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Volunteering is a boon for the volunteer, too

There’s a crisis in recruiting people to help good causes, which is bad news for everyone

May 24, 2023 13:21
JVN volunteers at MGB-Fun Run 2022 (002)
3 min read

Several times every month my daughter gets up at 5am and goes off to cook breakfast for 30 or so strangers. She serves their food, she lays the tables, she washes up. She makes tea and coffee, eggs and toast. Sometimes she even cleans the bathrooms. Then she goes off to the office for a full day’s work.

This is not an entrepreneurial side-hustle carried out alongside her regular job at a City bank. She’s a volunteer at a hostel for homeless people, one of a team of people who help to run this service.

In doing this, she’s going against a trend. Depressingly, the wave of community spirit that we heard so much about during lockdown didn’t last. Fewer of us are volunteering our time and efforts. Charities are reporting that it’s difficult to find and retain new volunteers. National Volunteer Week takes place from June 1 to 7, and as well as celebrating the contribution of so many, it’s also going to be an opportunity to sign up new recruits. To this end the Jewish Volunteering Network, run by my old friend Nicky Goldman, will be holding a roadshow at different locations around London, promoting the many opportunities that JVN can match you up with, with Jewish and non-Jewish charities.

Discussing this with Nicky recently, I expressed surprise that recruitment was a problem. After all, the pandemic made us all appreciate the need to look out for our neighbours, and appreciate those who look out for us. The response to the Ukrainian refugees coming to this country was magnificent, especially among the Jewish community. What finer example of volunteering than opening your home to people fleeing danger? It’s an act that resonates with so many Jewish families, who only have to look back a generation to emphasise with those fleeing peril.