The Archbishop of Canterbury has said that older people should be
recognised for the enormous amount of voluntary work they do in their
communities.
Speaking during his final appearance in the House of Lords, Dr Rowan
Williams said there was a misconception that older people are a
"burden".
"As things stand, more than half the over-60 population are involved in
some sort of formal and structured voluntary work," he said.
"Over half of the population believes that this is part of what they
should aspire to in later life, and a third are willing to take part in
informal volunteering. These facts are of basic importance. It means, quite simply, that a
majority of the older population are ready to do what they can, unpaid,
to support the fabric of society; they are doing exactly what we expect
responsible citizens to do."
Where older people find their physical independence reduced, they
should be supported to enable them to continue making a valuable
contribution to their communities, the Archbishop said.
"We should see questions of dependency as basically about how our public
policy and resourcing seeks to preserve both dignity and capacity among
those who may be increasingly physically challenged but remain citizens
capable of contributing vital things to the social fabric," he said.
Dr Williams said that churches and faith communities have a key role
to play in helping different generations engage with each other, such as
through befriending schemes involving school pupils or oral history
projects.
He noted that this was becoming more important "as family structures become looser and more scattered geographically".
The Archbishop went on to challenge the way in which a large part of
the prevailing culture is "frenetically oriented towards youth",
especially in entertainment and marketing.
While he said this was understandable up to a point, he warned that
it could cause society to overlook responsible and active people in
older life "who are still participants in society, not passengers".
"We tolerate a very eccentric view of the good life or the ideal life as
one that can be lived only for a few years between, say, eighteen and
forty," he said.
"The ‘extremes’ of human life, childhood and age, when we are not
defined by our productive capacity, and so have time to absorb the
reality around us in a different way – these are hard for our society to
come to terms with."
He concluded: "The recovery of a full and rich sense of dignity at every
age and in every condition is an imperative if we are serious about the
respect we universally owe each other, that respect grounded for
Christians in the divine image which is to be discerned in old and young
alike."