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Adam Daniel Goldberg Cohen

Adam Daniel Goldberg Cohen obituary, Chicago, IL

Adam Cohen Obituary

Adam Daniel Goldberg Cohen, journalist and humanitarian, community-builder, proud Jew, loving son, doting brother, and a passionate friend to so many, died suddenly of natural causes in his spiritual home of Tel Aviv, Israel, on June 14. He was 29 years old.

Adam's impact during his time on earth was immeasurable. From Tulane to Togo to Tel Aviv, Adam won people over with his warmth, thoughtfulness, sense of humor, exceptional jump shot, and uncanny freestyle rapping abilities. He was many people's favorite person.

Adam is survived by his adoring parents, Michael Cohen and Lisa Goldberg, and sisters, Sarah (32) and Adina (25), who all loved him beyond measure. He had an incredibly close bond with his immediate family, with whom he shared many passions, including a love of travel, finding meaningful connections amongst seeming-coincidences, deep learning, languages, music, Chicago teams, trivia, and public service. Adam treasured the time he spent with his late grandparents, Joyce Cohen (Allan Cohen) and Lucile and Michael Goldberg. He is also survived by a large, loving extended family of aunts, uncles, and cousins throughout the United States and will be remembered by them as the life of the party at B'nai Mitzvot, as well as a gracious conversationalist who made them feel like no time had passed once they were together. Adam was truly devoted to honoring his immediate and extended families, whether it was celebrating holidays and other life events, catching a Cubs game, singing, or sharing stories.

Adam was born in Chicago on August 27, 1992, and he was a proud Chicagoan, no matter where he called home. In photographs taken across the world, Adam could be seen with a red "C" emblazoned across his chest, and he was a consummate ambassador for the city that he loved. At a moment's notice, Adam was ready to recite the Cubs' batting lineup, obscure pieces of CTA trivia, or early Lupe Fiasco lyrics. His identity as a Chicagoan was celebrated on the West Coast by fellow campers at Camp Ramah in California, where he spent seven summers, including his first trip to Israel and a summer as a staff volleyball specialist.

After an enriching primary education at Edison Regional Gifted Center, Adam attended Whitney M. Young Magnet High School, where he excelled as a student-athlete. Alongside close friends, Adam guided the Whitney Young men's volleyball team to their second consecutive city championship and was named the 2010 tournament's Most Outstanding Player. "Cohen and Co. net consecutive crowns," read the Sun-Times headline. He was selected for Third Team All-State as a setter.

At Tulane University, Adam studied Anthropology and immersed himself in New Orleans' culture with fierce curiosity, a photographer's eye, and an anthropologist's mindset, both in and out of the classroom. Adam was an active member of the Tulane Chabad, a mainstay on the Dean's List, and an unusually loyal devotee of Green Wave athletics. He bridged friend groups and filled rooms with his signature high-pitched giggles and full-bodied laughter (often literally collapsing his 6-foot-3.5in frame onto you to punctuate a particularly good joke). In his junior year, Adam put his French studies into action during a semester at SKEMA Business School in Southern France, where he solidified his fluency in the language and deepened his lifelong love of French culture. Friends from all walks of Adam's life were in awe of how he balanced being a true intellectual and a consummate goofball.

Driven by a deep sense of purpose and an appetite for adventure, Adam enrolled in the Peace Corps after college and spent two years living in Togo, West Africa. He worked with farmers, women's groups, and youth organizations to implement sustainable farming practices and founded an agribusiness called "Cadeau de la Terre" that helped local coffee farmers package and retail their beans. Adam also worked in food preservation and security, helping farmers can jams and sauces to sell or eat later. He toured surrounding villages to help train other volunteers and Togolese partners in this practice.

In Togo, Adam quickly won over his community by making the rare effort to learn Akebu, the local language spoken in his isolated village of Kougnohou. This was emblematic of Adam's deep respect for other cultures, devotion to building meaningful relationships, and his impressive linguistic abilities – at the time of his passing, Adam was conversant in at least five languages. He was adored by his Togolese community – establishing inside jokes, absorbing cultural nuances and traditions, and serving as a pillar of warmth and support for all – often bridging the gap between Togolese and Peace Corps volunteers through laughter. He even recorded a rap mixtape in French with his host brother, which was well received in the village but has unfortunately yet to receive major label attention.

