logo
Jewish Free Loan Association Offers Interest-Free Loans to Wildfire Survivors with support from a grant from the California Community Foundation

Jewish Free Loan Association Offers Interest-Free Loans to Wildfire Survivors with support from a grant from the California Community Foundation

With support from a grant from the California Community Foundation's Wildfire Recovery Fund, JFLA has stepped up in a major way
LOS ANGELES, July 10, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — On a stunning Malibu cliff overlooking the vast Pacific, artist Myra Burg had lovingly filled her home and work studio with gorgeous paintings, ceramic sculptures and the heartbeat of her life's work: hundreds of cones of fiber and other supplies to create cylindrical tapestries of iridescent hues and varied textures.
And then it was gone. All of it.
Burg's home was destroyed in the Jan. 7 wildfires that swept through Malibu and Pacific Palisades, along with Altadena and Pasadena. In a flash, she lost her home and priceless personal treasures, like her father's tallis, a Jewish prayer shawl, that was to be handed down to her brother. She lost her business – her airy studio with a stunning bathroom, finished art pieces and $250,000 in supplies and equipment – none of which was insured, as her home had been.
But Burg is moving forward with plans for recovery, thanks in part to the Jewish Free Loan Association, a nonprofit that offers interest-free and fee-free loans to help people with urgent financial needs. The Malibu artist received a $50,000 small business loan, which has helped her begin to replenish her supplies and start work again in a temporary studio space her brother created for her in his home.
'This loan completely saved me,' Burg said. 'It put me back in business.'
With support from a grant from the California Community Foundation's Wildfire Recovery Fund, JFLA has stepped up in a major way to provide financial assistance to wildfire survivors. The association offers no-cost loans in keeping with biblical mandates not to charge interest and extends the services to people of all backgrounds who live in Los Angeles, Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties.
First established in 1904, the association's initial loans helped people buy sewing machines and produce pushcarts. Over the years, loans have gone to help people resettle after World War II, rebuild after the Watts Riots, begin new lives after fleeing the Iranian Revolution and the fall of the former Soviet Union. They've supported those needing help with payments for medical, dental and mental health bills, student loans, housing, car repairs, pet care, adoptions, funerals.
All told, JFLA has about 3,000 loans currently issued totaling $21.5 million. The maximum for personal loans is $15,000; for small businesses, $50,000. Educational loans are capped at $10,000, but are renewable annually for full-time students. Two guarantors are generally required who legally agree to repay the loan if necessary but the default rate is less than 1%.
'We are really the perfect antidote to help people get through what I like to call the speed bumps on the road of life,' said Rachel Grose, JFLA executive director.
But the January wildfires created an epic crisis. When Grose saw video footage of flames consuming homes, destroying neighborhoods and leaving thousands of people in need, she knew she had to act – quickly.
'I just knew in my gut that this was going to be a disaster of a proportion we hadn't seen,' she said. 'I knew there would be a need for loans. I wanted to put money in people's hands quickly.'
She reached out to her largest donors and within hours had 'very large commitments' from several of them. Within a month, she had raised nearly $2 million – including $150,000 from the California Community Foundation.
But there was another pressing issue. In order to give fire survivors quick help, Grose said she asked the board president and executive committee to suspend the requirement for two guarantors. They agreed.
'I said, 'It's a moment and we need to rise to the moment,'' Grose said. 'This was a risk for us but we're not a bank. We're here to support people and help people and I wanted to get money into people's hands. And we did.'
To date, the association has disbursed more than $1.9 million in 111 loans to individuals, families and small businesses who survived the wildfires that devastated parts of Malibu, Pacific Palisades, Altadena and Pasadena. In a follow-up survey, nearly 97% of recipients said the loans helped them return to pre-wildfire levels of stability. But most said they are still recovering from a loss of income or jobs, housing challenges, mental health struggles.
One family in Altadena, for instance, received a JFLA loan to rebuild their home of 20 years and repurchase everything lost – clothing, furniture, and other essentials while they lived in an apartment during the restoration process.
Michael Marylander received a $25,000 JFLA small business loan after his massage studio went up in flames in Pacific Palisades – just a few days after opening. On Jan. 7, Marylander recalled, he saw fire in the nearby Santa Monica Mountains and dozens of fire trucks roaring through the neighborhood.
He decided to close for the day, but said he never dreamed the flames would reach his business, The Massage Place, on Sunset Boulevard. When someone told him the next morning that the wildfire had gutted a supermarket across the street, he thought it was a joke.
'And then we realized it was all gone. The neighborhood is gone. Probably 99% of our customers don't live in Palisades anymore,' he said, as he sat near the site of his destroyed business, which has been cleared of debris with only concrete steps remaining.
More bad news hit when he learned that his insurance did not cover wildfires. A loan application to the U.S. Small Business Administration got mired in red tape and was initially denied. But his mother heard about the JFLA and Marylander was able to receive a loan after about a month. He is using the funds to support another newly opened Massage Place site and is uncertain how quickly Pacific Palisades will recover and whether he will reopen in the neighborhood.
'It's been a nightmare, but I'm grateful for the loan,' he said. 'It was the first financial aid I got.'
Burg, too, appreciates the JFLA loan and other help she's received as she makes plans for a new home and studio with optimism and perspective. Yes, it pains her to lose so many precious possessions but it's just 'stuff.' Yes, the loss is huge but so is the opportunity to build back better – this time with a robust fire suppression system she hopes will never be needed. And compared with her ancestors who fled the Nazis and saw their families murdered, she said, she has much to be grateful for.
'No, this was not devastating. This is an opportunity,' Burg said. 'As my father said, 'Nobody gets out of life unscathed. I get to rebuild.'
Media Contact: Gilien Silsby, 213-500-8673 or gsisby@calfund.org
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The rent hasn't changed since 1521 at world's oldest social housing in Germany
The rent hasn't changed since 1521 at world's oldest social housing in Germany

