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Mitzvah Day volunteers spread good works across North Jersey and beyond

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Mitzvah Day volunteers spread good works across North Jersey and beyond

NOVEMBER 2, 2014, 4:25 PM    LAST UPDATED: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2014, 9:11 PM
BY LINDA MOSS
STAFF WRITER |
THE RECORD

In Washington Township, volunteers wrote messages on baseballs to send to members of the U.S. military. In Paterson, a group braved the windy, bitter cold to pick up trash on the grounds of the Great Falls. And in Teaneck, in fellowship Jewish and Korean-American teenagers teamed up to paint a residence for developmentally disabled men.

More than 1,000 people across North Jersey on Sunday collectively contributed their small good deeds, so-called “mitzvahs,” to make the world a better place. These volunteers participated in the 17th Annual Mitzvah Day, the signature event of the Jewish Federation of Northern New Jersey, which is based in Paramus. This year there were activities at some 40 sites in Bergen and Passaic counties.

Volunteers had a wide array of choices, like cleaning up various park sites; assembling and packing gift packages for U.S. soldiers and clothing for children in Israel; and even a “Stitch and Schmooze” fest where knitters whipped up such items as scarves and hats for needy families.

Temple Beth Or in Washington Township hosted a “Put-It-in-Your-Pocket Mitzvah Fair,” where roughly 300 volunteers gathered to make small gifts to send to members of the U.S. military and in some instances, to Israeli soldiers. Participants have several choices at that site, with many doing all three.

Billy Cook, 13, of Washington Township was overseeing the signing of 400 baseballs as part of his Billy’s Baseballs non-profit. As his Bar Mitzvah project last year, self-described “die-hard Yankees fan” Billy came up with the idea of asking people to write notes and sign baseballs to send to U.S. troops, thanking them for their service and sacrifice.

Frank Kirk of Ridgewood accompanied his daughter Alison, 12, as she decorated baseballs with small flowers and wrote her messages, including, “Thank you for protecting us.”

Kirk said that earlier Rabbi Noah Fabricant had told the synagogue one never knows how important their mitzvah can be.

https://www.northjersey.com/news/mitzvah-day-volunteers-spread-good-works-across-north-jersey-and-beyond-1.1124983

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Remembering 9/11 With Good Works and Good Deeds

 

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Remembering 9/11 With Good Works and Good Deeds 

Join the 9/11 Day Observance today. Visit https://911day.org/ and share your message or good deed tribute. Or share your message on Twitter, #911day.

Our mission is to honor the victims and survivors of 9/11 and those that rose to service in response to the attacks by encouraging all Americans and others throughout the world to pledge to voluntarily perform at least one good deed, or another service activity on 9/11 each year.

9/11 Day is the grassroots movement to observe September 11 every year as a day of charitable service and doing good deeds, and to inspire individuals to continue to help others in need whenever they can. Today more than 35 million Americans and others participate annually by taking time out on 9/11 to help others in need, in their own way! We created this observance soon after 9/11 to provide a positive way to forever remember and pay tribute to the 9/11 victims, honor those that rose in service in response to the attacks, and remind people of the importance of working more closely together to improve our world. In 2009 the U.S. Congress and President Obama joined together to officially establish 9/11 as a National Day of Service and Remembrance under bi-partisan federal law.

Participating in 9/11 Day is easy. Simply dedicate time each September 11 to helping others in any fashion that you choose, like making a donation, performing a good deed, helping a friend, relative or neighbor, or volunteering your time. All we ask is that you remember by doing something positive that helps others. Be sure to share your plans or message on Twitter, using #911day, on Facebook, or by visiting our website, https://911day.org/

A few suggestions on how to help from the Ridgewood News :

Give blood. Donate books to a library or volunteer to read to children. Donate pet food to an animal rescue or shelter or volunteer to foster an animal. Donate food to a food pantry. Give clothes to a homeless shelter.

Companies, groups, municipalities and schools can also band together for special projects such as sponsoring a collection, volunteering time to help nonprofits in the area or just sprucing up public places.

For example, the Rotary Club of Ridgewood A.M. is collecting new and used shoes for donation to the Soles4Souls charity. The non-profit group monetizes used shoes and clothing to create sustainable jobs and fund direct relief efforts, including distribution of new shoes and clothing.

Drop off locations for the shoe drive include all Ridgewood public schools and the Education Center, Bethlehem Lutheran Church, Chestnut Deli, Columbia Bank, Emmanuel Baptist Church, Morgan Stanley, Old Paramus Reformed Church, Ponds Reformed Church, Ridgewood Christian Reformed Church, Ridgewood Community Church, St. Elizabeth’s Church, Temple Emmanuel, Ulrich, the Unitarian Society of Ridgewood, Upper Ridgewood Community Church, Village Hall, West Side Presbyterian Church.

For additional information about the shoe drive, contact Betty Wiest at 201-652-0858.

– See more at: https://www.northjersey.com/opinion/opinion-editorials/a-day-to-make-a-difference-1.1081489#sthash.CddwFVWx.dpuf