After the Peace Corps, Adam returned to Chicago to pursue a Master's at the renowned Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University. Upon graduating, he moved to Washington, D.C., and launched a career as a science journalist, publishing articles in Smithsonian Magazine and working as a writer for the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Journalism suited Adam's appetite for learning new things and sharing knowledge that would make the world a better place. He was a phenomenal listener, a skill that made him both a perceptive journalist and a treasured friend.

In D.C., Adam reveled in expanding his network of friends through intramural volleyball and trivia nights. He never made it onto Jeopardy, but it wasn't for lack of trying. After a hard day at work, Adam could be found unwinding by downing pint after pint of Ben & Jerry's ice cream.

His sweet tooth matched his disposition as a loving and affectionate friend. Adam had a rare gift to make every friend feel special. He consistently uplifted those around him and made them feel loved and understood. He took the time to get to know people intimately, held onto their traditions and inside jokes, and never forgot a birthday or to ask about a sibling or loved one. Adam could always be counted on for encouragement and praise – a pep talk before a first date; a thoughtful "mazel tov" for accomplishments big and small. His gregarious nature and ever-widening circle of friends made him a popular wedding guest. Adam was often the first volunteer to lift the chair during the Horah and the last one on the dance floor, making him a frequent topic of conversation amongst bridesmaids and bubbes alike, who marveled at his height, wit, and general menschiness.

While he was thriving in D.C., Adam continued to grow stronger in his Jewish faith and felt that his calling was to make Aliyah and live in Israel. He moved to Tel Aviv in March of 2021, landing a job as a content writer at the web development company Wix.com. In Tel Aviv, Adam made an instant impact professionally, socially, and spiritually. Of course, he learned to speak Hebrew and dove headfirst into experiencing the city and becoming an Israeli. He celebrated weekly Shabbats with his various new friend groups, who adored Adam as if they'd known him their entire lives. He was proud to be living in his own one-bedroom apartment in Tel Aviv with funky yellow tiles that matched his funky yellow bike, which he rode daily to work and ceremoniously from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem on Yom Kippur (while fasting, nonetheless). To celebrate the High Holidays as a Jew in Israel was a highlight of his life, and he proudly expressed that in Tel Aviv he felt as though he was truly at home.

Amongst his many other virtues, Adam will be remembered for his profound kindness and the impact his bright and loving personality made on everybody he met. In his passing, Adam inspires us to be more curious and compassionate. To ask questions and listen closely, to consider every person in the world worth understanding and loving, and to do so with purpose and intentionality.

"Adam was able to treat every person he met with a kindness so genuine it made your heart feel warm. It brings me comfort to know that even in his short time here he shared more kindness than many of us ever will in our lifetimes. I know his impact on both loved ones and strangers will have ripple effects for decades to come." – Adam's sister, Adina.

Service Thursday at 11AM at Anshe Emet Synagogue, 3751 N. Broadway Street, Chicago, IL 60613. Interment Rosehill Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to Masorti Foundation for Conservative Judaism in Israel, www.masorti.org or Peace Corps Partnership Program, www.peacecorps.gov To attend the funeral via live stream, please visit our website. Arrangements by Chicago Jewish Funerals - Skokie Chapel, 847.229.8822, www.cjfinfo.com.

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Chicago Tribune from Jun. 22 to Jun. 24, 2022.

Memories and Condolences
for Adam Cohen

Not sure what to say?





Graciela Oneto

January 22, 2025

I learned about Adam's story through Fluent, a Hebrew school in Tel Aviv. I was shocked by his story and I was really shocked by his end in this space. I know that your family is helping people who do not have the necessary resources to study Hebrew, I thank them and give them my deep condolences, in the hope that they can continue to be happy despite this profound loss. A hug to the soul of Adam and his family. Graciela

Rami Schwartzer

August 29, 2022

Dear Michael and Lisa,

I am one of the people whose lives your son touched, one of the people who were fortunate to know him even for a few days of his life. But even one of those days was enough to feel changed, made just a little better from proximity to Adam´s light. My story bumped into Adam´s a few times, in a few iterations of life, and each time his appearance was like a road sign that life was moving along in the right direction. It´s because of this infrequent nature of our relationship that I didn´t know until just today that he had died. While I imagine that by now you are moving into further stages of grief, I am in shock. I feel so sad that he is not in our world anymore, and so grateful that he has been.

