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Robert “Bob” Loup, who built the Jewish community in Denver and around the globe, dies at 87

Bob Loup — “the ultimate mensch” — helped save Denver’s JCC and Jewish refugees across the world

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Provided by the Loup family
Robert "Bob" Loup

Whether it was overseas or at home, Robert “Bob” Loup worked tirelessly to protect and further the interests of the Jewish community, rescuing refugees from Ethiopia, organizing a rally in Washington, D.C., against international oppression and helping save Denver’s Jewish Community Center.

His wife told a tale that he and former U.S. Sen. Gary Hart used an Etch A Sketch to avoid surveillance as they communicated while in Russia trying to free Soviet Jews.

In Denver, he cultivated the Hilltop neighborhood though his homebuilding business and was always there to lend a hand to someone in economic need, be it a homeless person on the street or a cab driver he had just met.

 died Thursday at age 87.

“You never felt like he didn’t have time,” said Kathy Neustadt, a close friend of Loup’s who worked with him on the board of Denver’s Jewish Community Center. “There wasn’t a call he wouldn’t make. You just felt so cared for by him. He really had a magical quality about him in an incredibly humble way.”

Loup’s family said the patriarch, among the nation’s leading Jewish philanthropists and who had four children and eight grandchildren, died after battling through end of life chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. He had survived several bouts of pneumonia.

“He was bigger than life,” his wife, Robyn, said Friday. “His personal relationships were as powerful as the big things he did in this world. He was all about spirit at the end.”

Loup as the son of a Romanian immigrant. He went on to graduate from the University of Colorado and then served in the Air Force during the Korean War.

He eventually launched a homebuilding and development business that operated in the Denver area and throughout the nation, creating — among other commercial and residential ventures — The Ranch Country Club in Westminster. Around 1991, he began working with his son, Jim.

“We’re still in business,” Jim Loup said Friday. “My dad was still involved in the business up until the time in died.”

Those who were close to Loup, however, say he was best known for humanitarian and community work. He was the president of the Allied Jewish Federation, the founder of and chairman of the United Jewish Appeal — an international organization that resettled refugees — among other service organizations.

In one photograph from a rally in Washington, he was captured sitting next to U.S. Rep. John Lewis, the famous civil rights activist and Democrat from Georgia.

Loup is perhaps most recognized in Denver for saving the Jewish Community Center — which is named after him — off Leetsdale Drive from financial doom. He was reluctant to accept recognition for his work, family and friends say.

His fundraising skills were unmatched.

“No one wanted to say no to Bob,” Neustadt said. “Whether he was asking for a donation, asking you to join a cause — to join an event — you not only couldn’t say no. You didn’t want to.”

It was that spirit that made him a mainstay in Denver, known for putting the community ahead of himself.

Provided by the Loup family
Robert "Bob" Loup at a Washington, D.C., rally with Rep. John Lewis, the famous Georgia Democrat.

“We would go out to baseball games and dinner with him,” said Jacob Loup, his 32-year-old grandson. “Everywhere he went, he would be ambushed by 15 different people who wanted to shake his hand.”

In November, one of Denver’s Jewish community’s highest awards in Loup’s honor.

“Bob was the ultimate mensch,” said Stuart Raynor, former CEO of the Denver JCC. “He was just always giving.”

Raynor remembered a time in 2007, just after he had starting working at the Denver JCC, when Loup called him frantically. Loup had just bought 30-40 Colorado Rockies ticket for summer camp staffers and something was wrong.

“Nobody asked him, but he thought they would have a good time,” Raynor said. “But he called me in a panic because he forgot to give them money for food and popcorn so they could have a good time. He just never forgot little things.”


A for Loup is set for 12 p.m. Sunday at the Hebrew Educational Alliance, 3600 South Ivanhoe St. Interment will be at Mt. Nebo Memorial Park.

Contributions in Loup’s honor can be made to the JCC Denver, Shalom Park, Kabbalah Experience, or CLAL — The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, 440 Park Avenue South, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10016-8012.

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