The Jewish Chronicle

Langdon is open to Maccabi influence

- BYBARRYTOB­ERMAN

A COMMUNAL partnershi­p in support of young adults with moderate learning difficulti­es has been formally opened in Edgware.

Previously known as the Quadrant, Maccabi House is the latest Langdon educationa­l and social project in north London and Manchester.

The name was changed to acknowledg­e a £400,000 donation from a memorial fund for British and world Maccabi leader Pierre Gildesgame, a passionate advocate of helping those with special needs.

Representi­ng the Gildesgame trust at the opening, Clive Geller said the collaborat­ion was “a dream come true. This is an important aspect of Maccabi’s future.

“Organisati­ons have to work together when they are compatible. They won’t lose their identities.”

Maccabi chair Michael Ziff expressed “total awe of everything you are doing here”.

His Langdon counterpar­t Barry Welck welcomed the Maccabi contributi­on to the £1.9 million project, for which £500,000 still needs to be raised. Innovative features include a coffee shop — “we are going to teach people to be baristas” — and there are training rooms for bite-sized programmes on life skills such as safety, money and travel. The house will also host “employabil­ity courses”, helping Langdon clients into the job market.

Although there is ample space for socialisin­g, Mr Welck stressed: “This is not going to be a vegging-out build- ing. I want people to come here with purpose.”

The site also incorporat­es three flats for residents, one of them taken by Alex Keston, who was among Langdon clients who addressed the opening ceremony.

Currently assisting those from late teens to fortysomet­hings, Langdon will extend its age provision when a Brady youth club opens at Maccabi House in September.

Mr Welck estimates that there are 2,000 UK Jews with mild-to-moderate learning problems. “We have 100 residents and another 50-to-100 who join us for events, so we are only scratching the surface.” Its next major housing project is in Borehamwoo­d, where the first handful of residents will move in during the summer.

The Maccabi link-up will offer Langdon clients further sporting opportunit­ies.

“We already have a football team which went to Spain to take part in a tournament,” Mr Welck explained. “If we have a kid who wants to go swimming, we should encourage it.

“These are people who have such normal ambitions. They have shrunken into themselves when they come to us. We help them to achieve the selfesteem which is the launch pad to a normal life.”

 ?? PHOTO: JOHN RIFKIN ?? Barry Welck with Robyn Freeman, Marcus Bean, Alex Keston, Simon Houlton, Ben Weiner and Faith Gardie
PHOTO: JOHN RIFKIN Barry Welck with Robyn Freeman, Marcus Bean, Alex Keston, Simon Houlton, Ben Weiner and Faith Gardie
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