MASADA KIDS EMBODY VALUE OF CHESED

Students make posters, cards for vulnerable

Masada College students have been lifting the spirits of Montefiore residents and frontline hospital workers by making special cards.

Masada ELC students Evie Black and Jake Freedman.
Masada ELC students Evie Black and Jake Freedman.

Masada College students have been working hard to lift the spirits of those in the community who are struggling as a result of COVID-19.

They have been preparing cards and posters for the residents of Montefiore Home in Hunters Hill. It has been a challenging time for the residents, who endured 14 days of isolation over Rosh Hashanah, due to a COVID-19 case.

Masada Cottage ELC children have been discussing kindness, compassion and ways to perform mitzvot.

After their teachers explained how many elderly people at the Montefiore homes are unable to have their family visit them due to COVID, the children agreed that colourful posters would help put a smile on their faces. They felt enormous pride, knowing the posters will be displayed in the Montefiore dining room.

Masada College Junior School students were also keen to show how much they care and make a difference in their community. They made personalised Rosh Hashanah cards for each Montefiore resident.

Masada ELC students Aylah Sacks and Ezra Sher.

Head of Junior School, Danielle Blumberg said, “The students wrote heart-warming messages to the residents, knowing that they would be alone for Rosh Hashanah.

“The act embodies the Masada value of inclusion and the Jewish value of chesed.”

The students also made thank-you cards for frontline workers and children in the COVID ward at Westmead Hospital.

This week they are creating cards to send messages to cheer up the staff members in the Northern Beaches Hospital ICU ward.

“I am very proud of the way all our students have shown such resilience during this lockdown,” said Blumberg.

“The care our students have demonstrated and their understanding of the impact the pandemic is having on particularly vulnerable groups has shown a maturity beyond their years.”

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