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By

Steven Lewis

Opinion

I'm worried who will be left to care for me

February 5, 2015 13:17
Ageing: The need for young carers to help the most frail in society is greater than ever
3 min read

Those who know me will know I like to be busy. I live an active life. I also, every so often, need to sleep. And there are a few things that keep me awake at night, one of which is an occasional worry about the future. My future and our future, the future of the organisation I am proud to be chairman of, and the future of wider communal organisations.

My involvement in Jewish Care goes back 25 years, for as long as Jewish Care has existed. It was my late friend, Adam Science, who dragged me along to my first "community meeting". It was a time when all my peers were getting involved in one communal organisation or another. We had watched our parents take the baton of responsibility for the social and welfare needs of the community from their parents. It was only natural that we would do the same. I recognised that I was, at the time, the future of the community and I had a responsibility to the community to do my bit.

Difficult as it is to say, I no longer represent the future but the here and now. I am watching my friends' children getting married and hoping that these young newlyweds will one day take on the baton of responsibility.

However, as I look around at the future, I do worry. While we have some fantastic young people involved in volunteering and fundraising through our Young Jewish Care programme, the sense of responsibility towards communal organisations is not as strong as it was when I first became involved.