Those words appear in Nancy Brinker's ,
Promise Me: How a Sister's Love Launched the Global Movement to End Breast Cancer, reviewed in
The Washington Post this morning. Brinker, the founder of the
Susan G. Komen for the Cure , recalls the words of her mother: "When you see someone in need, you
give. When you see something wrong, you
fix it."
Susan G. Komen died of breast cancer in 1980, still in her 30s. Ever since, her sister, Nancy Brinker, has been a dynamo on behalf of fighting breast cancer. Not just paying for its treatment, but seeking to
fix it. That is, seeking a cure.
The Hebrew words
tikkun olam don't mean provide care for the world, they means heal the world.
Susan G. Komen died of breast cancer in 1980, still in her 30s. Ever since, her sister, Nancy Brinker, has been a dynamo on behalf of fighting breast cancer. Not just paying for its treatment, but seeking to fix it. That is, seeking a cure.
The Hebrew words tikkun olam don't mean provide care for the world, they means heal the world.