Irene Zola & Morningside Village by LiLY

In the Fall of 2009, these Morningside Village Volunteers were tabling on Broadway between 110th and 111th Streets to increase their numbers and tell passersby about Morningside Village. Photo by Irene ZolaIrene Zola became aware of the indignities the elderly face just a few years ago.

Her mother, who was then in her 90s, broke several bones and later suffered a massive stroke. The family agreed to put her in a nursing home, assuming she’d be well cared for.

Zola went to check on her mother a few hours after she was admitted to the facility, and was shocked to find her in a dim room, moaning in pain on a bed soaked with urine, having waited hours for someone to help. Zola immediately started making arrangements to have her mother come live with her, but her mother died before that could happen. “I didn’t foresee what was going to happen. And so I decided to do something for all the other people whose daughters and sons don’t know better, and for those who don’t have daughters and sons.”

Morningside Village That is what Zola’s Morningside Village is all about. Its impact is felt by people like 97-year-old Dolores Saborido, who broke several bones in two falls. After a brief stay at a rehabilitation center, she was sent home, bedridden, with only untrained help. “Things looked black,” says Saborido, until a friend introduced her to Irene Zola. “That was a wonderful discovery. And my life has been absolutely turned around since I met Irene. Thank God.” After just one year, the Morningside Village roster has grown to 50 volunteers and 32 seniors. Zola says that because each senior’s needs and each volunteer’s strengths are unique, matches are carefully made.

“There are a few seniors who are very confused about their paperwork, [and] about paying their bills, for example. We have volunteers who do that. We have seniors who have had falls in the time we’ve known them, so we are looking around to assess their homes for safety and to find ways to create fall prevention.” Volunteers also prepare home-cooked foods and, because Morningside Village is a community, the chicken soup flows both ways, says Zola, who has gained about two kilograms just this year from all the meals she has been offered while visiting “her” elders. “They love to feed us and show their gratitude that way and their appreciation, and we love to eat with them.” Elder-care options Photo by Irene ZolaZola says the need for alternative models of eldercare, such as Morningside Village, is becoming increasingly urgent given currents trends: an aging population, increasing longevity, cuts in health care, decreasing government spending on the elderly, the distance of families from their old relatives and the fact that there are too few physicians specializing in the needs of the elderly. “There is a tremendous looming crisis on the horizon. In fact, it is already with us and it’s only going to get worse,” she says.”That’s why Morningside Village is so important a model of what can be done in a community.” Morningside Village also benefits younger community members.

Volunteers speak about the satisfaction and joy of helping others, and partnerships with local universities and hospitals are strengthening neighborhood networks.

A high-end photography book depicting the elderly in a positive light is in the works, and Morningside Village is creating an interactive website feature that will help communities around the country to create grassroots eldercare organizations of their own.

Inquiries, comments and suggestions are welcomed and can be emailed to Info@MorningsideVillage.org.

Or, write to:

Morningside Village P. O. Box 250402 New York, NY 10025

Or, for our phone number, click this link: Morningside Village phone number.

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by Reviewer & Lifeforce-in-later-years.org (LiLY)
LiLY, Lifeforce in Later Years, was founded in 2009 by a group of concerned people whose experiences with their elder parents or other relatives were eye-opening. They found that families are often caught off guard in meeting the challenges that they face when an elderly member is no longer able to function independently. They found that in our culture, individuals generally do not know about the hardships that can befall an aging loved one. And, they found a care system which does not effectively respond. LiLY’s founder, Irene Zola, is a firm believer in the power of critical thinking and creative collaborations. After the death of her mother, Faye Zola (1911-2008), she met with like-minded associates to create an organization that would provide life-affirming programs, all aimed at confronting the issues that faced her mother...In February, 2009, the Board of Directors of LiLY began its work. It decided that in order to truly make changes for today’s seniors, some of its programs need to be local. But, in order to make changes that will benefit tomorrow’s seniors, some of its programs need a broader national scope. And with that, a number of exciting program ideas have emerged....