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The JC letters page, 15th December

Jennifer Sheridan, Davina House, Tony Greenstein, William Philpott, Harold Miller, Peter Booth, Barry Hyman, Gabriel Herman and Ian Kay share their views with JC readers

December 15, 2017 11:57
Photo: Getty Images
6 min read

Unsung heroes

I was pleased to read the article about Paperweight Trust (JC, December 8). This is a largely unsung Jewish charity and clearly deserves to be more widely known in the community. I can testify to its outstanding work, having had contact with it for the past few years. 

As a result of a Jewish Care referral, Paperweight intervened on behalf of a friend, unable to cope with her affairs, due to advancing dementia.  The charity is always there for her at the end of the phone, visits regularly, and fire-fights on various fronts when necessary.  
Jacob Rees Mogg MP, in typically perverse fashion, regards charity food banks as “rather uplifting”, for all the wrong reasons.  Paperweight is certainly uplifting, but for all the right reasons. It does sterling work, given the critical state of social care in this country. 

As a result of punitive cuts imposed on local authorities by the current government since 2010, councils are hard pressed to maintain even the minimum of requirements to assist their clients. Thus, charities bear the onus of caring for the needy and those at risk, thanks to a savage ideology which denies this. So much for the Prime Minister’s caring-sharing sentiments at the start of her tenure in Downing Street.

We are the sixth richest country in the world. It should not be thus. It is a stain on our moral conscience that social care has deliberately been out-sourced to Paperweight and similar charities, to reduce state provision for the less fortunate among us.