People like Matt Hancock and George Osborne show little respect for the process, but we bereaved families won’t give up

My uncle left a message on our answering machine on 14 March 2020. It was a Saturday evening. “I’m not well, I’m in the hospital, they said it’s Covid.” My dad listened to it the following morning and immediately started getting ready. As he was about to leave, the hospital phoned, saying he needed to come urgently. By the time my dad arrived, my uncle Roy had died.

Roy was the eldest of four brothers, born in Clapham, south London in 1938. My father was the youngest. “It was always good when it was my birthday, because I got a present from them all,” recalls my dad. The brothers were decorators, often working together and mixing in the same social circles. In his final years, Roy moved into a residential care home. He was always out and about in the local shopping centre, never without his daily paper. He and my dad were close, and Roy would often come round for his favourite meals: spaghetti bolognese or a fried egg sandwich.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

On ‘SNL,’ Jim Carrey Steps Aside for Alex Moffat, the New ‘Joe Biden’

By John Jurgensen Close John Jurgensen Dec. 20, 2020 12:18 am ET…

Pelé joins calls for Brazil to step up search for pair missing in Amazon

Three-time World Cup winner joined sports, culture and media figures in calling…

Iran’s supreme leader calls wave of schoolgirl poisonings ‘unforgivable’

More than 1,000 girls across country have reportedly suffered ‘mild poison’ attacks…