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The Jewish Chronicle

Analysis: Central issues the report glosses over

July 17, 2008 23:00

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

1 min read

Running to more than 80 pages, The Future of Jewish Schools — the report of the Jewish Leadership Council commission — is perhaps more interesting for what it does not say.

If mainstream Jewish secondary schools in London are likely to face a struggle to fill their places within a few years, then one question is bound to be asked. Is there any point in opening the Jewish Community Secondary School (JCoSS), scheduled to take its first students in two years?

Abandoning JCoSS is not an option explored by the report — which is hardly a surprise, since the Reform, Liberal and Masorti movements would not contemplate it. Even if the demographic data suggests there is probably only room for five mainstream Jewish schools in the capital rather than the six including JCoSS, the non-Orthodox will still argue that at least one of them should be cross-communal.

In any case, plans for JCoSS appear too well-advanced for a rethink. A possible alternative — jettisoning JCoSS and turning JFS into the cross-communal school, for example — is simply not on the agenda. The Orthodox authorities would be loth to relinquish control of Britain’s largest Jewish school.