By
Donald H. Harrison
The community bade a final farewell to San Diego's own personification of the
American success story as Bernard Lipinsky, 87, was entombed Thursday, Dec. 27,
inside the Shalom Mausoleum at Greenwood
Cemetery.
Earlier, several hundred had crowded into the cemetery¹s nearby chapel, where
they heard Rabbi Martin S. Lawson of Temple
Emanu-El eulogize the philanthropist who donated millions of dollars for
education, the arts, care for the aging, and the Jewish community as one who
"walked in God's ways."
Lipinsky, who died in his downtown condominium on the evening of Dec. 25
following a long battle with cancer, had moved in 1927 with his parents from his
native Brooklyn to San Diego.
During the Depression, while still a student at San Diego High School and a
leader of the AZA Jewish fraternity, he took a job as a milkman. He later
dropped out of San
Diego State College after only two years of study to take a job filing for a
judge in Los Angeles, but he returned to San Diego to go into business with his
older brother Bill Lipin, who survives him.
The brothers opened jewelry and loan stores, and later expanded into handling
the pinball and jukebox concessions at local military installations, as well as
"kiddy rides" all over town, Rabbi Lawson told the mourners.
Lipinsky met his first wife, Jane , during the 1940s, and their marriage
produced two children, Jeffrey and Elaine, before Jane died in 1954.
Lipinsky's heartbroken mother-in-law, Bess Goldberg, arranged for him to date a
young widow, Dorris Fagelson Levine.
"From their first date spent talking about their late spouses, Dorris and
Bernard's relationship clicked," the rabbi related. "They could really
talk and listen to each other. They had such mutual love and respect for each
other that lasted for over 44 years. Bernard and Dorris were true partners in
family, in business, in life."
With his brother Bill, Bernard founded North Park Mortgage in 1956, which in
turn led to the brothers investing heavily and successfully in apartment houses
and buildings. They also purchased the Kona Kai Club on Shelter Island in 1968
and operated the resort property through 1984.
Lipinsky perhaps had been preconditioned to become involved in Jewish
philanthropy. His mother, Ida Lipinsky, and his sisters, Katherine and Betty,
had been among the 16 original founders of the San Diego Hebrew Home— a group
still referred to as the "Jolly 16" at Seacrest
Village Retirement Communities, which are operated by the Hebrew Homes.
Bernard and Dorris Lipinsky helped finance the growth of the Hebrew Home
when it was located on 54th Street, and their philanthropy followed the Home
when it moved to Encinitas and became known as Seacrest Village. The Lipinskys
were responsible for the construction of the administration building that is
named for them.
"At the Homes' Annual Ball (last) November, we honored Dr. Lipinsky and
said that we sit in awe of his presence," commented Robin Israel, vice
president of fund development. "Today, we sit in awe of the memory of this
great man."
So too did the administrators of other nonprofit organizations in a variety of
fields throughout San Diego County.
In honor of Lipinsky¹s giving, San Diego State University conferred upon its
one-time student dropout an honorary doctorate of humane letters — only the
second person in the college's history be so honored. The first was U.S.
President John F. Kennedy, while the third was former Israeli Prime Minister
Shimon Peres.
The names of the Lipinsky family may be found on a clock tower on the campus
and on the door and literature of SDSU's Lipinsky Institute for Judaic Studies.
Lipinksy also is credited with funding scholarships for 600 students, many of
whom could not have afforded a higher education without his help. It became
customary for scholarship recipients to write a letter
to Lipinsky telling him of their academic progress, and Lipinsky took great
pleasure poring over a book of such letters that he always kept within easy
reaching distance in his downtown condominium.
He also helped finance a freshman success program established by former SDSU
President Thomas Day, and was a generous contributor to the Hillel House
adjacent to the SDSU campus.
"Bernard's contributions to San Diego State are genuinely seminal because
he was the first major philanthropist who was prepared to invest in San Diego
State University, and it opened the way for everything that has happened since
that time," SDSU president Steve Weber told HERITAGE.
Prof. Lawrence Baron, director of SDSU's Lipinsky Institute for Judaic Studies,
suggested that "Bernard would be the first to admit that he was not a
religious person in the traditional sense. He did not strictly observe Jewish
rituals; but he made giving to others into a ritual. He did not pray
to God to make the world a better place; instead, he answered the prayers of
others to make their institutions better places."
U.S. Rep. Bob Filner, who served as an acting director of the Lipinsky Institute
during his days as an SDSU history professor, said that Lipinsky
"recognized that students at a modern university — be they Jewish or
non-Jewish — could graduate with little knowledge of Jewish history or
culture. He hoped to change that with the Lipinsky Institute. I knew Bernard as
a straight-talking man who laid out his vision of his creation, but let the
academic administrators and scholars have the autonomy they needed to create an
intellectually-respectable institution."
A recent offshoot of the Lipinsky Institute was the decision to house the
archives of the Jewish
Historical Society of San Diego at the SDSU Library. The society's
president, Stanley Schwartz, saluted the memory of Lipinsky "for his and
his family's past and present contributions to the San Diego community that will
enhance the lives of future generations."
Similarly, Jackie Tolley, director of the Hillel
House at SDSU, paid Lipinsky tribute for funding the Lipinsky Jewish Campus
Corps Fellow, "a position which provides for a staff person to seek out
students who might not automatically get involved in Jewish activities on
campus."
Education at all levels was a great interest for Lipinsky. Rabbi Simcha
Weiser, headmaster of the Soille
San Diego Hebrew Day School, noted that shortly after Dorris' death,
Lipinsky created a memorial scholarship fund at the Orthodox school in her
honor. Without the fund, said Weiser, Soille might not have been able to educate
16 students who received the scholarships.
