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Jonathan Boyd

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Jonathan Boyd,

Jonathan Boyd

Opinion

A continental shift in population

150 years ago, only about 10 per cent of world Jewry did not live in Europe. Today, only about 10 per cent of world Jewry remains there.

April 12, 2017 12:09
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3 min read

The head of the Service de Protection de la Communauté Juive — the French equivalent of the CST — doesn’t use her surname in public. She has been advised not to; it is simply too dangerous. The antisemitic threat there is all too real and, while most French Jews are staying put, many are leaving. Close to 22,000 have made aliyah in the past five years, almost five per cent of the whole.

The director of the Jewish community of Athens is struggling with the economic crisis in Greece. A key source of communal income has typically come from real estate but that has seen a dramatic drop. And, with unemployment rising, tax increases and capital controls, the community is becoming ever more reliant on financial aid from international Jewish organisations based in Israel or the United States.

In Istanbul, the leaders of “Generation Next” are trying to remain upbeat in the aftermath of last year’s coup and Erdoğan’s increasingly authoritarian policies. They continue to run activities for young adults, but many are looking for ways out — perhaps to Israel, although Spain looks like a viable option for some.

A leader of Lisbon’s small Jewish community laughs despairingly at philosophical questions about how to strengthen young people’s Jewish identities. He’s more concerned about the fundamental community infrastructure — keeping the synagogue open, maintaining the chevra kadisha and gaining access to kosher food.