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With Friends Like These

Since he was a child Rabbi Erps who grew up in Monsey where his parents still live watched them selflessly helping others around them. Though his parents lived in a small house and owned few possessions their hearts were big enough to include all those who crossed their path. His father would send him together with his brother to build the succah of an elderly neighbor before erecting their own. His mother filled her tiny home with shopping bags of clothing as she helped run a used-clothing gmach. Neither preached about the importance of chesed but Rabbi Erps learned to be a giver by osmosis.

Rabbi Erps joined Hatzolah of Rockland County in September 1993. After working the territory for some time he observed that Hatzolah dispatchers regularly received nonemergency calls from people who required help but didn’t know where else to turn. For example Hatzolah members occasionally transported handicapped individuals up or down steps and once even chased away rowdy neighborhood kids who had injured a child. But because emergencies took precedence they were not always available to respond to such calls. Not one to sit idly by after recognizing a community need Rabbi Erps soon conceived the idea of forming a Code Two Squad.

“Medical emergencies are known as Code One” he explains “so I thought that my volunteers could be known as Code Two members.”

At first Rabbi Erps envisioned this Code Two Squad as an offshoot of Hatzolah even using the same dispatching system. However after some discussion with Hatzolah directors it became clear that there were too many technical complexities involved. It was decided that it would be best to form an organization that operated independently.

After this initial setback Rabbi Erps continued to encounter resistance. “It’s a great idea” people told him “but it’ll never work.” And so the dream lay dormant until Rabbi Avi Frank a fellow Hatzolah member and colleague at Yeshiva of Spring Valley gave some encouraging words.

“Whatever happened with that idea of yours?” he asked one day. “Are you making any progress?”

And so Rabbi Erps threw himself back into the project determined to give it another try.

 

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