The Jewish Chronicle

Rabbi reveals chronic fatigue battle

- BY ROSA DOHERTY album and has a big following in the country.

LAURA JANNER-KLAUSNER is often so tired that she falls asleep at work and carries a pillow, ear plugs and eye mask wherever she goes.

Reform Judaism’s senior rabbi is not lazy — she has revealed she is one of 250,000 people in the UK who suffers from chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).

She spoke publicly this week for the first time about her life with the debilitati­ng illness which causes fever, aching, prolonged tiredness and depression in the hope it will break the stigma attached to the condition.

CFS, also known as ME (myalgic encephalom­yelitis), is a long-term illness and has no cure.

Rabbi Janner-Klausner said she had suffered with it for more than 20 years but had been determined to work twice as hard.

She says: “As I’m talking to you now I’m lying down on my floor. People that don’t understand the condition assume that people with it are lazy or unreliable.

“It is frustratin­g because CFS means I’m more susceptibl­e to infection than your average person and my body feels totally exhausted and in pain regularly.”

She first discovered she had the condition after contractin­g glandular fever.

“My problem was not taking it seriously enough. I kept slipping back into it and in the end it turned into chronic fatigue.” Rabbi Janner-Klausner would spend weeks at a time fighting infections such as flu or the common cold.

By speaking out about her experience she hopes to raise awareness of the condition which is more common in women and tends to develop between the mid-20s and mid-40s.

“It means your immune system is completely depleted. It is impossible to explain but you feel it in your arms, your hands, even in your gums.

“I would pick up whatever illness there was and spend weeks at a time wiped out by colds or flu. It is frustratin­g because you just want to be well.”

The stress brought on by the child abuse accusation­s made against her late father Lord Janner had “exacerbate­d” her condition, she says.

“The past four years have been particular­ly hard.”

Last week she took part in the physically draining March of the Living. She says: “I was very careful to get a lot of sleep and have enough time also to exercise the emotions out of my body.

“I ate a lot and slept at every opportunit­y on the coach.”

A combinatio­n of therapy and exercise has helped the rabbi manage the condition. “I have therapy once a week, which is kindly paid for by a congregant, and I regularly exercise. I go to boot camp with my friend Judge Rinder and his support has spurred me on.”

She also has to have regular injections of vitamin B12 to strengthen her immune system and has to have a minimum of eight hours sleep a night.

“Having supportive colleagues really helps, and my husband David has been my rock.

“They know I work hard and they trust me. I just want people to know that the condition, even though you don’t get rid of it, is manageable and there are ways you can cope.”

Rabbi Janner-Klausner appeared on the BBC World Service’s Heart and Soul with Caroline Wyatt on Sunday. Ms Wyatt, who suffers from MS, is a friend and convinced her to speak out.

POP SINGER Morrissey has called for kosher food to be banned.

The former Smiths icon, who is a militant vegan, was initially asked in an interview for his views on halal meat before turning to the topic of kashrut.

He said: “It, too, must be banned. I am not saying that stunned slaughter is acceptable, because it couldn’t ever be.

“If you use the term ‘humane slaughter’ then you might as well talk in terms of ‘humane rape’. People sound very stupid when they mention ‘humane slaughter’.”

In a piece published on the Morrissey Central website, the singer expressed his views on religion and meat to interviewe­r John Riggers.

Discussing party political attitudes to the slaughter of animals, he said: “If you have any concern for animal welfare, for example, you cannot possibly vote for either Conservati­ves or Labour, because both parties support halal slaughter, which, as we all know, is evil.

“Halal slaughter requires certificat­ion that can only be given by supporters of Isis, and yet we have halal meat served in hospitals and schools!”

Morrissey included a song titled Israel on his Low In High

School Morrissey

 ?? PHOTO: MICHELLE MORRIS ?? Rabbi LauraJanne­r Klausner says having ME is “manageable”
PHOTO: MICHELLE MORRIS Rabbi LauraJanne­r Klausner says having ME is “manageable”
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