I first stumbled upon Adam in the Spring of 2018 in the suburbs of Washington, DC, where he had found his way to my home for a shabbat dinner in my backyard. I was working as a rabbi in a start-up community in the area - all things that Adam told me immediately appealed to him: start-up, Jewish community, shabbat dinner, and interesting stories. He walked into my house as the friend of another guest, and walked out as the friend of us all. He and I connected instantly over Camp Ramah, music, and a passion for a certain informal vibe of Jewish community. Around that time my life had begun to feel like a canvas of gray tones, on which Adam´s sudden appearance painted a few yellow strokes. Of the thousands of acquaintances I have made in my life, that first time meeting Adam stands out as a moment of true, loving, genuine human connection. Adam was authentically Adam in every conversation, and it was lucky that that Adam was also kind, smiley, and curious with a vigorous thirst to learn...well, everything. Adam and I got to know each other over the course of the next two years, during which he became a regular at my shabbat table, study group, and singing circles, bringing with him each time an abundance of love and a cadre of new friends drawn in by that love. He was the fountain of joyous energy at every gathering.

This bright emanation was what I knew I would miss when it came time for me to leave Washington in 2020, so it was a kind of revival in my life when I ran into Adam again, by happenstance, in Tel Aviv in the Spring of 2021. The encounter happened, of all places, at a drum circle on the beach on erev Shabbat. Adam greeted me with a warm smile and an eager hug, one that absolutely consumed me - a full half-foot shorter than him - with an arched back and a strong embrace that told the story of his genuine compassion for the world. I was again in a season of darkness, feeling a bit untethered, and his sudden reappearance gave me the lift I needed to carry me to the next stage of the journey. We shared mutually about our recent life changes, having both made Aliyah and found ourselves living the good life in Tel Aviv. After that point he and I vowed to stay more connected. I travel a lot, but every time I went back to Israel in the last year I made an effort to see him, usually for a walk and a heartfelt conversation on the tayelet. When I was abroad I would receive sporadic messages of things that reminded him of me, something I am sure he did for many people who knew him. This was a person who treated everybody with that kind of personal care and connection, a rare breed of humans that our world desperately needs. Quite possibly one of the legendary 36 souls on whose merit the whole world stands.

I am grateful to you for the person you raised, and for the way your lives have now made mine better. And I am with you, as much as one can be, in your grief and your remembering. As the new reality of your life, and our world, without Adam settles in, I hope you find comfort in knowing about the many lives your son touched in such a short time. I miss him.

With love and blessings,
Rami

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Michael Ordower

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Lea Hassoun

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Jonathan Gross

August 27, 2022

My condolences. A beautiful life, well lived, and a fine tribute to him here.

Naomi Waxman

August 27, 2022

Adam and I were classmates at Medill and immediately connected over our shared passions for storytelling and Jewish identity. I am shocked to hear of his passing and share my deepest sympathies with his family and friends. May his memory be a blessing.

Mary Murphy

July 9, 2022

Lisa Goldberg and Michael Cohen: Please accept my deepest sympathy on the loss of your son, Adam. May his memory be a blessing.

Debbie and Eric Alden

July 8, 2022

To the Goldberg Cohen Family-
We were shocked and saddened to hear of Adam´s passing. Our hearts go out to you and your family. We just saw Adam in Israel at our son´s wedding.
He was surrounded by friends. What an amazing son you raised. Our thoughts are with you. May you find comfort in his memory.

Liane Talkington

July 5, 2022

We were visiting my son in VA when I read of the passing of your son in the MWRDGC email. I can only tell you that I cried for you at the loss of your incredible son. When I saw my son later that day, I gave him the biggest hug I possibly could. Stay strong and reach out if I can help you thru this very difficult time.

Brenda McDevitt

June 30, 2022

Mike & Lisa, Our thoughts and prayers are with you and your family during this difficult time. Kevin & Brenda

Am

June 28, 2022

Adam was an amazing guy. May his memory be a blessing.

Diane Clarke (MWRD)

June 28, 2022

Dear Lisa and Mike....There are no words that can comfort you....I am so sorry to hear of your loss......Adam was a most remarkable person who must have brought you joy for the past nearly 30 years......the world is a better place because of him. There is nothing anyone can do to lessen your sorrow, but know that your family is in my prayers. Please take care of yourselves.

Kathy (Hickey) Provenzano (MWRD)

June 27, 2022

Dear Mike & Lisa,
My deepest sympathy to both of you and your daughters during this difficult time. As others have said from reading about Adam, he was an amazing young man. Knowing the two of you, I am not surprised...you both were always so friendly, kind and down to earth! You raised a beautiful son who truly left memories for so many...I hope Adam's memories continue to comfort all of you.

