Leicester Mercury

Appeal to light up veterans’ lives with friendship support

ASSOCIATIO­N’S BID TO BEAT LONELINESS THIS CHRISTMAS

- By STAFF REPORTER christmas.rafa.org.uk

A LEICESTER charity chief is urging people to help light up military veterans’ lives this Christmas, as thousands of elderly and vulnerable people face a season of loneliness compounded by Covid-19.

While lockdown rules will be temporaril­y eased to enable families to meet, many veterans are likely to spend Christmas feeling as isolated as ever, because they have no relatives or are continuing to self-isolate to protect their health.

In response, the RAF Associatio­n – the Leicester-based national charity that supports the wellbeing of the RAF community – has launched an urgent Christmas appeal to enable it to expand its national telephone friendship service.

The associatio­n’s Secretary General Nick Bunting said: “We anticipate a large number of older people will have even less, if any, social contact than usual because of the ongoing pandemic.

“People without family or close friends to support them would normally have some opportunit­y to chat while out shopping, and to meet like-minded people at community clubs and events, but this year they won’t have that.”

Nick said that recent research by the RAF Associatio­n among the RAF community had revealed almost half of those surveyed had experience­d loneliness since the pandemic began.

“When asked how long they had gone without an in-depth conversati­on since the start of the first national lockdown, more than a third of those surveyed said three or more days. Asked if they felt an outreach service to contact vulnerable individual­s would be useful, 81 per cent of participan­ts said yes.”

Nick said the findings overwhelmi­ngly pointed to a need to further expand the charity’s telephone friendship service, so he was asking people to donate to the associatio­n to make this possible.

He said: “2020 has been a really tough year for our charity, at a time when people have needed us more than ever. We launched a new telephone friendship service – Connection­s for Life - as soon as the government issued its ‘stay at home’ message in March. Our amazing volunteers have so far made over 50,000 calls to lonely RAF veterans, but it’s not enough.

“It’s our aim that nobody should feel alone or isolated over the Christmas period and beyond, so we are relying on people’s generosity to help us to keep up our additional work and light up veterans’ lives at an otherwise dark time.”

Among those already benefiting from the charity’s friendship service is a 76-year-old RAF veteran Clive.

To promote their Christmas appeal, the RAF Associatio­n has launched a television commercial with the aim of helping people to understand the loneliness faced by veterans. The advert, which features Clive’s story, portrayed by an actor to protect his privacy, is being broadcast throughout December.

More informatio­n about the work of the Christmas appeal is at:

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