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So you want to be 100?

June 12, 2008 23:00

ByAlex Kasriel, Alex Kasriel

6 min read
Being Jewish helps. So does being active and adapting to change. We ask the centenarians and scientists for expert advice

Hannah Cripps, Miriam Shenker, Rose Carr, Dolly Phillips and Eva Lewis have plenty in common. They all consider themselves to have a positive outlook on life; they are fiercely independent; none smokes or drinks… and all have reached 100 years of age or more.

The number of centenarians, increasing overall in Britain, is disproportionately high in the Jewish community. Go to any Jewish nursing home and there will be at least two or three residents whose mantelpiece proudly displays their framed certificate from the Queen. In fact, demographers estimate that the proportion of Jews in triple figures is three times that of the general population.

David Graham, demographer at the Board of Deputies and co-author of Jews in Britain: A Snapshot from the 2001 Census, says that Jews can expect to live longer than their gentile counterparts in the UK. Although there is no official life-expectancy data, he calculates from figures compiled by the Office for National Statistics that their average age is higher than that of the rest of the population, indicating a higher proportion of older members of the community.

“The median-age data shows that in England and Wales, on average, Jewish men are five years older than men generally,” he says. “On average, Jewish women are six years older than women generally.”