Arab Times

Elderly find alternativ­e to golden yrs

Fellowship Community about caring for seniors

- By Jim Fitzgerald

the Fellowship Community’s adult home, workers are paid not according to what they do, but what they need; aging residents are encouraged to lend a hand at the farm, the candle shop or the pottery studio; and boisterous children are welcome around the old folks.

It’s a home for the elderly in a commune-like setting, 30 miles from Manhattan, that takes an unusual approach, integratin­g seniors into the broader community and encouragin­g them to contribute to its welfare.

“It’s a great place to live, and I think there’s probably no better place in the world to die,” says Joanne Karp, an 81-year-old resident who was supposed to be in her room recovering from eye surgery but instead was down the hall at the piano, accompanyi­ng three kids learning to play the recorder.

The 33-bed adult home is at the center of Fellowship Community, a collection of about 130 men, women and children founded in 1966 that offers seniors — including the aging baby boom generation — an alternativ­e to living out their final years in traditiona­l assisted-living homes or with their grown sons and daughters.

At most adult homes, a resident in decline would eventually have to go to a hospital or nursing home. But Fellowship has an exemption from state law that allows dying residents to stay there because “people have wanted to stay, and we have wanted to keep them,” said administra­tor Ann Scharff,

who helped found the community.

Accepted

“We provide a space in which people can prepare to die in a way that is accepted and nourishing to them and fraught with meaning,” Scharff said. “It’s not something you run away from, but it’s part of the whole spectrum of life, just as birth is part of life and is prepared for.”

Situated on a hilltop in suburban Rockland County, Fellowship looks a bit like a village out of the past. Besides the farm and the pottery and candle shops, there are a dairy barn with 10 cows, a print shop, a metal shop, a “weavery” and a wood shop.

The 33-acre farm goes beyond organic, running on “biodynamic,” or self-sustaining, principles, as much as a small farm can, said Jairo Gonzalez, the head gardener. Solar panels sparkle on the barn roof, and cow manure becomes compost.

Most of the adult home workers live in buildings surroundin­g it, as do about 35 independen­t seniors who don’t yet need the services but plan to live out their days in the community. At meals, elders, workers and children dine together.

“We don’t subscribe to ‘Children should be seen and not heard,’” Scharff said.

Caring for the elderly is the main activity, but all the workers also have other responsibi­lities.

“In a typical work week, someone will be inside helping the elderly, meaning bringing meals, bathing, meds,” said Will Bosch, head of the community’s board of trustees. “But they’ll also be doing building and grounds maintenanc­e, planting, harvesting, milking.”

Concede

Organizers decline to call it a commune but concede the spirit is similar. The philosophy behind it is called anthroposo­phy, “a source of spiritual knowledge and a practice of inner developmen­t,” according to The Anthroposo­phical Society in America.

Elder care is practiced in somewhat similar fashion in at least two other anthroposo­phy-inspired communitie­s: Camphill Ghent in Chatham, NY, and Hesperus Village in Vaughan, Ontario, near Toronto.

The area around Fellowship has several other organizati­ons with ties to anthroposo­phy, including a private school, a bookstore and a co-op grocery that sells some of the community’s crops. Fewer than half the adult home residents at Fellowship Community have any connection to anthroposo­phy, at least when they enter, Scharff said.

“We’re an age-integrated community built around the central mission of care of the elderly,” Bosch said. “The members want to be of service. They come because they know this is a place where they can contribute.”

So Karp, the 81-year-old, teaches music and entertains the community at the piano.

“I think the reason people really appreciate this place is because they can be active and they can contribute and there’s always something that needs doing,” Karp said. “And it’s nice when kids are glad to see you.”

Other residents, or members, as they’re called, have found similar niches.

Gwen Eisenmann, 91, a retired poet, leads poetry discussion­s and also likes to set the table before meals. Larry Fox, 74, a psychologi­st, treats patients at the Fellowship’s medical office and said, “Where could I be at my age and be so happy to get up in the morning and look forward to the day?”

It’s difficult, Bosch said, to find people to sign up for the communal life and work. It appeals to “people who are dismayed with the materialis­m of the world and are trying to get above it,” he said. “People who are interested in an alternativ­e lifestyle, not based on pocketing the most money they can for the least amount of work.”

When elders come in, they pay a “life lease” of $27,500 to $50,000, depending on the space they will occupy in the adult home or the “lodges” surroundin­g it. In addition, they pay $700-$1,500 per month in rent, and up to $3,000 a month for care, depending on what they need.

Revenue from the adult home provides 60 percent of the nonprofit Fellowship Community’s $3 million operating budget, with the rest coming from donations and the sale of produce, milk and crafts, home officials said. Donations completely fund the capital budget, make up any annual shortfall and subsidize the adult home. (AP)

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