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Religious leaders call for ‘a more compassionate narrative’ on migration

HIAS+JCORE spearheaded a letter to the PM after the announcement of the government’s immigration reforms

May 19, 2025 12:46
The Prime Minister Keir Starmer holds a press conference on immigration at Downing Street (Photo: Getty Images)
The Prime Minister Keir Starmer holds a press conference on immigration at Downing Street (Photo: Getty Images)
2 min read

Jewish leaders have joined forces with heads of Christian and Muslim communities to express “deep concern” over the government’s language and approach with regard to migration.

In a letter sent to the Prime Minister, signed by more than 30 senior faith leaders, they said the language he used to announce the government’s proposals and the wording in the immigration White Paper presented “only one side of the debate” and would “only drive public anxiety and entrench polarisation”. The letter was coordinated by Jewish refugee charity HIAS+JCORE.

In his speech at 10 Downing Street, Sir Keir Starmer said that without new rules around immigration, “we risk becoming an island of strangers”. While this line was not referred to in the letter, some critics have said it was evocative of Enoch Powell’s controversial “rivers of blood” speech in 1968, in which the latter criticised immigration from the Commonwealth to the UK.

The signatories, who included Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg, senior rabbi of Masorti Judaism, Rabbi Anna Wolfson, co-chair of the Conference of Liberal Rabbis and Cantors and Rabbi Robyn Ashworth-Steen, co-chair of the Reform Assembly of Rabbis and Cantors, wrote: “When you refer to the ‘incalculable’ damage done by uncontrolled migration, you are in danger of harming migrant members of our communities and strengthening those who would divide us.”