The Jerusalem Post - The Jerusalem Post Magazine

JONATHAN ROSS GOODMAN

The Canadian philanthro­pist and entreprene­ur reflects on the meaning of life

- ALLAN ROSENBAUM This article was written in cooperatio­n with the Canadian Friends of Hebrew University.

P‘I have made a conscious decision to live in awe, not fear’

hilanthrop­y, as per the Oxford Dictionary, is defined as “the desire to promote the welfare of others, expressed especially by the generous donation of money to good causes.” What motivates a person to donate generously of their time and money?

A new video series hosted by Ralph Benmergui, Canadian television and radio personalit­y, created and produced by the Canadian Friends of Hebrew University, explains the sense of purpose and drive possessed by those who help people in need.

Jonathan Ross Goodman, a Montreal native, is cofounder & CEO of Knight Therapeuti­cs Inc. and has dedicated his life to numerous causes, including cancer research, Jewish education and improving the welfare of Israelis of Ethiopian descent. He will be featured on an episode of The Philanthro­pists, which will be shown on The Jerusalem Post website on April 12.

Goodman was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s disease at age 21 and, after undergoing a year of chemothera­py and radiation, decided that he would not allow his illness to control his life. “I vowed that cancer was never going to change my life,” he says, “in the sense that whatever I could do without cancer, I would do with cancer.”

Goodman returned to school and earned a law degree and an MBA before founding Paladin Labs, a specialty pharmaceut­ical company, which was sold in 2013 for $3.2 billion.

For Goodman, creating and operating a successful business was not enough. “I was shaped by my parents’ attitude of tikkun olam, or repairing the world. My mother, of blessed memory, used to say that we are not put on this earth just to take up space. We are put on this earth to make a difference,” says Goodman, who recounts his mother’s dedication to community causes, calling her a “profession­al volunteer.”

Since overcoming his illness, Goodman has invested a great deal of time and resources in the fight against cancer. Paladin Labs fielded the largest cycling team in Quebec six years in a row for the Ride to Conquer Cancer and has raised millions for the fight against cancer.

Another passion of his is Jewish education. “I want Jewish grandchild­ren,” says Goodman, who was actively involved in the developmen­t of a new $50 million campus built over the Jewish Y for Herzliah High School, one of Montreal’s leading Jewish high schools.

Goodman says research has shown that receiving a Jewish high school education is one of the most important determinan­ts as to whether someone will marry a Jewish person. “Montreal is one of the great Jewish communitie­s of North America because we recognize that Jewish education is the only way to ensure Jewish continuity and produce Jewish grandchild­ren,” he says.

Speaking of his hope for ensuring Jewish continuity, he adds, “A Jewish high school puts a lot of aces in the deck. You have to stack enough aces in the deck and hope your kids pull an ace.”

A decade ago, Goodman embarked on another successful educationa­l project in Montreal, spearheadi­ng an effort in which all of the Jewish schools in the city combined to host a gala evening to raise funds for all the institutio­ns.

This event has been held for 10 years and has raised more than $10m. for Jewish schools in Montreal, he says.

Beyond education, Goodman has served as the campaign chair for the Combined Jewish Appeal of Montreal. “Twenty percent of Montreal’s Jews live at or below the poverty line. We have to ensure that we are looking after the most vulnerable of our community.”

Goodman’s most recent philanthro­pic passion is helping Ethiopian Jews living in Israel. Goodman wants to ensure that Ethiopian Jews are treated equally in Israel, and he says, “The best way to effect change for our people has always been in education. The best way to change the trajectory of Israelis of Ethiopian descent is to provide resources to support their attendance at the two best universiti­es in Israel – Hebrew University and Tel Aviv University.”

Goodman concedes that his idea is not an overnight solution and will take time, but as he says, “We are not an overnight people.” He wants to raise $5m. for each school to arrange scholarshi­ps for Ethiopian students, and his family’s Morris and Rosalind Goodman Family Foundation will donate $900,000 to each school when the fundraisin­g goals have been met.

As one might surmise, the term tikkun olam is frequently on Goodman’s lips. One of his newest philanthro­pic endeavors, the JNF Climate Solution Prize, is something that he says will literally help repair the world. The Climate Solution Prize will award a prize for the best Israeli solution for climate change, and Goodman heads the program that seeks to raise $6m. for the award.

IN 2011, Goodman was involved in a near-fatal cycling accident that, as his serious illness had done years earlier, drove home the message of the importance of living each day.

At the time, Paladin Labs had acquired a biotech company, and Goodman took his employees on a celebrator­y bicycle ride in the Laurentian Mountains in southern Quebec. Goodman fell off his bicycle – he still has no recollecti­on of the accident – and suffered a severe traumatic brain injury, septic shock, pulmonary embolism and two heart attacks. His family was told that he had a 10% chance of survival.

Miraculous­ly, he survived and quips, “Thankfully, they know more about Mars than they know about the human brain.”

On a more serious note, he adds that the word “recovery” is not the right term for a traumatic brain injury. “I will never recover, and I will never be who I was. But I am smart enough and driven enough to make a difference in this world.”

Jonathan Ross Goodman says that anyone can be involved in philanthro­pic endeavors, regardless of their financial position in life, by donating their time and skills to help others. Despite the substantia­l financial assistance that he has provided Jewish organizati­ons, Goodman is most proud of the fact that he has acted as a matchmaker for six couples who eventually married.

Goodman’s most recent philanthro­pic passion is helping Ethiopian Jews living in Israel

“It doesn’t cost anything, and it is a form of tzedakah. I made a difference,” he says. “You just have to begin to help others. No one ever said on their deathbed that they should have worked harder. They all say that they should have spent more time with family and friends and given back to the community.”

As executive chair of Knight Therapeuti­cs, which markets and licenses drugs from internatio­nal drugmakers for Canada and Latin America, Goodman is still deeply involved in the world of pharmaceut­icals and remains dedicated to helping others through his philanthro­py. “Ironically, selling drugs pays for my tzedakah habit,” he jokes.

At the age of 54, having experience­d and overcome serious illness and injury, Jonathan Ross Goodman says, “I have made a conscious decision to live in awe, not fear. One never fully recovers from a traumatic brain injury. I have had so many rads of radiation and undergone chemothera­py that there are many reasons to look at the glass as being half-empty.”

Goodman prefers to look at life differentl­y and says, “I think about why the glass is half full, and how I can make a difference, and treat each day as a blessing. Every day is an opportunit­y to leave the world a better place.”

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 ?? (Photos: Courtesy Jonathan Goodman) ?? JONATHAN GOODMAN: The best way to effect change for our people has always been in education.
(Photos: Courtesy Jonathan Goodman) JONATHAN GOODMAN: The best way to effect change for our people has always been in education.
 ?? ?? GOODMAN’S ATTITUDE toward tikkun olam was shaped by parents Morris and Rosalind.
GOODMAN’S ATTITUDE toward tikkun olam was shaped by parents Morris and Rosalind.
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64*/( 5*.& FGŎDJFOUMZ POF DBO IBWF HSFBU JNQBDU 4IBXO -FF 6OTQMBTI

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