Background
Slotkin grew up in a family of Russian immigrants.
Slotkin grew up in a family of Russian immigrants.
Slotkin also had strong interests that influenced his life and caused his philanthropy. In Kansas City, Slotkin came up with a business plan to rent rather than sell. In the 1930s, Slotkin opened his first Abbey Rents store in Saint Louis.
Stanley Slotkin started increasing his company after this and it became the world’s largest rental firm in 1965.
During the growth of his company, in 1937, Slotkin relocated his business headquarters to Los Los Angeles Abbey Rents had 90 rental outlets that lent a wide variety of goods, including party supplies and medical equipment.
He had two children with Miriam Slotkin: Mark and Diane. Slotkin believed that plastic surgery was important for people with physical deformities.
To allow his belief to proceed, Slotkin opened a clinic that provided plastic surgery—free of charge—to people who could not otherwise afford the corrective surgeries necessary to repair physical deformities like cleft palates and harelips.
With Slotkin’s financial backing, the clinic was able to perform tens of thousands of these operations. In addition, Slotkin helped to start Epihab, a job-skills training project for people with epilepsy. Founded in the late 1950s, Epihab trained epileptics in a variety of skilled and semi-skilled jobs and helped them find positions to utilize their new skills.
Another avid interest of Slotkin’s was antique books and archaeology.
Over the years, Slotkin collected a number of relics that he gave to numerous universities and museums. One such example is that of an ancient antiphonary or choir book thought to be used in the Cathedral of Deville in about 1500.
Slotkin presented sheets from this book to Marquette University, the Milwaukee Public Museum, the Saint Louis City Art Museum, Saint Louis University and Saint Louis Cathedral. In 1963, Slotkin bought the Charles Darwin Family Library in London and donated all the papers and artefacts from the collection to the University of Southern California.
Biblical archaeology
In the papers from the Charles Darwin Family Library in London, Slotkin found a story about the Tomb of Joseph in Nazareth that sparked his curiosity.
In 1962, Elias Bandak, mayor of Bethlehem, hosted Slotkin in a visit to the holy land. Stokin visited the Cave of the Nativity while it was being renovated and became interested in stones that were being removed. Bandak gave the stones to Stokin as a gift and had the stones shipped to America.
Michael Anthony got permission from Slotkin to use the nativity stone in the making of Christian Jewelry.