About 30 years ago, Ed Asner tried and failed to convince his rabbi of the importance of Heifer International, so he narrated a documentary to convince others of the project’s unique benefits. This year he was joined by “Royal Pains” star Mark Feuerstein to create a Heifer at Hanukkah video to encourage other Jews to support a sustainable end to hunger and poverty.
Since 1944, Heifer International has provided livestock and environmentally sound agricultural training to improve the lives of those who struggle with reliable sources of food and income. Heifer provides 30 kinds of livestock and a multitude of trees and seeds to families in more than 42 countries.
The Heifer at Hanukkah website featuring the video also offers a variety of gift options that fulfill the responsibilities of both tzedakah (justice or charity) and tikkun olam (repair of the world), “so shoppers can honor a loved one — from Abba (father) to Zaide (grandfather) — with a cow, goat, chicks or water buffalo to help an impoverished family move from dependence to independence.”
As I watched the video, the two Jewish actors seemed rather spunky, reminding me of the famous exchange in the first episode of “The Mary Tyler Moore Show.” News Director Lou Grant (Asner) tells Moore, “You know, you’ve got spunk.” She takes it as a compliment until Lou adds: “I hate spunk!”
So I ask Asner how his views of spunk compare to those of his famous character. “I’m in total disagreement with Lou,” he explains during a phone call from New York City, where he’s currently appearing in the Broadway play “Grace.” “I enjoy spunk, I certainly do,” he says emphatically.
Asner says he first heard of Heifer on an airplane when he was seated next to the son of one of the nonprofit’s founders. Sold on the benefits of the group, Asner told his seatmate to have the organization call him and then he shared his enthusiasm with his rabbi.
“I failed to convince him of the benevolence of the organization,” says Asner, noting that the refusal was likely what drove him to become so involved with the organization. When Heifer International called, he not only made a donation, he narrated what he calls “a wonderful documentary they made of their work.”
Asner describes Heifer as the best example of the old adage: “Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day; teach a man to fish and feed him for a lifetime.” Asner says Heifer goes beyond that by giving a man a fish and teaching him to raise more. “It’s the best resistance to hunger you could find,” he says.
Listening to Asner praise Heifer, it’s hard to believe he couldn’t convince his rabbi. But he admits he was too tentative a religious Jew. However, until last year he says he would attend services each year and serve as a reader for the congregation on Yizkor.
Feuerstein likewise grew up at an Orthodox shul — Park East in New York. Now he and his family belong to Reform congregation Ikar in Los Angeles. But when he’s in the New York area filming “Royal Pains” each year, he still enjoys attending Park East.
“On the [High Holy Days], and a few others, I will join my dad and my brother in the beautiful turn-of-the-century sanctuary on 67th Street between Third and Lex. It’s nice to see the same rabbi, Arthur Schneier, and President Michael Scharf sitting on the bimah, and to sing ‘L’dor V’dor’ with the choir and great congregation,” Feuerstein says.
L’dor v’dor (from generation to generation) is part of the appeal Heifer has for Feuerstein. “Heifer takes us out of our little bubbles and reminds us that there are families in countries all around the world who are suffering, who need sustenance,” he says. “Further, Heifer does this not by giving a family a fish so it can eat for a day, but by giving a cow so it can be milked, or a chicken so it can produce eggs for years to come. L’dor v’dor, from generations of people to generations of cows and chickens.”
When asked at what point he realized he could make a difference by speaking for organizations working to make the world a better place, Feuerstein replies, “When my father’s partner’s son, Jordan Rathkopf, asked me to help Heifer International launch this excellent Hanukkah campaign, that’s when! Why actors are given the microphone more often than teachers, doctors, nurses, community workers, etc., is beyond me, but if I can use my exposure to do a little good, then I’m thrilled and honored.”
When the USA Network’s summer series “Royal Pains” airs a two-hour holiday special Dec. 16, Feuerstein says viewers will get a taste of two of the values he feels Heifer at Hanukkah promotes: tikkun olam and tzedakah.
“I think Dr. Hank Lawson [Feuerstein’s character on “Royal Pains”] stands for the deepest sense of tikkun olam,” Feuerstein explains. “He is literally repairing the world around him in every episode, because he takes his Hippocratic oath seriously. Dr. Hank is always looking to help those around him by keeping them healthy and saving lives. And when Evan R. Lawson [Hank’s younger brother] realizes that the amount of money with which he reimburses his cousin Owen was way more than he actually owed, he decides to support his cousin in a way that is perfectly in line with the concept of tzedakah and tikkun olam. I think Hank and Evan are perfect mensch[en], notwithstanding the actors who play them.”
www.heifer.org • 800-696-1918
Mark Feuerstein, best known as the star of USA Network’s Royal Pains, and Ed Asner, famous for his roles in The Marty Tyler Moore Show, Lou Grant and the Pixar film Up, are featured in a new online video at www.heifer.org/heifer-at-hanukkah/. In the video, Mark dresses up as a heifer – the gift that Ed plans to give his granddaughter, which will provide an impoverished family with four gallons of milk a day. “My granddaughter will receive the gift of giving tzedakah,” Asner says. “Kids play with a good toy for a few months or a year, but this gift ends poverty here at home and abroad.” Photos
