Pictured: Event co-chairs Steven and Harriet Nichols, Regional Board Chair Seth Gerber, Honorees Tom and Barbara Leanse and George David Kieffer, Regional Director Amanda Susskind, National Director Abraham Foxman, emcee Mark Feuerstein and co-chairs Stephanie and Howard Sherwood.
Approximately 900 people attended ADL’s Centennial Gala Celebration at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on December 10. The event raised nearly $1.4 million to support ADL efforts to combat anti-Semitism and bigotry of all kinds.
The League honored three distinguished community members – Barbara and Thomas J. Leanse and George David Kieffer –for excellence in their professional fields and community leadership.
The Gay Men’s Chorus of Los Angeles provided musical entertainment and MC Mark Feuerstein of USA Network’s hit series Royal Pains provided comic relief and a healthy dose of Jewish humor.
Following a video welcome by President Obama, four spotlight speakers highlighted ADL’s continuing impact: UCLA student Sunny Singh spoke of all he learned when he visited Israel on ADL’s Campus Leaders Mission; Det. Chris Keeling of the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department discussed the partnership between ADL and law enforcement; and high school teacher Katherine Friedman told of her experience bringing ADL’s Holocaust Education curriculum to her students.
In a particularly touching tribute, Los Angeles World Airports Chief of Police Patrick Gannon told of the chief of police at Ben Gurion Airport reaching out to him immediately following the November 1st LAX shootings, which came days after Chief Gannon had visited Israel as part of ADL’s counter-terrorism training program in Israel.
There were numerous poignant moments throughout the evening:
- Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean of UC Irvine School of Law, presented the Jurisprudence Award to “my hero, George Kieffer.” Chemerinsky explained that he holds Kieffer up as a role model of public service for his students.
- George David Kieffer, in accepting his award, credited ADL as a counterforce to hate – “not hating back, but pushing back against hate and bigotry through education and dialogue.”
- Regional Board Chair Seth Gerber introduced ADL’s Centennial video, Imagine, and described how it allows us “to remember and honor the lives of individuals who have inspired so many of us to pursue justice and fair treatment for all.”
- National Director Abraham Foxman, nearing his 50th anniversary with ADL, reflected on ADL’s 100 years at the “forefront of the struggle to protect the fundamental freedoms of all Americans.”
- Thirty-year ADL supporter Tom Leanse, accepting the Humanitarian Award with his wife, Barbara, spoke of how ADL’s mission aligns with his world view of “trying to make the world a better place as we pass through on our journey.” Referencing the Jewish Journal article that featured the Leanses and their philanthropy, Leanse urged all those in attendance to devote time or money to an important cause. “It is incumbent on all of us to help when we can. You don’t have to do a lot, but you do have to do something.”
- Barbara Leanse, whose social work career began with helping AIDS patients in the 1980s and now includes overseeing a diverse population of volunteers at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, ended the evening with a poignant story about a volunteer who described her as being “there for him” and, thanked ADL “for accepting us all with our differences.”