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Judaism

Believing and belonging: what drives European Jews

Religious belief may be weak but Jewish identity remains strong among the continent's Jews, according to a new report

February 13, 2022 11:42
German Jewry
BERLIN, GERMANY - DECEMBER 22: A member of the Jewish community wears a Kippah during a ceremony to mark the beginning of Hanukkah at a public Menorah ceremony near the Brandenburg Gate on December 22, 2019 in Berlin, Germany. Jews around the world will celebrate Hanukkah, which this year runs from December 22 to December 30. (Photo by Carsten Koall/Getty Images)
3 min read

Towards the end of Saturday’s sidrah of Tetzaveh, the second of a two-part instalment on the assembly of the Tabernacle and the kitting-out of the priesthood who will serve in it, there is an explanation of what this great national enterprise is all about. It is place where the children of Israel are  to encounter the Divine Presence. “And I will abide among the Israelites,” God says.

Across the Jewish world, there are many thousands of synagogues, institutional descendants of the Tabernacle in the wilderness. But as survey after survey has revealed, levels of religious belief among Western Jewry are strikingly low.

This was apparent again in the findings of a poll of European Jews which were published by the Institute for Jewish Policy Research this month. When asked what was very important to their sense of Jewish identity, belief in God (33 per cent) was less than half that of the top markers associated with Jewish peoplehood — remembering the Holocaust (78 per cent) and combating antisemitism (73 per cent).

More than 16,000 Jews from a dozen European countries, including the UK, took part. The information was collected in a survey primarily about antisemitism conducted by the European Union’s Fundamental Rights Agency in 2018. Now the data on Jewish identity has been analysed in a report of more than 100 pages by Daniel Staetsky, senior research fellow at JPR, and the world’s leading Jewish demographer, Hebrew University Emeritus Professor Sergio DellaPergola — a follow-up to their study of the continent’s Jewish population two years ago.