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I’m so glad Dad agreed to move into a care home

My 95-year-old father was adamant he would not go into a home — but Hammerson House gave him, and us, so much

April 25, 2024 08:04
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Hammerson House
3 min read

My father was determined that he was not going to go into a care home. And certainly not a care home in London. Or a Jewish one. “I’ve never lived with Jewish people and I’m not going to start now,” he told me, rather bafflingly considering his Jewish wife and children, his stint in Finchley as a young man, and the undeniable fact that he was one of the most Jewish people imaginable, bringing Jews and Judaism into every conversation he could.

Instead, newly widowed at 94, he insisted on staying alone in his house in Welwyn Garden City, supported by carers, neighbours and the wonderful local Jewish community, which combined into a pretty amazing support system. But that still left a lot of hours alone, and there were dramas, some involving dashes to the not-very-local hospital. I once had to dispatch friends (thank you!)  at 1am on a snowy night to save him when his recliner tipped too far the wrong way. So he decided to sell up (“I think you’ll find it sells very quickly, probably to a Chinese diplomat”) and move somewhere slightly smaller but very local, ideally a different house in the same street. We started looking at hopelessly unsuitable rip-off retirement flats.

Luckily my sister is made of sterner stuff than my brother and I and on a flying visit from Israel, managed to tour three care homes. Jewish ones. In London. And she persuaded Dad to give them a try. After all, the house, as he predicted, sold ten minutes after going on the market, although not to a Chinese diplomat, somewhat to his disappointment. He had to go somewhere.

And that is how Dad – who died last month, just a few days short of 96 – ended up in Hammerson House, a care home which so outshone his expectations that he agreed to be videoed telling people how great it was. Sadly he didn’t get a chance to do that, so let me do it instead.

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Family