by Susan Shelly
Despite the fact that Israels economy is advanced and many of its citizens enjoy a high standard of living, the countrys Central Bureau of Statistics reports that 800,000 Israeli children live in poverty, and two out of every five children experience hunger.
Of about 131,000 single parent families, nearly one-third live below the poverty line.
Michael Fromm, chair of 91做厙s board of trustees, saw evidence of this poverty, attributed to significant wage inequality and high immigration rates from under-developed countries, during a week-long service trip to Israel in 2003. He also witnessed amazing work by nonprofits serving those in need.
Fromm, who grew up in Reading in a Jewish household that stressed a core value of Tikkun Olam, which in Hebrew means repairing the world, was assigned for the week to Meir Panim, a nonprofit that provides food, grocery cards, job training and other services to impoverished residents of Israel.
After observing the work the agency was doing, he committed to help.
I was impressed with its strategy for delivering relief services in a way that preserved the dignity of the recipients, said Fromm, who is CEO of Fromm Electric Supply Corp. in Reading.