American Christians Donate $5 Million to Help Israel's Neediest Citizens Survive the Winter

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Thu Feb 18, 2010 6:00am EST

LUD,  IsraelFeb. 18  /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- This morning Malya did not
have to make the bone-chilling walk to the store from her apartment where she
lives alone.  Today she will not have to go to the doctor's office, the mall,
or perhaps the police station to take refuge from the cold.

At age 78, Malya would much rather stay at home, but that's a dangerous option
for her when she has no heat.  For her, the choice has been either to turn on
her small heater and pay the electric bill at the end of the month, or save
that money to buy medicine and food.  She cannot do both.  And so, Malya must
venture out into the cold to find somewhere, anywhere, that she can stay for a
while.

Today she can stay home -- and be warm.

Thanks to the support of the  International Fellowship of Christians and Jews 
(IFCJ), in cooperation with the Israel Ministry of Welfare, Malya and more
than 134,000 other elderly residents throughout  Israel  are receiving grants
that will be applied directly to their monthly heating bill.  

"It gets very cold sometimes and I don't have heat because I can't afford it,"
Malya said.  "During the night is the worst because it gets so cold, and my
windows are old and cracked, and my floors are marble. It gets colder in my
small two-room apartment than it is outside."

IFCJ, headed by Rabbi  Yechiel Eckstein, has donated  $5 million  to help pay
the heating bills of  Israel's neediest elderly citizens.  The contributions
from Christians throughout  the United States  make this critical support
possible.  The  Warm Winter for the Elderly  program is being carried out this
year in collaboration with the Israeli Electric Corp., the Ministry of Social
Affairs, and the Ministry of Infrastructure.  Those being helped by this
donation have been identified as eligible recipients in need according to The
National Insurance Institute of  Israel's database.

The  State of Israel  partially subsidizes the electric bills of this
population, yet even with this assistance the majority still cannot afford to
pay the balance of their heating bill during the winter.  IFCJ's donation will
provide each recipient with a grant of approximately  150 shekels, or about 
$40, for the cold months of February and March.

Rabbi Eckstein, president and founder of IFCJ, said there is a moral
imperative for society to assist its oldest and neediest citizens.  "A society
can be judged by the way it treats its weakest, most vulnerable members.  When
elderly people suffer from the cold day and night because they cannot pay
their heating bills, it should pain us all."

This is the first time in  Israel  that a philanthropic organization has
transferred its donation directly to the Electric Corp., which will deduct the
sum from the personal electric bills of each eligible recipient.  This method
was chosen in order to preserve the dignity of recipients, and to ensure that
the donations reached the recipients as quickly and efficiently as possible.

This is the fourth consecutive year for IFCJ's  Warm Winter for the Elderly 
program.  Donations from 2007 through this winter total more than  $13 million
 and have been raised primarily from the U.S. Christian community.

"When the social worker told me that Christians in America will pay for
heating my home, I broke down crying," Malya said.  "I am no longer forced to
spend my days in different stores because it is too cold in my house, but am
able to relax in my own home [and] appreciate the amazing gift that  The
Fellowship  provided -- the simple ability to stay warm."

The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews  (IFCJ), headquartered in 
Chicago  and  Jerusalem, was founded in 1983 by Rabbi  Yechiel Eckstein  with
the vision of building bridges of cooperation between members of both faith
communities and together supporting  Israel  and Jews in desperate need
throughout the world.  To date, IFCJ has raised two-thirds of a billion
dollars to support programs aiding sick, elderly, orphaned and at-risk
populations in  Israel, the former  Soviet Union,  Ethiopia,  India,  Latin
America, and Arab countries.  For more information about IFCJ programs and
projects, visit  www.ifcj.org.

SOURCE  International Fellowship of Christians and Jews


Denise M. Jones of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews,
+1-312-641-8546, denise.jones@ifcj.org

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