"He had benefited from a tremendous opportunity to be successful, to
lead a good life, and he extended that circle outward to encompass other
people," the rabbi said. "I have a beautiful picture of Bernard
sitting with the kids in our school."
At the Agency for
Jewish Education's offices is the Bernard and Dorris Lipinsky Teacher
Center. Dr. Cecile Jordan, e-mailing to HERITAGE from Israel, said that Lipinsky
not only funded AJE programs, but immensely enjoyed participating in them.
"Bernard often attended the AJE workshops and seminars," she wrote.
"We will always remember Bernard borrowing and returning videos from the
AJE Video Collection. In fact, during the past 10 years, Bernard viewed more of
the AJE videos than any other San Diegan."
As Lipinsky revered education, so too did he love the arts. Recently, he
underwrote the annual Jewish cultural festival mounted by the San Diego
Repertory Theatre, which gratefully renamed it as the Lipinsky Family Jewish
Arts Festival. Rabbi Lawson, in his eulogy, also noted that "his tzedakah
strengthened the Jewish Film Festival," which is produced annually by the
Center for Jewish Culture at the Lawrence
Family JCC.
Lipinsky's generosity was not limited to arts programs in the Jewish community.
Jack O'Brien, artistic director of the Old Globe Theatres, commented, "The
Globe has lost one of its closest and most loyal friends, and the theater one of
its most irresistible enthusiasts." Lipinsky, said
O¹Brien, was "our gentle patriarch, whose kindness and generosity has
sustained us in the past and will ever nurture our future."
Jeff Lipinsky recalled that O'Brien had gone over all the plans with his father
for what would become a patrons' suite named for the Lipinskys "even before
the first hammer went against the walls."
He noted that his father's last public outing was at a small family dinner Dec.
14 in the suite, which sits in the shadow of the California Building's famous
tower and dome in Balboa Park.
Another beneficiary of Lipinsky's donations was the San
Diego Young Playwrights Project, which enables young students to have their
plays produced on real stages like that of the Old Globe. One of the graduates
of that program was Annie Weisman, a former student at Torrey
Pines High School who has since become such an accomplished playwright that
the La Jolla
Playhouse recently produced her play, Be Aggressive.
The director of the Playwrights Project, Deborah Salzer, said Lipinsky also
"helped us spark the imaginations of students in marginal schools and
neighborhoods. He pledged his first major gift to Playwrights Project so
unexpectedly, and quietly, that I gasped in response.
"Bernard's contributions went beyond dollars," Salzer continued.
"He came to events, right up to his final weeks. He talked with us about
his life. And when we asked for opinions, we got them, succinct and direct, as
when he walked out of a play he didn't like."
As the son of one of the Jolly 16, it was perhaps to be expected that Jewish
causes would attract his interest. "A gentleman of great generosity, his
devotion to the State of Israel and Jewish causes will be sorely missed,"
commented Bernard Lewis, San Diego regional chair for Israel
Bonds.
"Bernard Lipinsky was a great community leader and a generous benefactor to
the community, particularly in Jewish education," said a statement from the
United Jewish
Federation.
"He was very generous to the Israel
Guide Dog Center for the Blind," commented Helena Galper,
representative of that organization in this area.
In his eulogy, Rabbi Lawson shared that when Temple Emanu-El "was searching
for economic assistance, Bernard and Dorris stepped forward with an amazing gift
that helped Emanu-El survive and also created the magnificent stained-glass
windows in our sanctuary. "But that was not enough," Lawson
continued. "They went on to establish at Temple Emanu-El the Lipinsky
Family Education Fund, helping to bring parents and children together for Jewish
learning and allowing us to re-establish our Family Camp program in the coming
year.
"When I spoke to Dorris and Bernard about their gift, you simply could not
find kinder, more unaffected people."
Lipinsky's children, Jeff and Elaine, said their father's philanthropy also
contributed quietly to a seemingly endless list of causes that included the Fred
J. Hansen Institute for World Peace, the Balboa Theater Arts and Education Fund,
the San Diego Zoo, Meals on Wheels, Mama's Kitchen, Doctors Without Borders,
juvenile diabetes, multiple sclerosis and "many others too
numerous to mention."
Lipinsky,who had been aware for more than a year that his cancer was terminal,
was surrounded during the last week of his life by his children, grandchildren,
family members and friends— a scene that reminded Rabbi Lawson of the biblical
Jacob bestowing blessings from his deathbed upon his children.
Jeff Lipinsky said that his father started experiencing a little pain the last
week, "and he took a fall the night before his 87th birthday, on Thursday,
Dec. 20. We knew that on the 20th he was failing, but he lived for his 87th
birthday and stayed lucid up to the very end. He was on morphine, but he was
very aware. Dad's mind did not turn off, even when he was sedated."
San Diego Hospice, another
institution that Lipinsky had helped support, came to his aid in the final days,
the son said.
Jeff Lipinsky noted that whereas Dorris Lipinsky died Feb. 14, 1999—
Valentine's Day — his father expired on Dec. 25, Christmas Day. "I will
never have any difficulty remembering the dates of their deaths," he said
sadly.
As well as for his love of the Jewish community, "he will be remembered as
a man who was concerned with education, taking care of elders, and the
arts," his daughter Elaine said. "He wanted to give back to the
community, because it had been so good to him."
Lipinsky is survived by his two children and daughter-in-law Sheila; his older
brother Bill Lipin, whose 96th birthday came Jan. 1; Elaine's three children
Diane (Robert) Zepf, Jane (Brad) Murphy and Nathan (Cara) Segal; Jeff's two
children Daren (Gina) Lipinsky and Steve Lipinsky; and two great-grandchildren,
Yardyn Shraga, 3, the daughter of Jane Murphy, and Noah
Segal, the son of Nathan Segal. |