Moshe
Gottlieb, D.C., 70, one of the first chiropractors to practice in Israel,
was killed in a suicide bomb attack on Tuesday, June 18, 2002 in
Jerusalem. The Islamic terrorist group Hamas claimed responsibility for
the attack on the bus, which killed 19 and injured 74. The bus, which was
completely destroyed, was carrying many students on their way to school.
Dr. Gottlieb was travelling to a facility in the town of Bnei Brak, where
he provided volunteer services for children.
According to his son, Seymour, Gottlieb viewed his patients as friends
or partners in a healing relationship.
"My father's patients were more than just physical entities for
performing chiropractic adjustments. He would interact with them, ask them
about their personal life, shared his personal life experiences with them.
Their quality of life was the essence of his well-being," Seymour
said. "Some of them feel totally at loss with his passing."
Gottlieb immigrated to Israel from Los Angeles with his wife, Sheila,
and their two children after having established a successful and lucrative
chiropractic practice there. He graduated from Los Angeles College of
Chiropractic in the mid 60s and moved with his family to Israel in 1978.
"We moved to Israel after spending a summer there a few years
before," says his son. "Simply put, my father 'fell in love'
with the land and the people there. His love for community service was so
great, that he would usually prefer to stay home for the Sabbath and tend
to the religious and social services of his community in the Gilo
neighborhood of Jerusalem rather than take a weekend off to visit his
children and grandchildren living elsewhere. He was also instrumental in
creating the core of these neighborhood community services, and he
continued to play an active role in these services for over 20 years,
until his very last day."
"Every day he did Mitzvoth [commandments and good deeds],"
Seymour continued, "but Tuesday was his special day. Every Tuesday
morning, he would head out by bus to Bnei Brak, an hour ride from
Jerusalem. There he volunteered in the treatment of children with Down's
Syndrome, CP and others, and then made sure he got back to his
neighborhood in Jerusalem in time for afternoon prayers. I asked him once:
'Why don't you slow down a little, start your day a little later?' He
said: 'What can I do, people are waiting for me, waiting for my
treatment.'"
Dr. Yitzchak Freeman, a well-known Jerusalem chiropractor, shared the
following story.
"I first met Dr. Gottlieb in 1988 on a late summer Friday evening.
He greeted me by saying 'Shalom! It's great to have another DC in Israel.
If you're serious about helping people, and not just making a few shekels,
I'll help you as much as you want.' He was one of the first chiropractors
in Israel; I was the 14th."
Freeman also recalled that, in 1990, "I called him and asked him
to help with his expertise, with the tonal and gentle method he used in
chiropractic, in the treatment of children in Bnei Brak with Down's, CP,
autism, and other neurological disorders. Most of the kids loved my
Diversified adjusting style, but others would cry as soon as I would enter
the room. Dr. Gottlieb made the trip to Bnei Brak and started volunteering
with me. He loved those kids, and continued volunteering his services to
them on a weekly basis. This was the beginning of his legendary Tuesday
trips to Bnei Brak. During the hour and a half I sat with his widow and
two children a few days after his passing, a mother of one of such
children entered the Gottlieb home, sat down and showed us a picture of
Dr. Gottlieb adjusting her child who has Down's. He changed the lives of
many people. Just being around him changed my life too."
Gottlieb was a subluxation-centered chiropractor; he did not view
chiropractic as manual medicine or a subset of medicine dealing
exclusively with the diagnosis and manual treatment of musculoskeletal
conditions. Because he addressed the total well-being of his clients, he
was known to have succeeded in helping many where other doctors had
failed.
"He was recently the guest of honor at the wedding of a girl who
was diagnosed with a brain tumor whom he helped recover," one friend
explained, while visiting the Gottlieb family.
He always managed to find time to help others, whether through his
professional skills, by teaching classes in the synagogue, by quietly
providing financial assistance to needy individuals or families, or just
by encouraging others with a smile. "No one has any idea of how many
people and institutions he helped," said Rabbi Rosenbluth of the
town, Elazar, a long-time close friend.
At his funeral, in the presence of hundreds of mourners, the Chief
Rabbi Schlesinger of Gilo spoke in a solemn and heart-piercing voice.
"A void has been created in your absence, Dr. Gottlieb. What will we
do without you?"
People were crying because they simply loved him. If anyone was close
to being a truly righteous person, it was he.
His wife, his brother, Judah, his son, his daughter, Feige, and 12
grandchildren survive him.
May his legendary memory be a source of blessing, and may the guilty be
brought to justice. May we soon witness the endorsement of principles by
all of humankind that truly support the freedom of spirit and the full
expression of human potential existing within each and every one of us.