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How Sue’s donor legacy is still saving lives today

Twenty five years ago one woman launched a campaign to try and save her life. That is now the Sue Harris trust

September 13, 2018 13:58
Enduring: An image from the Sue Harris campaign (Photo: Sue Harris Trust)
2 min read

It was 1993 and Yom Kippur has just ended. I gulped down a coffee, scoffed some sponge cake and dashed to the office to wait for the first calls. We had launched the Sue Harris Campaign in synagogues all over the country with 100,000 leaflets.

Sue herself addressed 150 audiences — from charity balls to Friday night dinners — with a simple, message: “I’m Sue Harris, I have leukaemia and one of you could save my life.”

The first call that night came from Nigel Savage, founder of Hazon, the American Jewish environmental organisation. A few more trickled in but it was hardly a rush. I decided to call it a night.

We had no email and no social media 25 years ago. This campaign was strictly old school, so what did we expect? Slowly though, the response grew and we hired someone for three months to manage the campaign. The incredible Lizzie Rosenfelder is still with us. She organised recruitment drives in synagogue halls, where hundreds queued to give blood for testing. Donors were found for others; but not for Sue.