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Gift of Life Bone Marrow Foundation Salutes Yeshiva University for Record Registration at its Annual Gala

May 20, 2008 -- The Gift of Life Bone Marrow Foundation honored Yeshiva University with its 2008 Partners for Life Award at the foundation’s annual gala dinner on May 15. The university has facilitated more bone marrow transplants than any other institution via Gift of Life’s campus recruitment program. President Richard M. Joel accepted the award on behalf of YU students. To date, more than 2,500 YU students have registered, and 23 have already saved lives via their donations. This past year, the YU Student Medical Ethics Society ran two hugely successful drives that registered over 500 people. “I felt very proud and empowered to know that my team was directly involved with Yeshiva University’s recognition at the Gift of Life dinner,” said Yeshiva College junior Avi Amsalem, whose experience as a donor moved him to take a lead role in organizing the drives on campus. “Attending the dinner enabled us to see that our efforts have impacted not only the YU community, but the greater Jewish community as well.” The gala is the largest gathering of donors and recipients in the nation. One of the highlights of the evening was the emotional introductions of bone marrow donors to their transplant recipients in front of the audience. Gift of Life was founded by Jay Feinberg to facilitate bone marrow, blood stem cell and umbilical cord blood transplants for children and adults suffering from life-threatening illnesses globally. Its services include transplant coordination, donor recruitment, patient advocacy and public education. Through targeted recruitment in Jewish communities throughout North America, Gift of Life strives to overcome the loss of bloodlines following the Holocaust, a consequence that has made the search for genetically matched donors particularly difficult for Jewish patients. “The stories of this year’s three featured bone marrow transplant pairs are a tribute to the strong spirit of chesed [kindness] in the Jewish community,” said Feinberg, whose own life was saved following a bone marrow transplant in 1995. “When total strangers become involved in saving a life, they are following the Talmudic admonition of ‘One who saves a life is as if he saved the entire world.’”