Richard Whitecross

Richard Whitecross - Asylum Welcome

Fundraising for Asylum Welcome
£507
raised
by 17 supporters
Donations cannot currently be made to this page
Participants: Richard Whitecross
Asylum Welcome

Verified by JustGiving

RCN 1092265
We help asylumseekers, refugees & detainees to live in dignity with hope for the future

Story

Richard James Whitecross

28 July 1945 - 6 November 2009

 

Richard was diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer's disease in 2003.

He donated his brain and spine to University College London (Queen Square Brain Bank) for dementia research.

Cristina, Mathew, and Thomas would like to thank their friends and family for their love and support.

Donations can be made here in Richard's memory. Thank you for your generosity.

 

Asylum Welcome

Richard was a great supporter of Asylum Welcome.

He helped the charity in their effort to assist refugees in a number of ways.

He visited asylum seekers in a local detention centre and helped them avoid deportation. He organised their legal and medical support, and tried to find accommodation and work for them on their release. He also arranged free English language tuition.

 

We have also set up two other pages in Richard's name, for those who would prefer to donate elsewhere:

 

The Clive Project

www.justgiving.com/richardwhitecrossthecliveproject

Amnesty International

www.justgiving.com/richardwhitecrossamnestyinternational

 

The Guardian Newspaper

Other Lives Obituary

7 December 2009

Richard Whitecross, who has died of Alzheimer’s disease aged 64, had an incredibly varied and full life – as a publisher, campaigner, translator and devoted family man – characterised by his generous, gentle spirit, quiet courage and offbeat sense of humour. He had an innate ability to touch the lives of people he met.


As a post-war baby, far younger than his brothers Mike and David, Richard spent much of his childhood alone; this solitary upbringing fuelled his love of books, and led to his reading English at .  His adventurous spirit exhibited itself early on, when after university he travelled to to visit David, and embarked on various escapades – climbing Kilimanjaro, hitchhiking through the , and visiting nomadic tribes with a photographer – before being mugged in a shantytown, giving him a distinctive machete scar on his cheek.


Always in search of fresh experiences, Richard began a new life as a publisher in , representing various publishing houses, including Oxford University Press. Soon after his arrival, he met a lecturer, Cristina, and fell in love. They were married six months later.


The political situation in Latin America was deteriorating, and after the 1973 military coup in , Richard and Cristina became politically active, attending rallies and hiding refugees in their apartment, at great personal risk. Like thousands of others in ’s “dirty war”, the couple were arrested by the secret police and “disappeared”. Lucky to survive, they were imprisoned for six months inside the notorious Villa Devoto detention centre, but thanks to a concerted campaign by friends, family, Amnesty International, Reuters, The Buenos Aires Herald, and the ASTMS trade union, which Richard belonged to, they were eventually released and exiled.


Twelve years ago, Richard first started exhibiting signs of forgetfulness, causing problems at work. Cristina began to suspect it might be Alzheimer’s, but it took two years for the diagnosis to be confirmed. From someone who had been so patient, thoughtful and kind, he was transformed by bouts of paranoia, hallucinations and anger. His deterioration was rapid and heartbreaking. Mercifully, once this initial stage had passed, he returned to his normal temperament, and regained his sense of humour and good nature, even as his memory waned. He still responded to jazz and to the Marx Brothers films he had always enjoyed, and remained a loving father and husband to the end.

He is survived by Cristina, Mat, Tom, and his beloved golden retriever Tommy.

 

 

About the charity

Asylum Welcome

Verified by JustGiving

RCN 1092265
Working respectfully alongside refugees, asylum seekers & migrants at risk of detention. Providing a warm welcome, trusted advice & a range of volunteer-run services to maintain safety & build confidence. Advocating for a fairer asylum system.

Donation summary

Total raised
£507.00
+ £121.85 Gift Aid
Online donations
£507.00
Offline donations
£0.00

* Charities pay a small fee for our service. Find out how much it is and what we do for it.