Hospice Wellington Receives $250,000 Gift for Rural Supports
Hospice Wellington announced today that a very special gift from Klara and Oscar Bookbinder’s estate will allow them to begin a three-year pilot project in rural communities.
In honour of the care that they each received in the Hospice Wellington residence during their final days, Klara and Oscar Bookbinder’s estate has committed invested $250,000 over the next three years. In keeping with their deep affection for the rural community that welcomed them, their gift will allow the creation of a three-year pilot of the Hospice Wellington Rural Community Programs for the people of Guelph/Eramosa, Wellington County and off-site spaces in Guelph.
Peter Hannam, Executor of the Bookbinder Estate shared, “this is a tribute to the friendly, 24-hour, caring atmosphere that Hospice Wellington provided for the Bookbinders”.
The 2018 Rural Wellington Health Advisory Table’s Community Health Needs Assessment identified the rural community’s need and wish for more supports around palliative and grief programming. The project would seek to serve three groups – individuals who are dealing with their own life limiting illness, their caregivers and people who are grieving. As with all Hospice Wellington programs, individuals and families would have complementary access to these programs.
Rural communities have their own established connections, and partnering with people in their local communities can make it much easier to learn of, and to reach out for support. Hospice Wellington looks forward to working with the agencies in the community of Guelph-Eramosa, home to Klara and Oscar Bookbinder, and those within the communities of Wellington County and the City of Guelph. The impact of this gift is a monumental step for people dealing with end of life and grief. It is a shining tribute to the Bookbinder’s life-long example of welcome and inclusion.
“We are so honoured to partner with the legacy of Klara and Oscar Bookbinder. It was our privilege to serve them each at the end of their lives. Through their vision of serving others, we will be able to connect with more communities, rural and urban, to deliver programs to people closer to their own homes,” says Pat Stuart, Hospice Wellington’s executive director. “The first immediate step will be to connect with those Guelph/Eramosa and Wellington County communities that have already expressed an interest in services and speak to others to assess interest.”
Klara and Oscar Bookbinder
Klara and Oscar Bookbinder were a couple who emigrated to Canada from their native Hungary. After living in Toronto, they settled in Rockwood bringing with them a devotion to and a long history of teaching of music to children, both in Toronto and Rockwood. Their nurturing of young musicians led to both richer lives and, for some, new career paths.