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Joel Goldberg

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Joel Goldberg

June 25, 2022

Dear Cohens and Goldbergs,

I'm so incredibly sorry and shocked to hear of Adam's passing. I had the opportunity to work with him at AAAS before he made his journey to Tell Aviv. He was such a kind and thoughtful colleague, someone who clearly wanted to do good for the world and had the ability to do great. What an awful, unbelievable tragedy. I wish you all comfort and peace from the bottom of my heart.

Sincerely,
Joel Goldberg

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June Shulman

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Doug Bright

June 24, 2022

I was taken aback by my tears. I didn't expect to cry. Having moved to San Francisco on Monday, I had to grieve from afar, grateful to have been able to watch the service at Anshe Emet, a building I have only been in once, 17 years ago for Adam's (my first and, thus far, only!) Bar Mitzvah.

My relationship with Adam has been inactive for many years and is thus mostly one of memory. The last handful I've times I've seen him have been products of coincidence (or, given how I feel about Adam, luck). If it indicates the distance between us, I remember being surprised by his stature and his deep voice, developments since our days as schoolmates at Edison. The soulful, joyful, warm demeanor I knew from those days was still there in droves, if only amplified by the power of maturity and confidence. I felt the same resonance I've always felt with Adam, thanks to shared values - our love of our hometown, our curiosity about others, and our embrace of the silly, among others.

While I wish I had shared more time with him in adulthood, I know he was a deeply good man, a product of a deeply good family. No one deserves such pain - least of all, your clan. Seeing you bear that pain today saddened me deeply. Know, though, that you bore it with a love I know to be so characteristic of your family. You have enriched and inspired me. Thank you Adam, Mike, Lisa, Sarah, and Adina for being role models in love, both now and in my formative years. I love you.

Tammy Ward (MWRD)

June 24, 2022

It broke my heart to hear of the loss of your son. My thoughts and prayers are with you and your family during this difficult time. May cherished memories of your son comfort you.

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Analise

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Olivia Nesbit

June 23, 2022

Adam brought such joy, laughter, curiosity, and kindness to the world. I feel incredibly lucky to have known him!

Jackie Smith (MWRD)

June 23, 2022

Mike and Lisa, So very sorry to hear of the loss of your beloved Adam. Reading his obituary, shows what a truly remarkable young man you raised up.

Steve Adolph

June 23, 2022

I did not know your son/brother but I read the beautiful obituary of clearly a remarkable individual who had packed so much into his 29 years. You could get a real sense of his personality and gifts from reading about Adam life's. I am sad that I never crossed paths with Adam because clearly my life would have been richer if I would have known him and his infectious personality. I hope that the family is able to keep his life story and legacy alive so we can all benefit from it. May his incredible memory be a blessing!

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Tori Winner

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Meg Austin

June 23, 2022

You´re one of greatest humans and you´ve changed so many lives for the better, especially mine! What a devastating loss. I pity all the people who never got to know you

JOLEEN GRAFF

June 22, 2022

There are no words to comfort you with, so I will just say I am so very sorry for this horrible tragedy.

Emma Jackson

June 22, 2022

Mike, Lisa, Sarah and Adina,
With my deepest sympathy to you all and your family. I pray that God comfort you all.

Emma Jackson
MWRD

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Martina Bright

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Juwon

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Pamela Murray

June 22, 2022

Mike, Lisa, and family:
Please accept my condolences for your tremendous loss. May your memories of the joy and happiness his life provided comfort you and your family.
I remember, fondly, meeting him at his Bar Mitzvah and thank you for your kind invitation which allowed me to meet this extraordinary young man. I knew immediately he was destined for all the great things he accomplished
I praying for your family.
Pamela Murray
MWRD

Stan Bachusz

June 22, 2022

May God bless you and your family in this time of sorrow.

Traci

June 22, 2022

I of course do not know you or your son but I just read his obituary and my heart breaks for you and yours. What an incredible child you raised. Please accept my most sincere condolences.
Peace be upon you and yours.
A fellow Whitney Young alum

Pamela Slaby

June 22, 2022

Mike and Lisa, my thoughts and prayers are with you and your family and friends during this sad time. Adam truly left a special legacy during such a brief lifetime. Sincerely, Pam Slaby (from MWRD)

Maxwell

June 22, 2022

Wishing you peace during this difficult time.

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Service

11:00 a.m.

Anshe Emet Synagogue

3751 N. Broadway Street, Chicago, IL

Funeral services provided by:

Chicago Jewish Funerals - Skokie Chapel

8851 Skokie Boulevard, Skokie, IL 60077-2224

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