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Presidential ‘fatwa’ keeps Stoke’s minyan men in line

v How does a shul with 21 active members attract a minyan to most of its weekly Friday night services?

December 9, 2016 14:59
Martin Morris (left) and Bishop Michael at the 10th anniversary celebrations

By

Barry Toberman,

By Barry Toberman

1 min read

“I issue a fatwa,” jokes Martin Morris, who leads Stoke-on-Trent and North Staffordshire Hebrew Congregation. “They only made me president because I don’t get embarrassed about being rude to people. I tell them they have to turn up and pay their subs.”

The synagogue — the only one in the county — held a service recently celebrating its 10th anniversary in its current premises in Newcastle-under-Lyme. But there has been a Jewish community in the area since 1873 and at its peak in the 1920s, the shul had a membership of 175 families.

Mr Morris — who is following in the presidential footsteps of his late father Sydney — points out that the last Census suggested a Jewish population of 400 in Stoke-on-Trent. “We only hear about them when they die [the shul is one of the few attached to a cemetery].”

The Friday night minyan does not look lost in an intimate prayer space seating four dozen. The ark, bimah and stained-glass windows were transferred from its former premises in Hanley, where a rabbi was retained until 1966.

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