Become a Member

By

Leon A Smith

Opinion

The generosity of the community

August 3, 2012 06:37
4 min read

Until this week the subject of fencing (not the garden or criminal type) had been one only vaguely in my consciousness. I’ve never had any interest in fencing. I’ve never seen fencing. And even if I had thought about it for two minutes, I’d probably would have said – what is the point? No pun intended!

All that’s changed this week! I’m now a fencing officiando. It was perhaps destiny that my application for Olympic tickets resulted in me receiving tickets for fencing. What an intriguing day it was. High skills. A great spectacle. Very exciting. But above all, a lasting impression of how people could be so committed to what I had hitherto thought to be a very obscure activity. The same observations could equally have been made about archery or handball. The impression one is left with in relation to any of these sports is the sheer determination and indefatigability of the participants. Imagine spending a very significant part of one’s spare time fencing or playing handball. Yet people do it. People from all over the world make these activities their prime purpose in life.

This has got me thinking as to what is my own prime purpose in life! (A truly philosophical question which of course ranks up there with “what is the meaning of life?”). A large part of my time is spent running a charity which cares for older members of the Jewish community. I am sure that many of those in the fencing or handball community will think to themselves – what an obscure and strange way to spend one’s time. And they’re possibly and probably right! That’s what I have chosen to do in life and that’s what gives me satisfaction.

The founders of our charity, whose origins can be traced back over 170 years, were truly altruistic, principled people with genuine concern for the wellbeing of their fellow human beings. That is why they established The Widow’s Home Asylum and The Hand in Hand Asylum, which subsequently became The Home for Aged Jews which subsequently became Nightingale House and subsequently became Nightingale Hammerson. Their purpose and our purpose today is totally clear. We exist to provide care for older people – that’s our purpose in life. Nothing less. Nothing more.