Toronto Star

Volunteers fill gaps amid U.K. lockdown

Britons step up to help the vulnerable ahead of government initiative

- DANICA KIRKA

Rev. April Keech knocked on the door of an apartment in east London, took three giant steps back and made way for other volunteers to lay a bag of groceries on the threshold.

The jovial Anglican priest seemed to want to hug the resident, Peter Kraus, when he came to the door, but restrained herself to abide by social-distancing requiremen­ts for slowing the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“Hello, Pete! That’s your bag,” Keech told the 68-year-old retired merchant seaman, who lives alone. “I hope you’re OK!”

Keech and her team of volunteers have spent the past two weeks buying groceries, filling prescripti­ons and making deliveries to residents in east London who are at risk of serious illness or death from the COVID-19 disease. The U.K. has reported more than 25,000 confirmed cases, and 1,789 virus-related deaths among those hospitaliz­ed.

For most people, the new coronaviru­s causes mild or moderate symptoms, such as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can cause more severe illness, including pneumonia and death.

Britain is in the process of mobilizing around 750,000 volunteers to help vulnerable people after the government ordered a countrywid­e lockdown. So many individual­s have offered to help — three times more than requested — that the government put recruitmen­t on hold until it could process those who had already come forward.

Since the government initiative is just starting, people like Keech have stepped into the breach to assist those who need help now — not in a week or two.

“Kindness now and compassion for what other people are going through is crucial to help us understand one another, and connect to one another,” said Keech, an associate priest at St. Paul Old Ford Church. “And I think about what is going on here ... and what is to come. We’re not even at the peak of this in London.”

Kraus is grateful. He recently had a stomach operation, so it is risky for him to go outside and move around the city.

“It’s very kind of them to do that,” he said of the weekly deliveries of canned beans, bread and other groceries at his door. “It saves us from going down to the supermarke­t.”

Keech organized a handful of volunteers after a local doctor asked her to help make sure at-risk patients got their medication days before the lockdown took effect a week ago. Many of those who need assistance are elderly people who have a high risk of respirator­y complicati­ons, don’t hear well or are a bit baffled by the new invisible enemy. Some sought help just because they were afraid to be alone.

The government is counting on citizens to pitch in and help stretch the resources of local authoritie­s, first responders and the National Health Service like previous generation­s did during the First World War. While attitudes and technology have changed since the 1940s and many people no longer know their neighbours, officials organizing the national effort are encouraged by the outpouring of volunteers.

“We have been absolutely overwhelme­d by the response and cannot thank the public enough,” Royal Voluntary Service CEO Catherine Johnstone said. “As history shows, it is often in times of crisis that we pull together and become our best selves.”

 ?? ALBERTO PEZZALI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rev. April Keech and her team of volunteers organize food deliveries to old and vulnerable people in east London.
ALBERTO PEZZALI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rev. April Keech and her team of volunteers organize food deliveries to old and vulnerable people in east London.

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