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So is your voice being heard yet?

Ten years ago, a controversial report called for changes in the way the views of the community are represented to the outside world. What has changed over those years?

December 30, 2009 13:46
The 2009 demonstration in Trafalgar Square supporting Operation Cast Lead did not represent the entire community — but did reveal that Israel is a burning issue

By

Winston Pickett

5 min read

A decade is a big distance from which to judge the impact of a report — especially when the circumstances that prompted it seem to have taken place in a different era altogether.

More than anything else, the Commission on Representation of the Interests of British Jews — formed by the Institute for Jewish Policy Research (IJPR) — and its Communities of Communities report were born out of a frustration and dissatisfaction with the status quo.

The opening lines of the report captured some of the collective angst. Straddling diplomacy and candour, it pointed to “disenfranchised” segments of British Jewry — “from the strictly Orthodox to the Progressive” — particularly “women, the younger generation and the unaffiliated” who “do not feel the present representational structures meet their needs”.

Elsewhere the report was still more blunt. “There has been a persistent and increasing grumble of complaint,” the report said, “that the Chief Rabbinate and the Board of Deputies are unrepresentative and ineffectual.”