On Tuesday night the Miami Heat basketball team partnered with South Florida rabbis to welcome dozens of sick children and their families to a game.
The game against the Oklahoma City Thunder was attended by fifty families with children suffering from illnesses, from cancer to a rare chromosomal disorder. The game was part of the Heat’s ninth annual Jewish Heritage Night.
It was ten-year-old Meier Kagan’s first-ever Heat game. Meir, who suffers from cerebral palsy, went with his family to the game at the American Airlines Arena.
Meir was “excited” about the game but said, “now I’m worried about being on the news right now.”
Meir’s mother Chana Kagan sees every day as a miracle. “He has cerebral palsy, so sometimes it’s a little hard for him to get through the day.” she said. “But he pushes on. Nothing stops him.”
Chabad of Florida’s Rabbi Pinney said thousands of people now celebrate Hanukkah with the Miami Heat. “The event grows and grows every year,” he said, “and we have literally thousands of people coming to celebrate Hanukkah in this amazing venue.”
Ari Cohen, 13, was not going to miss this for the world. He wasn’t about to let a small hospital procedure get in his way.
His father, Moshe Cohen, said “We don’t get to go out often but when an opportunity like this comes up, then it’s an amazing opportunity for us.”
Chai Lifeline and Ishai Reinfeld of DailySteals.com were instrumental in helping make the night come together. Reinfeld created a program called Stealing Hearts to give back to the community each December.
Reinfeld said the reason he started the program was personal. “My grandmother had breast cancer and so I know what that struggle is, living day in, day out in the hospital,” he said. “And so for us to be able to bring that to them, take them away, take their mind off of it, come see a game, come watch the Heat hopefully win, is a blessing. Fulfilling doesn’t begin to describe it, and they are the definition of a miracle.”
Rabbi Eli Lipskar of Rok Family Shul in Brickell said their 10th annual Jewish Heritage Night will be even better. “Wait ’til next year, we’ll always top the party,” he said.
Reinfeld said the Stealing Hearts program gave out gifts for the dec. 25th holiday earlier in the month. He said they are hoping to expand the program to help even more people the following year.