Fun Centers At Mount Sinai Children's Hospital Honor Newtown Resident
Fun Centers At Mount Sinai Childrenâs Hospital
Honor Newtown Resident
By Nancy K. Crevier
Newtown resident Jeff Freedman, co-director of Camp Winaukee in New Hampshire â one of the largest boysâ sports camps in the United States â and his business partner Bart Sobel of New York City, whose father established the camp in 1934, were honored at Mount Sinai Childrenâs Hospital in New York City on Wednesday, December 1, when eight Fun Centers were installed in appreciation of the menâs work with youth. Camp Winaukee serves boys ages 7 to 15, and also hosts a ten-day camp each August for special needs children.
The Fun Centers, each costing approximately $10,000, are specially designed portable entertainment centers equipped with an LCD television, a Nintendo Wii, and a DVD player, intended to provide distraction and ease loneliness for children who are hospitalized.
The Fun Centers were donated by Alice and Ron Cohen of Boston, whose sons Adam and Brad have attended Camp Winaukee, and installed by Starlight Childrenâs Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the lives of seriously ill children. The Cohens left it to Mr Freedman and Mr Sobel to decide where the Fun Centers would be installed.
âWe chose Mount Sinai,â Mr Freedman said, âbecause of the amazing work they do with children, and because Mount Sinai gives a lot of free care to inner city children.â
In a statement read at the December 1 dedication of the Fun Centers, Mr Freedman said, âBart and I are humbled by this beautiful gesture provided by the Cohen family, and are forever grateful that our name can be associated with fun at the Mount Sinai Childrenâs Hospital.â He went on to note how pleased he and Mr Sobel are that children in the hospital will now have access to the Fun Centers and be provided with âa brief respite from what they are going through daily.â
As the men have devoted their careers to making sure that children have fun, being honored with the Fun Centers is particularly meaningful, Mr Freedman said.
âWe have devoted our careers to putting smiles on childrenâs faces,â he said, as have the Cohens, who are involved in the toy industry. Mr Freedmanâs wife, Cindy Freedman, is an occupational therapist working with special needs children. âSo we are all pretty passionate about making children happy,â Mr Freedman said.
âOur Fun Centers will brighten the lives of thousands of hospitalized children fighting serious and chronic illnesses. We are forever grateful to the Cohen family for this gift,â he stated via a press release.