PLEASE GIVE TODAY
In Memory of Eric Charles Marder
February 15,
1971 to September 20, 1999
The Eric Marder Scholarship Fund was created in
memory of
my son,
Eric. The fund provides college scholarships to children with primary immune deficiency diseases. Eric’s Fund was created shortly after Eric’s death and is administered by The Immune Deficiency Foundation. ALL donated funds go
directly to the kids; no expenses are
deducted.
My goal is to raise money for Eric’s endowment fund. Please help me help more kids. Every penny received goes to the kids. For more information
about Eric’s fund and the charity that administers it (The Immune Deficiency Foundation) – or if you know a kid that needs help, please contact
me, Eric’s mom, Anne Marder Bishop at annie3907@verizon.net or
941-377-4999. To make tax deductible
donations, make check payable to the Immune Deficiency Foundation and in the “memo” portion of the check put: Eric Marder Scholarship Fund, and mail to Eric Marder Scholarship Fund,
1912 Rolling Green Circle, Sarasota, Florida 34240. All donators receive a detailed
yearly report of scholarships given..
HISTORY: At five years of
age, Eric was diagnosed with Common Variable
Immune Deficiency. In 1976, this was a rare, mostly unheard of, immune disease. For
the rest of his young life, Eric was in and out of the hospital.
At an early age, perhaps
because his physical endurance was limited and he frequently couldn’t participate in physical education at school, Eric
became interested in cooking. He would often cook with me, his mom. When he was 14 Eric sold homemade chocolate chip cookies door to door.
At 16 he won first place in a cooking contest and received a $250 bond.
Eric was a graduate chef
of The Culinary Institute in Baltimore, Maryland. While attending college, he
had many problems. One day while waiting for the subway to go to the Culinary
Institute, Eric suffered a grand mal seizure. When he came to, he refused the
ambulance and proceeded to get on the subway and go to school. After graduation,
Eric held many jobs in the food industry, and at the time of his death he was a chef in an assisted living facility. He was promised his own kitchen (a lifetime dream) to take effect October 15, but
he died shortly before that, on September 20, due to complications from extremely
low platelets. All the kids who receive these scholarships have tremendous drive
– and maintain good grades.
Each year Eric’s
fund gives out many scholarships to children with primary immune deficiency diseases. All the kids who receive these scholarships have tremendous drive – and maintain good grades. An endowment fund was also started
in 2001.