The Star

time4 days ago

  • The Star

The rent hasn't changed since 1521 at world's oldest social housing in Germany

A general view of the streets at the Fuggerei in Augsburg. — Photos: AFP When German pensioner Angelika Stibi got the keys to her new home in the southern region of Bavaria this year, a huge financial weight was lifted from her shoulders. Stibi has to pay just 88 euro cents (RM4.30) a year for her apartment in the social housing complex known as the Fuggerei, where rents have not gone up since the Middle Ages. Founded in 1521 by the wealthy businessman Jakob Fugger and believed to be the oldest such project in the world, the Fuggerei in the city of Augsburg provides living space for 150 residents facing financial hardship. Consisting of several rows of yellow terraced buildings with green shutters and sloping red roofs, the complex still resembles a medieval village. "I had a truly wonderful life until I was 55," said Stibi, a mother of two in her 60s from Augsburg. The Fuggerei provides living space for 150 residents facing financial hardship. After she was diagnosed with cancer, "everything went from bad to worse" and she was left with no other option but to apply for social housing, she said. Waiting lists are long for apartments in the walled enclave not far from Augsburg city centre, with most applicants having to wait "between two and six or seven years", according to resident social worker Doris Herzog. "It all depends on the apartment you want. The ones on the ground floor are very popular," Herzog said. Applicants must be able to prove that they are Augsburg residents, Catholic and suffering from financial hardship. Climbing plants line the walls of homes on a street at the Fuggerei. Relative of Mozart Martha Jesse has been living at the Fuggerei for 17 years after finding herself with monthly pension payments of just €400 (RM1,972), despite having worked for 45 years. "Living elsewhere would have been almost impossible," said the 77-year-old, whose apartment is filled with religious symbols. The Fuggerei was heavily damaged in World War II but has since been rebuilt in its original style. Renowned composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's great-grandfather, the mason Franz Mozart, was once a resident and visitors can still see a stone plaque bearing his name. Founded in 1521, the Fuggerei is believed to be the oldest such project in the world. For Andreas Tervooren, a 49-year-old night security guard who has lived at the Fuggerei since 2017, the complex is "like a town within a town" or "the Asterix village in the comic books". The meagre rents at the Fuggerei are all the more remarkable given its location an hour's drive from Munich, the most expensive city in Germany to live in and one of the most expensive in Europe. Rents have also risen sharply in many other German cities in recent years, leading to a wave of protests. A bronze bust of the entrepreneur and banker Fugger. Daily prayer But not at the Fuggerei, whose founders stipulated that the rent should never be raised. Fugger (1459-1525), also known as Jakob the Rich, was a merchant and financier from a wealthy family known for its ties to European emperors and the Habsburg family. Fugger set up several foundations to help the people of Augsburg, and they continue to fund the upkeep of the Fuggerei to this day. The annual rent in the Fuggerei was one Rhenish gulden, about the weekly wage of a craftsman at the time - equivalent to 88 euro cents in today's money. The church of the Fuggerei. Although some descendants of the Fugger family are still involved in the management of the foundations, they no longer contribute any money. "We are financed mainly through income from forestry holdings, and we also have a small tourism business," said Daniel Hobohm, administrator of the Fugger foundations. The Fuggerei attracts a steady stream of visitors, and the foundations also receive rental income from other properties. In return for their lodgings, residents of the Fuggerei must fulfil just one condition - every day, they must recite a prayer for the donors and their families. – AFP

