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Recognizing a Legacy of Giving Back

Steve and Sue Kaplan, left, with Laurie Flynn, executive director of Link to Libraries, and John Doleva, president and CEO of the Basketball Hall of Fame, a strong supporter of the agency.

Steve and Sue Kaplan, left, with Laurie Flynn, executive director of Link to Libraries, and John Doleva, president and CEO of the Basketball Hall of Fame, a strong supporter of the agency.

 

As she talked about Steve Kaplan and his many contributions to the nonprofit Link to Libraries, Laurie Flynn, the agency’s executive director, didn’t start with his service on the board, his lengthy stint as treasurer, or even his role as quiet, behind-the-scenes co-founder with his wife, Susan Jaye Kaplan.

No, she started by talking about the manner in which Kaplan, who passed away in January after a lengthy battle with brain cancer, adopted, for lack of a better word, the Kensington International School in Springfield — because, in many ways, that says even more about him.

“He started off as a volunteer reader,” she recalled, noting that the nonprofit helps place such readers in schools across the region to help encourage young people to read. “And he turned it into so much more; it became near and dear to him. He tutored there, he did all kinds of things, and he did it without asking for a spotlight … he just quietly gave and gave and gave.

“He always joked that he was “Mr. Susan Jaye Kaplan,” Flynn went on. “But he was a force in his own right; it was just different energy.”

It was that above-and-beyond approach at the Kensington School, and the varying forms of energy displayed by both Kaplans that helped inspire Flynn to create a legacy fund in both their names to help continue and even expand LTL’s service to the young people in the region.

Susan Jaye Kaplan, as most now know, co-founded not only LTL but also the nonprofit GoFIT. She was honored for her work with BusinessWest’s Difference Maker award in 2009.

“When Steve passed in January, I thought it was an important time to honor his work and Sue’s work, and their work as a couple in Western Mass.”

“When Steve passed in January, I thought it was an important time to honor his work and Sue’s work, and their work as a couple in Western Mass.,” she told BusinessWest. “They’ve done so much, not just for Link to Libraries, but we’re a huge piece of their legacy. It seemed to me that … when you look at the two of them, and how much they gave, not just through the schools, but through community partnerships, it seems like a great opportunity, a great way to honor their legacy, to have something that is permanently part of Link to Libraries, that is dedicated to doing more than we’re doing now.”

Elaborating, Flynn said the Stephen Kaplan & Susan Jaye Kaplan Community Legacy Fund, which was formally announced at LTL’s biennial fund-raising ball at the Basketball Hall of Fame, will enable the nonprofit to extend its reach, and impact.

“While most of Link to Libraries’ work is done through underserved elementary schools, we frequently receive requests from other local nonprofits for book donations to support their own work with children and families in need,” she explained. “We do our very best to say ‘yes’ to every book request we get, but we have limited funds, limited ability to do that.

“By creating this fund and having this cache of money set aside to support our community partners, who are serving the same kids and families that we are, that will enable our reach to expand,” she went on, adding that that the legacy fund will be a permanent fixture at LTL.

Flynn said there is no specific goal for the fund, adding that whatever is raised — and she is expecting support from individuals and businesses alike — will enable LTL to support more groups serving children and families, such as the Salvation Army, the Springfield Museums, and countless others.

“Steve’s passing was a terrible loss to our Link to Libraries family, to the Western Massachusetts community, and to all who knew and loved him,” said Flynn. “We hope that this tribute will be a living reminder of Sue and Steve’s tireless work and passion for improving the lives of others.”

For more information on the legacy fund, visit linktolibraries.org.

— George O’Brien

Daily News

In Yiddish, a ‘mensch’ is a good person, a stand-up guy, someone with integrity, honor, and character.

Steve Kaplan, who passed away recently after a lengthy and courageous battle with brain cancer, was a mensch of the highest order.

He was a CPA with the firm Meyers Brothers Kalicka, remembered by colleague and fellow partner Howard Cheney as “a tireless CPA who always set a high standard for us to follow, a great teacher, and as the person who went to the post office on April 15 each year to mail out last-minute tax returns.”

But he was also known for his bowties, and especially for getting involved with the community and encouraging others to do the same. He was a tutor, mentor to young people, great golf buddy, devoted Rotarian, and someone who never waited to be asked to volunteer his help.

He jokingly introduced himself as ‘Mr. Susan Jaye Kaplan,’ a nod to his energetic, equally involved, and perhaps better-known wife, with whom he partnered on many initiatives, especially the nonprofit Link to Libraries, which promotes childhood literacy and puts books on the shelves of school libraries.

They co-founded the agency, with Sue as its face, while Steve kept the books and mostly stayed in the background. Together, with a few others, they built a nonprofit that has drawn the support of individuals and businesses across the region.

There should be emphasis on that word ‘together.’ Indeed, individually, the Kaplans achieved much. Together … they were a force, authors of a love story that was and is a true inspiration.

Theirs was the kind of partnership the writer Antoine de Saint-Exupery had in mind when he wrote that “life has taught us that love does not consist in gazing at each other, but in looking outward together in the same direction.”

Steve and Sue Kaplan did a lot of that, and in addition to that partnership, Steve leaves behind a legacy of caring and a sense of service to others.

The region has lost a great mensch.