Gertrude (“Trudy”) Belle Elion’s greatest legacy is the thousands of lives touched by the drugs she and her associates developed for the treatment of leukemia (6-Mercaptopurine or 6-MP), gout (allopurinol), rejection of transplanted organs (azathioprine), and herpes (acyclovir), among other disorders.
Elion was born on January 23, 1918, in New York City, to Lithuanian immigrant dentist Robert and Bertha (Cohen) Elion. Her father came from a long line of rabbis. Elion’s intellect manifested itself at an early age: she was a voracious reader and an excellent student, graduating from Walton High School at age fifteen. The death of her beloved grandfather from stomach cancer led her to choose chemistry as “a logical first step in committing myself to fighting the disease. That was the turning point,” she later recalled. “It was as though the signal was there: ‘This is the disease you’re going to have to work against.’ I never really stopped to think about anything else.”
Trudy attributed her parents’ emphasis on education to their Jewish background. “Among immigrant Jews,” she said, “their one way to success was education, and they wanted all their children to be educated, it’s a Jewish tradition. The person you admired most was the person with the most education. And particularly because I was the firstborn, and I loved school, and I was good in school, it was obvious that I should go on with my education. No one ever dreamt of not going to college.”
Elion received her B.A. summa cum laude in 1937 but found work opportunities scarce for a woman chemist. She received her M.S. from New York University in 1941. Despite her father’s losses in the 1929 stock market crash, she was able to continue her education by qualifying for tuition-free Hunter College. During this period, she also suffered the death of her fiancĂ©. She never married. She found work as a quality control chemist at Quaker Maid Company, then as a research chemist at Johnson & Johnson. She landed a position in 1944 as a research chemist at Burroughs Wellcome, the noted pharmaceutical company, eventually becoming head of experimental therapy, a post she held until her retirement in 1983.
Gertrude Elion’s contributions over the course of her career were remarkable. Among the many drugs she helped to develop were the first chemotherapy for childhood leukemia, the immunosuppressant that made organ transplantation possible, the first effective anti-viral medication, and treatments for lupus, hepatitis, arthritis, and gout. Her efforts have saved or improved the lives of countless individuals.
Elion was elated when new cures were discovered. She said, “What greater joy can you have than to know what an impact your work has had on people’s lives?” she asks. “We get letters from people all the time, from children who are living with leukemia. And you can’t beat the feeling that you get from those children.”
When Elion died on February 21, 1999, the head of Glaxo Wellcome observed,“Gertrude Elion’s love of science was surpassed only by her compassion for people.” Her generous heart and brilliant mind touched countless individuals around the world. She left a legacy that will benefit humanity for years to come.
“Don’t be afraid of hard work. Nothing worthwhile comes easily. Don’t let others discourage you or tell you that you can’t do it. In my day I was told women didn’t go into chemistry. I saw no reason why we couldn’t.”
We should give thanks for people like Gertrude Elion who gave of herself to improve the life of others. As we pray for these people let us also pray for the peace of Jerusalem and the protection of Israel (Psalm 122:6). Let us remember the dedication and commitment that Elion had not only for the Jewish people, but people everywhere.
For more about Gertrude Elion and her accomplishments please read Famous Scientists, Wikipedia, and Jewish Women’s Archive.

“Don’t make me go! I don’t want to go to school!”



When we think of the great architects of the world, names like Alexandre Gustave Eiffel (The Eiffel Tower) or Shah Jahan (The Taj Mahal) or William F. Lamb (The Empire State Building) typically comes to mind. These men provided us with sites that are readily recognizable and on everyone’s “must see” list when they visit the cities they are located in. However, there was a German “architect” of whom we all know but who lives in notoriety rather than renown – for Adolf Eichmann was the man who designed the atrocious treatment of millions of Jews – - he was responsible for the attempted genocide of the Jewish race. In the brief excerpt below from an article by Dr. Mike Evans, we learn a little bit more about this truly vicious man.
Honors and accolades usually come to those who have “paid their dues,” and Abe Weinrib certainly qualifies. Facing six years of the worst the Nazis had to offer during the Holocaust, he recently received a very special privilege, as the article below shares.
There is no question that any group of people seems to incite hatred and distrust more than God’s Chosen People. Much of this hatred is based on the lies perpetuated in THE PROTOCOLS OF THE ELDERS OF ZION, a fictional piece that was marketed as truth – first in Russia and then in much of the rest of the world. As the article below from THE JEWISH DAILY FORWARD shows, Anti-Semitism is alive and doing well on the Iberian Peninsula!

Sometimes death is a welcomed friend, for it can whisk you away from the pain, agony, and horror you might be immersed in. William Brasse met this friend seventy years too late to save him from the memories that haunted him during those seventy years. For William Brasse was forced to photograph the Holocaust for the Nazis, and the scars it created in his psyche never went away, as the excerpt below from an article by Greg Goodsell shows.
You can separate a pea from the pod, but can you separate the Holocaust and Anti-Semitism? That is the question/quandary currently facing Germany, and it is not an easy one to answer, as the excerpt below from an article by Donald Snyder shows.
Legal loopholes may be the bane of society. Allowing fiends to go unpunished, or have their punishments reduced, these loopholes are often created when a judge’s interpretation of a law supercedes its intent. That is what the excerpt below from an article by Allan Hall regarding author/Holocaust denier David Irving shows to be the case:
The flames of hatred will never die down when they are fanned by the most trusted individuals in our lives: our own mother and father. That, according to his brother Abdelkader, is exactly what French gunman Mohamed Merah fell victim to, as explained in the excerpt from a recent article by AP below:
Over sixty years have passed since WWII, but Holocaust survivors have suffered yet more discouraging news. Holocaust survivor financial assistance for medical needs has been suspended for the balance of the year.
You don’t live to be 100 years old and not face a few adversities in life. Morris Sorid, however, has had more than his share of life threatening challenges in life. As the article below by the JEWISH DAILY FORWARD staff shows, he is most philosophical about it!