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The Jewish Chronicle

It’s hard to be a Jew, especially in a recession

Communal bodies, families and individuals are facing stark choices if Jewish life is to be maintained

January 8, 2009 17:38

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

2 min read

The harsh winds of recession have started to make an impact on the Jewish community. Donors have cut back pledges, synagogue bodies are laying off staff and one institution has already gone to the wall. MST College, in North-West London, which specialised in teacher training for strictly Orthodox schools, closed at the end of last month.

MST may not be the only casualty. Despite the falling Jewish population, the number of Jewish charities has been increasing at more than five per cent annually in the UK in recent years.

Compared to a figure of 0.3 charities for every 100 people in England and Wales generally, there are nine Jewish charities for every 100 Jewish people. That rate of growth surely could not have continued even in good times and, in this difficult economic climate, many charities are bound to struggle.

The question is: should market forces simply be allowed to do their work and the survival of charities left to donor choice?