Family & Education

Clifton College’s Jewish ‘family’

The boarding house in Bristol opened in 1878 to enable the sons of the Anglo-Jewish gentry to enjoy a public school education while still being able to practise their faith

October 27, 2017 13:50
clifton college.jpg

By

Simon Rocker,

simon rocker

2 min read

In 2005, Polack’s, the Jewish boarding house at Clifton College, Bristol closed. A product of Victorian liberalism, it opened in 1878 to enable the sons of the Anglo-Jewish gentry to enjoy a public school education while still being able to practise their faith.

But the name Polack’s lives on, as does Jewish life at Clifton. The school maintains a Jewish centre for pupils. The Polack’s House Educational Trust offers scholarships to Jewish boys and girls from the age of 11 of up to half the fees (now £38,000 a year for upper-school boarders). And a year ago the college engaged Lauren Chiren to run its Jewish enrichment programme.

Ms Chiren, who is originally from Glasgow, knows the college well since she is a parent of a pupil herself and has lived in Bristol for a number of years. Saul started at the college’s nursery in 2009. “It was the only school that had a Jewish connection. That to me was very important. They actively supported Jewish children who came in; that was the reason I chose Clifton.”

She has enjoyed a varied career — helping the Home Office roll out electronic monitoring for offenders, working as a sports therapist and, most recently, setting up a business to coach individuals and organisations on dealing with the menopause.

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