Globalisation can survive the US trade war
Globalisation can survive the US trade war

The Star

time4 days ago

  • The Star

Globalisation can survive the US trade war

AS US President Donald Trump's sweeping trade levies take effect and raise his country's average duties to the highest since World War II, it's easy to imagine globalisation is in reverse and that a new era of protectionism, fragmentation and reshoring has begun. Some of the gloom may be overdone. Although the United States was the chief architect of the multilateral trading system and has become the world's most lucrative consumer market, it can't by itself turn back the clock on global economic interdependence. Prosperity gains from comparative advantage and low-cost container shipping are too great for the rest of the world to ignore. Even as the United States embraces self-sufficiency and reveals itself to be an unreliable economic partner, others are keen to keep trading. The majority of global imports don't involve the US Around 86% of goods are imported by other countries. 'Despite all the talk of deglobalisation, if you just look at the numbers, what we are seeing in the last two and a half years is an acceleration of globalisation on the back of a huge commercial success from Chinese companies taking market share on the global stage,' Vincent Clerc, the chief executive officer of A. P. Moller-Maersk A/S, told investors last week. This was after the container shipping giant reported surprisingly resilient demand outside the United States and forecast global container volumes could increase by as much as 4% this year. 'There is a new driver in container demand that is adding a lot of upside potential,' Clerc said, predicting this stronger Chinese-led growth might last 'a few years.' (The US this week extended a pause of nosebleed tariffs on Chinese goods for another 90 days.) Although China's exports to the United States have suffered a double-digit percentage hit since Trump first threatened a swathe of new duties in early April, it's offset this by increasing exports to the rest of the world. Such robustness partly reflects stockpiling, and some economists expect a slowdown in the second-half of the year as Washington intensifies scrutiny of the transshipment of Chinese goods to the United States via third countries. Nevertheless, it's also indicative of 'a dramatic change in China's trade orientation, away from reliance on the United States and toward a broader, more diversified global footprint,' according to a report dated Aug 8 by German asset manager DWS Group. 'The competitiveness of Chinese exports as well as intensifying economic links with regions like the Middle East and Africa is a structural trend that is likely to prevail.' The US share of China's total exports has roughly halved Meanwhile China's trade with South-East Asia has sharply increased. German logistics giant DHL Group is seeing similar shifts in demand, with time-definite US express shipments with a guaranteed delivery date plunging 31% in the second-quarter, while its deliveries to Asia rose 2% and those to the Middle East and Africa jumped 8%. Global trade 'finds its way to keep flowing' and even in the current environment there are 'still growth opportunities and growing trade lanes,' Melanie Kreis, DHL's chief financial officer, told analysts last week. Another DHL executive, Ken Lee, who heads the Asia-Pacific express business, recently called globalisation 'too big to fail.' I don't wish to play down the impact of the world's largest economy undermining the rules-based trading system and raising import taxes, which will impose unnecessary costs on consumers, blunt competition, dampen growth, delay investment and cause global trade to grow more slowly than it otherwise would. High tariffs on South-East Asian countries may undo some of the advantages of Chinese and western companies tapping new sources of cheap labour and diversifying their manufacturing footprints, a strategy known as China+1. Furthermore, if China's exports are diverted from the United States to emerging markets, other countries may impose duties to protect domestic industries. (A reminder that China must do more to support demand by its own consumers.) But with China accounting for more than 30% of global goods manufacturing and dominating in key decarbonisation technologies, it's hard to see the world swiftly turning its back on this highly efficient production. Much of the Global South has continued to import Chinese vehicles, which are cheap and of high quality, even as the United States and Europe (to a lesser degree) raise trade barriers and warn about China's industrial overcapacity. China's auto exports continue to soar Low-cost, high quality vehicles are finding buyers overseas. One also shouldn't forget that the majority of global trade doesn't involve the United States. Intra-Asia and Asia-Middle East trade corridors are 'some of the fastest growing on the planet,' HSBC Holdings Plc chief executive officer Georges Elhedery said during a call with analysts last month. 'Globalisation is very much alive and well. It's just taking a very, very different complexion,' Bill Winters, the boss of Standard Chartered Plc, told investors in late July, saying clients were diversifying supply chains, manufacturing and distribution. The London-headquartered bank makes most of its money in Asia and the Middle East and has a large trade finance business. Currently only around one-fifth of the value of all goods and services produced around the world end up in a different country, according a DHL study in March, meaning global trade potential isn't close to being exhausted. 'So far, global trade growth has been highly resilient, and we've also not seen all that much retaliation from countries hit by US tariffs. 'That's partly because those countries recognise how much they benefit from trade,' Steven Altman, senior research scholar at the NYU Stern School of Business, told me. 'I don't see the US leading a global movement away from trade, and so far it appears globalisation can survive Trump 2.0.' Indeed, US protectionism and bullying are likely to convince trading partners to secure access to alternative markets and thereby draw them closer together. After being hit with some of the highest US tariff rates, Brazil and India last week reiterated plans to strengthen mutual trade ties. After striking a long-sought trade deal with the South American Mercosur bloc in December, the European Union should now get on and ratify it. So, yes, supply chains face upheaval while the United States and China are pulling apart, but that doesn't mean globalisation is dead. Rather we may be entering a new era, characterised by US retrenchment, Chinese companies investing overseas – and other countries trading more with each other. — Bloomberg Chris Bryant is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering industrial companies in Europe. The views expressed here are the writer's own.

