By Editorial Staff
December 01, 2025
Ten years after the passing of its visionary founder, Rochelle Shoretz, the national non-profit organization Sharsheret stands as a testament to the power of human connection in the face of adversity. What began as a quiet conversation at a dining room table in 2001 has evolved into an international lifeline, providing culturally sensitive support to over 275,000 individuals annually. As the organization marks a poignant anniversary, the sons of its founder, Shlomo and Dovid Mirsky, are issuing a call to action, urging the public to ensure that no family faces a cancer diagnosis alone.
The Genesis of a Movement: A Personal Journey
In 2001, when Rochelle Shoretz was diagnosed with breast cancer, she faced a dual struggle: the physical toll of a life-threatening illness and the profound emotional isolation that often accompanies it. At the time, cancer was a social taboo, a topic rarely discussed openly within many communities. For a young mother balancing the demands of parenting, a burgeoning career, and the specific nuances of Jewish life, the silence was deafening.
Her turning point arrived when she connected with Lauryn Weiser, another young Jewish mother navigating a similar diagnosis. That single, vital connection—the realization that shared experience could mitigate the terror of the unknown—became the blueprint for Sharsheret, which means "chain" in Hebrew. Shoretz transformed her personal survival strategy into a structured, scalable model of peer support.
"We were only three and five when our mother was diagnosed," recalls Shlomo Mirsky. "We saw firsthand how Sharsheret wasn’t just an organization; it was a lifeline that allowed our mother to be a parent while she was a patient."
Chronology: From Five Women to a Global Network
The trajectory of Sharsheret serves as a case study in non-profit growth fueled by authentic necessity.
- 2001: Sharsheret is founded by Rochelle Shoretz after her own breast cancer diagnosis, aiming to bridge the gap in support for Jewish women.
- 2002–2010: The organization formalizes its peer-support programs, introduces the "Busy Box" initiative to assist families with young children, and expands its national footprint.
- 2015: The organization mourns the loss of its founder, Rochelle Shoretz, but the infrastructure she built proves resilient, maintaining service continuity and expanding outreach.
- 2016–2024: Sharsheret scales its digital presence, integrating advanced telehealth resources, genetic counseling support, and mental health services into its core mission.
- 2025: The organization hits a milestone, now serving more than 275,000 people annually, moving far beyond its original scope to become a recognized leader in cancer support services.
The Pillars of Support: Why Sharsheret Matters
Sharsheret’s success lies in its hyper-specialized approach. Unlike general cancer support groups, Sharsheret focuses on the intersection of medical reality and cultural identity.

Culturally Tailored Resources
The organization provides nuanced support that respects the specific religious and cultural questions facing Jewish families, such as navigating medical treatments during the Sabbath or holidays, and the unique psychological burdens placed on families within tight-knit communities.
The Power of the "Busy Box"
One of the most enduring legacies of the organization is the "Busy Box," a tool designed for the children of cancer patients. Recognizing that the chaos of treatment often alienates young children, these boxes are curated to provide age-appropriate engagement, allowing parents to focus on their health while maintaining a sense of normalcy and connection with their children.
Genetic Counseling and Advocacy
As medical science has advanced, so has Sharsheret. The organization has become a leading voice in education regarding hereditary cancer risks, particularly the BRCA gene mutation, which disproportionately affects individuals of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. By providing access to genetic counselors and financial assistance for testing, Sharsheret is not only supporting patients but actively preventing future diagnoses.
Supporting Data: The Scale of Impact
The numbers behind Sharsheret’s growth are not merely metrics of scale; they represent individual lives stabilized and supported.
- Reach: With over 275,000 annual touchpoints, the organization has moved from a localized support group to an essential healthcare partner.
- Retention and Growth: Despite the transition in leadership following Shoretz’s death, the organization has seen a 15% year-over-year increase in service requests over the last five years, indicating both the growing need for specialized support and the trust the community places in the brand.
- Operational Efficiency: Sharsheret consistently maintains high ratings from charity evaluators, ensuring that the vast majority of every dollar donated goes directly to programs, clinical staff, and resources for patients.
Official Perspective: The Mirsky Brothers’ Call to Action
For Shlomo and Dovid Mirsky, the anniversary is not just a moment for reflection; it is a moment for mobilization. "It is hard to believe it has been 10 years," they wrote in a recent public statement. "She has missed so many milestones—from our graduations to the birth of grandchildren. But she would be proud to see that the table at our home, which once held five women, has grown to include thousands of families across the globe."
The brothers are emphasizing the critical need for year-end contributions. Because Sharsheret’s services are provided free of charge, the organization is entirely dependent on private philanthropy. Their goal for this year-end campaign is to ensure that the infrastructure—clinical support lines, peer-matching databases, and the logistical supply chain for Busy Boxes—remains robust enough to meet the 2026 demand.
Implications for the Future of Cancer Care
The model pioneered by Sharsheret has broader implications for the healthcare landscape. The "patient-as-peer" approach demonstrates that clinical outcomes are inextricably linked to emotional support systems. As the medical community increasingly recognizes the importance of the "whole-person" approach, Sharsheret serves as a gold-standard template for how organizations can blend clinical excellence with compassionate, community-based care.

Closing the Gap in Mental Health
As cancer survival rates improve, the focus is shifting toward survivorship and the long-term psychological impact of the disease. Sharsheret’s commitment to mental health—providing counselors who understand the unique cultural pressures of the Jewish community—is becoming a vital component of the cancer care continuum.
A Legacy in Action
The legacy of Rochelle Shoretz is not found in a plaque or a building, but in the thousands of lives that have been touched, the children who felt less alone, and the families who found a path through the darkest chapters of their lives.
"We are asking the community to join us in making a year-end donation," the brothers concluded. "Your support is the chain that keeps this organization growing. You aren’t just funding an office; you are ensuring that a mother, a father, or a child who receives a diagnosis tomorrow has someone to call the moment they walk out of that doctor’s office."
As the year draws to a close, the story of Sharsheret remains a powerful reminder of the resilience of the human spirit. It is a story of how one woman’s struggle became a beacon for thousands, proving that even in the face of the most difficult diagnosis, nobody needs to walk alone.
To support Sharsheret’s mission and honor the legacy of Rochelle Shoretz, donations can be made at link.Sharsheret.org/EOY.
