Categories: In Print / Sivan Rahav-Meir
Not Just A Kidney Revolution
A year ago, at the height of the lockdown, only a few people were allowed to accompany Rav Yeshayahu Haber to his final resting place. Rav Haber was the founder of the Matnat Chaim (Gift of Life) organization and passed away at the age of 55 from the coronavirus. This week, many more people attended the memorial service that marks one year since his death.
Rav Haber is not only responsible for the revolution in kidney donations in Israel and he did not only save the lives of 1,000 kidney recipients. He brought about several other revolutions at the same time:
- A “you alone can change the world” revolution. Do you have a worthwhile initiative? Do you have a dream? Just get moving and make it happen. Don't wait for the government, the establishment, or financial backers. Just begin and perhaps, little by little, you will change the world.
- A caring revolution. Rav Haber discovered the anguish of those seeking a kidney when he found himself in that very situation. After receiving a kidney, he could have just returned to his previous life. Instead, he decided that the solution to his personal problem should be available to the public at large.
- A peer pressure revolution. We talk a lot about negative peer pressure that causes people to be swept up by unhealthy trends and activities since "everyone is doing it."
- A Jewish unity revolution. Jewish unity is expressed each time a charedi kidney is transplanted into a secular body or a leftist kidney is transplanted into the body of someone on the right. Rav Haber explained this phenomenon as follows, "I don't ask anyone to give a kidney to a stranger, because the recipient is not a stranger. He's your brother."











