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Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks: single parents need help

October 18, 2012 17:30
Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

1 min read

Chief Rabbi Sacks has expressed concern about the divide between children from two-parent families and those who grow up without “the support and presence of their natural fathers”. He made his comments during a Lords debate about child development.

In a rare intervention in a parliamentary debate, convened in the wake of the Rochdale child abuse scandal, Lord Sacks called on lawmakers to address “the deepening and dangerous social divide between two cultures”. He suggested that children who did not have the gift of growing up “in stable, loving association with the two parents who brought them into being” could be disadvantaged later in life.

“The depth of this divide has been hidden from public attention by a perfectly honourable desire not to sound judgmental; not to condemn any freely chosen way of life; and not to add further to the immense burdens of being a single parent”.

But Lord Sacks added that there was “a price to be paid for silence” and urged the government to do more to help children develop the skills to become “loving, caring and responsible parents”.