It all began with lemonade stands. Increasingly popular, lemonade stands even have their own designated day now. Josh wanted one. He wanted it bad, and he was not above begging.
“I’d been trying to do a lemonade stand for a long time,” Josh recalled, “and I was really happy when my Dad finally told me I could have one.”But the purpose of Josh’s lemonade stand was not the 130-year-old entrepreneurial tradition of children learning how to start, own and operate a business through lemonade stands. You see, Josh didn’t want to sell lemonade at all. He had something else in mind. Josh planned to give it away, along with sweet tea, in hopes of raising money for a worthy cause.
Josh liked the idea of an organization, but had no idea which one, so he asked his dad if he knew of any.
Bertuglia, whose company just happened to be building Al Copeland Jr.’s house at the time, told his son about the Al Copeland Foundation.“I explained to him about Al Jr. and his dad and the foundation he had started because of it, and that was all I had to really say,” Bertuglia said.
“I set up my little lemonade stand, and I just started asking people, ‘Hey, do you want some lemonade or some sweet tea?’” Josh explained. “And if they said yes or they said no, I gave them some posters and told them, ‘This is what’s going to happen if you donate to this lemonade stand.’ It was free. You could have as much as you wanted and donate if you wanted to.”
The first year, Josh raised $711.95. This year, the total he donated to the ACF was $732.00.“It made me feel excited because I got to raise money for people who needed my help,” Josh shared.
Holly and Adam Bertuglia are so proud of their second oldest, one of their five children. “It’s really just a blessing having someone at such a young age be aware of the needs of others and to be sensitive to that,” said Adam Bertuglia. "It warms your heart. It’s something that we’re really excited about, and we’re grateful that he wants to do. I just hope it stays with him. Generosity is something that’s important – helping other people, doing for people when it’s not required of you, when you don’t have to do it—that’s a really great trait, I think. That’s what we’re trying to show all of our children – that it’s important to be like that.”The Al Copeland Foundation (ACF) was the result of a promise the Copeland family made to their dad that they would find a cure for Merkel Cell Carcinoma, the cancer that took the life of Al Copeland Sr.
At a recent lunch with his parents hosted by Al and Liz Copeland at Copeland’s in Kenner, Josh was the guest of honor. Al Jr. told Josh, “It’s people like you who really make a difference -- people who really believe in what we believe in and try to raise money for the cause and trust us that we’re going to put it in a great place and do great things with it.”
As a thank you, the Copelands presented Josh with the ACF pin reserved for cancer survivors and those who do phenomenal things to help save lives and end cancer.
Liz Copeland told Josh,” Your heart was there, and your passion was there to want to help people find a cure for cancer. And we want you to be able to get out to other kids who feel the same way to help us find other cures for other cancers.”
A thrilled Josh quickly accepted. “I think that would be awesome!”Dr. Larry Hollier, Chancellor of LSU Health New Orleans, is quite impressed with young Josh. “This world needs more people like Josh. He is such an inspiration. We owe him and his family a huge debt of gratitude for his efforts to support our work in advancing cancer treatments. And I sincerely hope he’ll change his mind about becoming a chef and enroll in our medical school instead!”
Stay tuned!