After Madoff, campaign to help Wiesel
рус   |   eng
Search
Sign in   Register
Help |  RSS |  Subscribe
Euroasian Jewish News
    World Jewish News
      Analytics
        Activity Leadership Partners
          Mass Media
            Xenophobia Monitoring
              Reading Room
                Contact Us

                  World Jewish News

                  After Madoff, campaign to help Wiesel

                  30.03.2009

                  After Madoff, campaign to help Wiesel

                  An e-mail campaign to help Elie Wiesel's foundation in the aftermath of the Bernard Madoff scandal has raised $400,000.
                  Wiesel, the Nobel Prize-winning author, lost more than $7 million of his personal fortune and his foundation took a $15.2 million hit in the Ponzi scheme.
                  In recent months, small and large donations totaling $400,000 have flowed into The Wiesel Foundation for Humanity, the Conde Nast Portfolio business magazine's Web site disclosed March 26. Some of the money was given directly to Wiesel and his wife, Marion, but the couple turned everything over to the foundation.
                  "At any moment it would have been an amazing outpouring of generosity," Marion Wiesel told Portfolio.com, "but specifically in these times it's so amazing, and it continues."
                  Among the donors are two alumni of Boston University, where Wiesel has taught for more than 30 years, who launched the e-mail campaign to encourage 1 million people to donate $6 each in remembrance of the 6 million Holocaust victims.
                  Donations to the Wiesel Foundation, which supports afterschool centers in Israel, international conferences and various humanitarian awards and prizes, have ranged from $5 to $100,000.
                  Many small contributions came from "people we don't know, in places we've never been to," Marion Wiesel said.
                  At a panel discussion March 26 sponsored by Portfolio, Elie Wiesel said of Madoff, "We gave him everything, we thought he was God, we trusted everything in his hands."
                  Wiesel added that he could never forgive Madoff, who is now in jail awaiting sentencing.
                  "I would like him to be in a solitary cell with a screen," he said, "and on that screen, for at least five years of his life, every day and every night there should be pictures of his victims."

                  Источник: JTA