Nippon Paint tycoon and Singapore's wealthiest man Goh Cheng Liang passes at 98
Nippon Paint tycoon and Singapore's wealthiest man Goh Cheng Liang passes at 98

Daily Express

time6 days ago

  • Daily Express

Nippon Paint tycoon and Singapore's wealthiest man Goh Cheng Liang passes at 98

Published on: Tuesday, August 12, 2025 Published on: Tue, Aug 12, 2025 By: Malay Mail Text Size: Goh Cheng Liang, who held a majority stake in Japan's Nippon Paint Holdings, had an estimated net worth of US$13 billion, according to Forbes. SINGAPORE: Goh Cheng Liang, founder of Wuthelam Group and Singapore's richest person, died today at the age of 98, his family said, according to a report published in The Straits Times today. According to Forbes' 2025 ranking of the world's billionaires, Goh topped the list for Singapore with an estimated net worth of US$13 billion (RM55 billion). Advertisement He held a majority stake in Japan's Nippon Paint Holdings, which he helped build into a global coatings powerhouse. Born in 1927, he grew up in a rented shophouse room in River Valley and was sent to Johor during World War II, where he helped sell fishing nets. In 1949, he bought surplus paint from a British army auction and began making his own Pigeon Brand paints using a Chinese dictionary to decipher chemical names. His business boomed during the Korean War when imports were restricted. He later became Nippon Paint's distributor in Singapore and founded Wuthelam Holdings in 1974, building it into a multinational company with nearly 60 per cent of Nippon Paint. Goh's other ventures included developing and later selling the former Liang Court mall and Mount Elizabeth Hospital. Known for avoiding publicity, he told The Business Times in 1997 that he preferred private companies to public ones. Through the Goh Foundation, he funded cancer research, treatment facilities and scholarships, and supported welfare agencies in Singapore as well as roads, schools and sanitation systems in Chaozhou, China. A cancer survivor himself, he also backed the Goh Cheng Liang Proton Therapy Centre at the National Cancer Centre Singapore. He is survived by three children, eight grandchildren and a great-grandchild. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store