SAN DIEGO—The Serving Older
Survivors unit of Jewish Family Service has an opportunity to increase its
$280,000 annual budget by $130,000. Obtaining such additional funds from
the Conference of Jewish Material Claims Against
Germany would enable the SOS unit to increase services to the 70
financially distressed people it now serves, and perhaps start serving as many
as 30 other impoverished survivors on its waiting list.
The opportunity comes in the form of a "challenge" grant from the
organization that was created following negotiations between Germany and the
organized Jewish community to pay restitution for Nazi crimes against Jews.
The Claims Conference will provide a grant of $65,000 to San Diego, only if a
matching amount of $65,000 can be raised locally by May 15— in slightly more
than a month—and not just any $65,000.
Under the rules of the challenge, Jewish Family Service may not turn to
stalwart supporters such as the Jacobs Family Foundation or the Viterbi Family
Foundation—created respectively by Qualcomm co-founders Irwin Jacobs and
Andrew Viterbi—and say, "please, please, help us out again."
Instead, the money must come from "new donors," people who have
never contributed before, people who can't bear the idea that Holocaust
Survivors, in their declining years, are suffering again—from recurring
memories, lack of transportation, isolation, and failing health.
At
the invitation of Teri Wilner, a JFS case manager whose clients are European
Holocaust survivors who have been in this country for a half century or more,
I visited the SOS unit in Mission Valley earlier this week to learn more
about the work done there. We were joined by Tatiana Livshits, who helps
survivors who are recent immigrants from Russia and the Ukraine, and by Hedy
J. Dalin, manager of the unit.
Wilner and Livshits say the Holocaust survivors have all the needs of other
elderly people on very limited income—plus some other problems that are
unique to them as a group.
Hedy J.
Dalin, (left) JFS director of care manage-
ment, with Teri Wilner and
Tatiana Livshits.
Too poor to be able to afford to move into an assisted living facility, the
seniors in some cases are too frail to clean their houses, fix
their appliances, lift heavy objects, or take care of the myriad of chores
that younger, healthier people take for granted. The SOS program provides
between 8 and 10 hours per week of home care per client. In some cases, the
clients have medical conditions requiring them to buy special equipment, but
lack the funds to do so. In response, SOS will help purchase such
equipment, for example a "push up" chair that is easier for
the senior to get up from. In some cases, JFS arranges transportation for
seniors to doctor's appointments, or to the grocery store, or for other
shopping.
The clients often live in rented quarters, and when their landlords decide to
turn the apartments into condominiums, the seniors can't afford to buy
them. So the SOS program will help the seniors find a new apartment, and
help them move in. Without such help, many would have neither the
strength nor the financial capability to make a move—assuming they can find
a new apartment at a rental they can afford.
Whereas JFS is required to maintain confidentiality about who their
clients are, one survivor, Vera Stein, voluntarily shared information about
her life as one who is "poor in San Diego." Born to Jewish
parents in Berlin in 1924, her Russian father was a physician, her
Polish mother a costume designer. Their comfortable middle class life ended
when the Nazis came into power. They left Germany in 1938, traveling to
Israel via Switzerland and a stay in a British internment camp for illegal
immigrants.
The family immigrated legally in 1942 to the United States, where she
graduated with a bachelor's degree in literature in 1946 and went to work soon
thereafter as a reporter at PM, an afternoon newspaper in New York City.
Her career later took her into advertising, then into the retail business, and
in 1972, she moved to San Diego where she worked at various retail stories
until "poor health forced me to retire in 1994." Today, she
said, "my total income per month is $1,024, which does not even cover my
expenses."
"I am immensely grateful to
JFS for their financial and emotional support, without their help I could not
survive," she said. "I told my counselor if only 100 people
would donate $10 per month I would be out of this financial trap that I am in.
That would improve my physical and mental health and restore the will to live.
... By supporting JFS you are saving people like me."
In an interview, Stein, 82,
said climbing rents are perhaps her biggest worry. If she could have one wish
granted, she said, it would be that the Jewish community build subsidized
rental units for people like herself to live in through the end of her days. If
she could have two wishes, the second would be for better transportation. She
lives in the southern portion of La Jolla, south of Bird Rock. "Not
everyone in La Jolla is wealthy," she says. Having no car, she is
dependent on bus transportation—and she is alarmed that San Diego Transit
may change the stops for Route 9. "You try to walk eight blocks to
do your shopping and then walk home," she said.
