The Jewish Chronicle

MY CANCER VOW

FACEBOOK BOSS FIGHTS BACK

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because the reach was phenomenal — more than 150 million people, she tells me with pride. The launch took place jointly in London and New York and, of course, on Facebook and its picture-sharing app Instagram where celebritie­s piled in to help raise awareness and funds for Follicular Lymphoma (FL), the blood cancer she was diagnosed with in 2016 at the age of 44.

There is currently no cure for FL and her aim is to find one. “I absolutely believe there is a cure out there,” she says. “What this disease has lacked is awareness, both publically and in the medical world as well. And the funds to make it happen. So that is the intention.”

Big data is something that we often hear about in a negative way, when considerin­g the influence of internet giants such as, well, Facebook but Mendelsohn believes firmly that its power can be harnessed to help people like her.

“We want something that is genuinely transforma­tive. We’re not looking for iteration around the edges.

“I’m really interested in how big data and the applying of machine learning can help to solve the problem. So much of medicine will be about personalis­ed approaches, So many of the personalis­ed treatments do come from blood cancers and then extend out.”

In the meantime, the charity’s new website (www.theflf. org) and the support group that she jointly runs on Facebook will help people know what to ask and what might be possible when they see their doctors. “In London we have access to top specialist­s,” she points out, “which is not the case for most people.”

Some people in the group have not told anyone of their diagnosis, but Mendelsohn never considered keeping it secret. Eventually she wrote an article for the Sunday

Times, explaining the horror of discoverin­g that a small lump in her groin had eventually proved to be the only symptom (some people have none at all) of an incurable disease. Telling her children — now aged between 22 and 14 — was the worst part. Her youngest asked if she was going to die. “It is not a conversati­on I could ever have imagined having with them, not even in my worst nightmares, until it hit me in the face,” she

Nicola Mendelsohn I believe there is a cure out there. Big data can help solve the problem

wrote. “It was the hardest moment of my life.” Family support has helped her cope but also there’s her optimism. “One of the things my friends say about me is that one of the things that I’ve always done is to practise gratitude, to live in the moment and to be grateful — incredibly grateful — for the life I have.” Last weekend, at a close friend’s batmitzvah, all her children were there.

“I don’t take that for granted that my four grown up children would want to come, would want to be with us and celebrate. That matters hugely to me, that whole sense of family values.

“A cancer diagnosis is a massive kick in the teeth that can easily take you to the darkest of places. And it did. I’ve been really clear about that. But I didn’t want it to define my life and I didn’t want it to be the thing that would be all encompassi­ng of every aspect of my life.”

Judaism is, and has always been, at the centre of her life. “At the heart of Judaism is family and the wider family of community,” she says. “I know that I’ve never had to think about the fact that I would go through this alone — it wouldn’t even occur to me — and yet for so many people it is.”

She’s been struck by the loneliness of some members of the FL support group. “They’ve got no family, they’ve got no friends, they’re going through the worst thing in their life alone. If you practise Judaism, that would never happen. There would always be someone on the worst days making a pot of chicken soup for you.”

In this way — creating communitie­s for anyone who needs one — Facebook in particular and the internet in general is a powerful force for good, she believes, and one which aligns very much with her Jewish values.

Growing up in Prestwich, Manchester, her parents instilled into her a sense of community and she and her husband are active in Finchley United Synagogue. “My parents taught me the value of volunteeri­ng and I spent many Sundays in my youth at Heathlands, the old age home, singing terrible songs because I have the worst voice. I remember marching for Soviet Jewry, in those days, in the 80s. Living a good life with good values, surrounded by family, there’s nothing more important than that.”

She’s the daughter of the legendary caterer Celia Clyne, who went from cookery teacher, to running a restaurant in the Jewish Cultural Centre, to the banqueting queen of the north. The catering business started when Mendelsohn was 11, “so, growing up around a mum who was working was totally normal.” Her grandmothe­r also worked with her grandfathe­r, selling haberdashe­ry, fabrics and trimmings on the market. Her father also works in the catering business and so does her older brother, Mark. Her younger brother Adam runs the media company Coolr and was actively involved in launching the charity.

She wanted to be an actress, and studied English and Theatre Studies at Leeds University where she — quite literally — had a ball. She is still proud of her efforts organising “possibly the largest JSoc ball ever— for more than 1,000 people”, raising thousands of pounds for charity. No prizes for guessing who the caterers were. She also met her husband and they married soon after she graduated.

She has no regrets about abandoning her acting ambitions, recognisin­g that it was hard to sustain a career in theatre if you are shomer Shabbat. She loved advertisin­g’s combinatio­n of creativity, problem-solving and results. When she started out, in pre-internet days, a client might want a TV ad and a print ad. “If I were doing the same job now,” she says, “I’d be making thousands of pieces of content that would be deployed in so many different areas.”

The internet has changed everything . “If you don’t think it’s impacted an area of your life— it will do.” She acknowledg­es that means upheaval and change, which many fear, but insists that the positive outweighs the negative.

Facebook is actively listening to its critics, she says (only last week, Sasha Baron Cohen accused Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg of facilitati­ng “hate and violence”), and has invested “billions and billions” on machine learning so that hateful content is taken down or, ideally, never made public at all. The company employs 35,000 content moderators, and 99.9% of terrorism-related posts are picked up before they are made public, she says, figures which made her “very proud.” The company’s efforts can be stymied by the lack of internatio­nal agreement on what constitute­s hate speech. But anything promoting violence is taken down immediatel­y. Facebook has been working with Hope not Hate, the Community Security Trust and the Board of Deputies to make sure Jews know how to report antisemiti­c posts or threats.

As to more general concerns about data mining, she urges people to check their privacy settings. ”We’ve made a lot of changes in the last few months, making sure that people are clear about the informatio­n that they have on Facebook and what they want to put out and share as well.”

Right now, of course, the focus is on the election. Facebook takes political advertisin­g as “it isn’t for a private company to say what a politician should put out there.” Political parties and individual­s must register with Facebook and make clear where their ads are coming from, so “the person looking at it is really clear that it’s political advertisin­g.” The ads are then archived and kept for seven years. This system gives more transparen­cy and informatio­n than ever before, she says.

We’ve got one minute left in her busy schedule — she’s due to speak at a training event and later in the week is flying off to Sweden — so I attempt to breach her personal privacy settings. She’s married to a Labour peer — her husband was Tony Blair’s fundraiser — and he recently spoke out against antisemiti­sm in the Labour party. They live in Finchley, the constituen­cy where Luciana Berger is standing for the Liberal Democrats. How will she will be voting, I wonder.

“Voting is a private matter,” she replies and I think that’s that. But then she adds, “I abhor racism. I’ve fought my whole life against racism. It’s an interestin­g election for everyone.”

Living a good life with good values: there’s nothing more important

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 ?? PHOTO: TOM LINDBOE ??
PHOTO: TOM LINDBOE
 ??  ?? A painting of Nicola Mendelsohn in the Northern Quarter, Manchester. The purple veins mimic the dye used to diagnose the illness
A painting of Nicola Mendelsohn in the Northern Quarter, Manchester. The purple veins mimic the dye used to diagnose the illness

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