Jack N. Mandel,
an international leader in Jewish philanthropy, passed away May 12 at the age of
99. He was chairman of the Jack N. & Lilyan Mandel Foundation and of
Parkwood Corporation’s finance committee at the time of his death.
Cleveland-raised
and a longtime resident of Hollywood, Fla., Mandel supported Chabad-Lubavitch
of South Broward, the Broward Chai Center, and other Jewish institutions in the
area.
“Jack would
often call me from Cleveland, requesting that I say a [prayer] for a friend,” said
Rabbi Raphael Tennenhaus, director of Chabad of South Broward. Mandel would
also “ask me to say kaddish for someone who nobody was saying kaddish
for.”
In 1940, Mandel
and his younger brothers Joseph and Morton purchased their uncle’s automotive
parts store, where Mandel had worked after high school. The Mandel brothers ran
Premier Automotive Supply in a small storefront. In the 1950s, they formed a
new division, Premier Fastener Co., and in 1960, the company changed its name
to Premier Industrial Corp.. As a publicly traded company, Premier set earnings
records for many years and was one of the largest distributors of auto parts
and electronic components in the United States. Premier merged with Farnell
Electronics PLC in 1996, and the Mandel brothers established the Parkwood Corp.
and Parkwood Trust Co.
Mandel and his
brothers formed The Mandel Foundation in 1953 to support education, nonprofit
leadership, and other causes, and institutions in Cleveland and Israel bear
their names or those of their family members. The Mandels’ business and
philanthropy were collaborative efforts, but each brother brought qualities to
the trio’s work.
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| Jack N. Mandel (Photo: Cleveland Jewish News) |
Jack Mandel
“was the true" elder of the family,” said brother Morton. “He was always there
for us. He was the wisest person I have ever known.”
In 2007, Jack,
Joseph, Morton and Barbara Mandel and The Mandel Foundation committed $22.5
million to establish The Mandel Center for the Humanities at Brandeis
University, one of the largest gifts in the university’s history. The family
foundation had previously established the Mandel Center for Studies in Jewish
Education and various graduate fellowships at the school.
“Jack Mandel
was a very wise, kind and generous man,” said Jehuda Reinharz, president of The
Mandel Foundation and past president of Brandeis University. “He treated
everyone with respect and (had) a wry sense of humor and was beloved by
everyone who came into contact with him.”
Active in many
organizations, Mandel was board president at Montefiore in the 1960s and later
donated funds to create The Mandel Rehabilitation Pavilion. He served on the
national board of directors of The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee
and on the board of The Negev Foundation.
After visiting
the Negev desert, Mandel became very knowledgeable about the Negev and brackish
water farming, and he provided funds for Israelis’ agricultural efforts in that
region. An honorary trustee of The Hebrew University and a trustee of The Tel
Aviv Foundation, Mandel coordinated a donation from The Mandel Foundation for a
state-of-the-art emergency medical center in Efrat, Israel.
“I will not die
unhappy,” he said in a video about the family’s legacy. “Because as a result of
my having been here, some people are better off.”
In 1984, Mandel
and his wife dedicated the Ellen Bonnie Mandel Cultural Complex, which provided
educational and social programs, in Tel Aviv’s Neve Sharett neighborhood. The project
was named in memory of their daughter and was sponsored by the three Mandel
brothers.
Born in
Kolbusowa, Poland, Mandel came to the U.S. when he was 9 years old. A graduate
of Cleveland Glenville High School, he attended a half-day program and spent
the rest of the day working at jobs that included selling the old Cleveland
News, ushering at the Palace Theatre, spot welding at Cleveland Metal
products, and die casting at Superior Casting Co. He briefly attended a yeshiva
in New York.
At his memorial
service, Samuel Miller, co-chairman of the board and treasurer of Forest City
Enterprises Inc. and a close friend, referred to Mr. Mandel as one of the lamed
vavniks, the 36 righteous people Jewish mysticism hold exist in this world
at any one time, and said, “His soul print and his heart print are forever
emblazoned on everyone who ever met him.”
Mandel was
predeceased by his wife Lilyan and daughter Bonnie. He is survived by his son
Sheldon and brothers Joseph and Morton.
A
version of this article first appeared in the Cleveland
Jewish News.