Wilner said that like so many other financially-strapped Holocaust survivors,
Stein would like to be more involved in Jewish community activities, but,
without transportation, is unable to do so. The JFS caseworker
said if synagogues throughout the county could organize programs to provide
round-trip transportation services to Shabbat services and other synagogue
events, they would do the survivors, as well as other seniors, a world of
good.
In
addition to having similar housing and transportation problems, other Wilner clients also are plagued by
recurring memories and flashbacks to the Holocaust. Because many of them
are widows, living alone and without family in the immediate vicinity,
their sense of isolation may be one factor accounting for these painful
flashbacks, said Wilner, who is trained as a psycho-therapist. Because
,any clients do not have cars, and cannot easily take public transportation,
they spend their time without social stimulation.
Once a month Wilner tries to get her clients together for an afternoon of talk
and socialization at the JFS Senior Center operated at the Chabad of
University City. Getting the survivors together is a major, and somewhat
expensive, logistical exercise because the seniors have to be provided
round-trip transportation. Every six months or so, Wilner also arranges for a
special get-together for the seniors, a night at the Theatre in Old Town.
While the survivors enjoy each other's company, they live over too wide an
area of San Diego County to make frequent get-togethers practical—especially
with transportation costs so high.
In such circumstances, Wilner said, the survivors may tend to fixate on the
terrible past. She related the story of a client who survived a
concentration camp, "came to this country, met another survivor,
married, continued to raise her child (who had survived the concentration camp
with her), worked successfully, managed to save a little money, and then her
husband died two years ago.
"She was in a marvelous day program where her emotional needs were met;
but that program was closed. She had a birthday a couple of months ago,
and that brought back the memories. She started hallucinating , and bringing
back all the dead people who were really close to her, and just talking to
them through the walls. She is waiting for them to pick her up, and as
each one doesn’t come pick her up, she invents a new one. One day she is
getting married and she went out and
bought new furniture for her marriage.
"Her daughter, the child who was in the concentration camp, is now living
with the mother – you can imagine to be a child in a concentration camp ,
what your ideas of life are, what scars you carry.
The mother refuses to get any psychiatric help, and based upon our
current laws, we can’t impose it, if she is not a danger to herself and
others. Her hallucinations are keeping her up at night. She gets
up in the middle of the night because her ' lover' is going to come, pick her
up…. These are typical of
survivors, these flooding back of memories that have become dysfunctional."
Dalin, who is herself the child of survivors as well as the wife of the
community chaplain, Rabbi Ralph Dalin, related the story of another client who
" had a brain tumor and all of a sudden she started thinking that she was
back in concentration camp. ... She was having visual hallucinations, and just
wasn’t functioning. She really
thought she was back in the concentration camp. It was horrendous. Her husband
was a soldier who was one of the rescuers and for him to see his wife mentally
going back there, groveling for food, was anguish, total anguish. She didn’t
die long after that."
Livshits told me that although her Russian and Ukrainian clients also are
Holocaust survivors, they are less likely to discuss their World War II
experiences with other people, perhaps because they are so focused on
adjusting to their new lives in America.
Beset by language problems, her
clients often need help translating documents as they deal with various
government agencies. While most of them had no formal Jewish education
in the Soviet Union—where the teaching of religion was scorned—they
maintained their Jewish identities during the Communist period, and would like
to learn more about American Jewish life and customs. For example, she
said, it would be a mitzvah if some knowledgeable Russian-speaking Jews could
organize seders to teach them in their own language about the customs of
Passover.
Seventy different JFS clients mean seventy different stories—some of them
awe-inspiring tales of survival, said Wilner. One of her clients escaped
her Nazi-occupied homeland by seducing a guard while her family dashed across
the Italian border. Her husband lagged behind, and when the guards caught on
to what was occurring, they tried to physically restrain the husband from
crossing the border. But since more than half his prone body was across
the border, Italian border guards intervened and dragged him to safety.
Another client " ran through the woods with a four-year-old
daughter on his back, walking innumerable miles to safety," Wilner related.
Obviously no one can change the horrors that these survivors endured. But the
San Diego Jewish community is in a position to help our elderly Jewish victims
of war and Nazi bestiality in their latter years. More information about
contributing toward the challenge grant may be obtained from Dalin, Wilner or
Livshits at their offices at 2565 Camino Del Rio South, Suite 110, or by
telephoning them at (619) 574-2526. The challenge clock is ticking.