| Shalom My Gantseh Megillah Family and Friends and L’Shana Tova 
to you and your loved ones. We pray that the inscriptions in this year’s book of 
life include all of us and those people we care about.
 This has been a hectic period for Arnold and me. We’ve been spending a great 
deal of time with our 103-year-old aunt who is recovering from a broken femur 
after a serious fall. She is definitely on the mend and is maintaining a 
remarkable spirit through this entire ordeal.
 
 While caring for Aunty I couldn’t help but think of all the elderly people in 
our society who need assistance and loving support and are not in a position to 
receive it. So many seniors are relegated to elder care facilities where they, 
like Blanche Dubois, rely on the “kindness of strangers.” If you are financially 
secure you can enjoy the comforts of more exclusive and well staffed facilities. 
Sadly, the majority of our seniors must exist on limited incomes or government 
subsidies. The least fortunate of these souls are placed in institutions that 
barely have enough trained staff and equipment to function on the most 
rudimentary basis.
 
 Aunty is a member of the fortunate minority who is not in financial difficulty. 
She has been blessed with the ability to remain in her own home, where she has 
lived for over 60 years. Her situation allows her to have trusted staff members 
on hand 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. This affords her a level of security and 
serenity unknown to many others in her age group. Not having to disrupt her life 
in her later years plays a major role in her long term survival.
 
 The one issue that constantly swirls around my head and interrupts my sleep is 
how so many of our seniors are not in Aunty’s position. Due to my own medical 
situation, I have spent a great deal of time in hospitals. During my stays I met 
many older people who passed through the hospital on their way to a nursing home 
or senior residence. I listened to some of the most heartbreaking stories I have 
ever heard. Some of them had gone through their entire savings due to a lack of 
adequate health insurance or income. Now these elderly people were destined to 
be housed in a subsidized facility where they would have to share a room with 
several strangers. Privacy would be a memory, and every move they made would be 
scrutinized by others.
 
 The fortunate members of this group had loving family who did their best to 
visit and add some comforts to their lives. Too many of these individuals 
however, were alone in the world. Their lives were in the hands of others who 
did not know or understand them.
 
 I have witnessed elderly men and women tied to their wheelchairs so they would 
not fall or injure themselves. I have seen grey heads nodding in grogginess 
because medication is used to keep them sedate and undemanding. People who were 
once self-reliant and proud, are stripped of their dignity and dealt with as if 
they were infants or mentally incompetent. Most of this mistreatment is not 
deliberate, but simply exists because we, as a country, do not prioritize senior 
care with adequate planning and funding. In my heart I feel as if a crime is 
being perpetrated against people who in their earlier years contributed to their 
community and country.
 
 We do not revere our senior citizens as do certain other cultures. In our 
disposable society, we treat the old as being in the way, annoying or even 
worse, totally useless. We tolerate their needs at best and ignore them entirely 
at worst. This is a sin. I recognize that most of my comments relate to the 
situation in the United States, but there are other countries in Western culture 
that do not fare much better. But the U.S., with its market driven health care 
system, seems to be furthest away from offering the kind of care our senior 
citizens are entitled to.
 
 Next week Arnold and I will be back in Seneca Falls, New York with Aunty. She 
will continue to receive loving care both from the family and professionals, and 
all in her own home. While I am delighted and relieved to know our aunt is in 
such a relatively comfortable and secure position, it continues to drive home 
the point of how much of an exception her situation is.
 
 Arnold and I would like to thank all of you who have sent messages and cards 
wishing Aunty a speedy and swift recovery. We have read each and every message 
to her, and she is absolutely thrilled to know so many people care about her. 
She has asked me to convey her gratitude to the members of the Megillah family 
and to wish you all a very happy New Year.
 
 We would like to share a brief video of Aunty at her 103rd birthday party, July 
17th of this year. You can either click on the “Media” button and choose 
“videos” on the homepage of the Gantseh Megillah or you can go directly to 
http://www.pass.to/newsletter/video.htm.
 
 
 Happy Succoth and see you in November.
 
 Much love to all of you,
 Michael
 
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