids Kicking Cancer provides weekly inpatient and outpatient classes for children in the mind-body techniques found in the martial arts. Specially trained black belt martial artists teach breathing, visualization and relaxation techniques in addi- tion to traditional martial arts moves