2014-19: Creation and early years Robert Desmond cycled 1,350 miles from
London to Auschwitz, touring Holocaust and World War II historical sites along the route. Following his ride, he visited JCC Krakow and discovered a vibrant, living Jewish community in Poland, which surprised him. CEO Jonathan Ornstein and his team at JCC Krakow were similarly impressed to hear about Desmond's journey but considered it symbolically unfinished. Thus, they created Ride For The Living to complete the ride by biking from Auschwitz to JCC Krakow, from despair and loss to hope and resilience. The inaugural edition in 2014 featured 14 riders, including members of the Kraków, Jewish community and special guests from Poland, the
United Kingdom, the
United States, and
Israel. The funds the event raised were used for
Holocaust survivors from the Kraków, community to travel to Israel—the first time that many of them had visited the country or even traveled abroad. In 2015, Marcel Zieliński, then an 80-year-old Holocaust survivor who had walked from Auschwitz to Kraków as a 10-year-old after liberation, joined RFTL. He became an annual participant, riding alongside his family and hundreds of international supporters on a path nearly identical to that of his childhood trek. By 2019, RFTL had grown to include over 200 participants.
2020-21: COVID-19 pandemic Due to the
global pandemic, Ride For The Living pioneered its Global Challenge, allowing individuals to connect with the program without posing excessive public-health risk by participating virtually through self-directed exercise and recreation activities.
2022-24: Ukraine war response and return to normal programming As public authorities lifted pandemic measures, RFTL returned to hosting its marquee in-person program while still keeping the accessible options that had allowed for increased participation. A 5K Walk For The Living option also became available for individuals unable to complete the bike ride. Immediately following the
Russian invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, JCC Krakow established a full-scale humanitarian-aid operation, providing food, housing, and integration assistance each week to thousands of people forced to flee, directly supporting 360,000 displaced individuals by 2024 with a fundraising campaign that ultimately raised 12 million dollars. In light of this work, Ride For The Living created a special supplemental program, consisting of a bike ride from the Ukrainian border to JCC Krakow, in solidarity with everyone the war had impacted. By starting a day earlier than the standard group riding from Auschwitz-Birkenau, all participants finished approximately synchronously.
2025: Tenth annual ride Ride For The Living celebrated its tenth iteration in June 2025. The year aligned with the 80th anniversary of the
liberation of Auschwitz. == Purpose ==