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Simon Rocker

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Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

Analysis

European Jewry vibrant and growing, says report

November 4, 2010 16:29
1 min read

When I searched "European Jewry" recently in our electronic archive, the results came accompanied with words like "Holocaust" or "annihilation". It is as if the Jewish communities of the continent could only be defined in reference to the catastrophic past.

So it is refreshing to see a report which is unashamedly upbeat: European Jewry is "confident, vibrant and growing", according to the The 2010 Survey of New Jewish Initiatives.

It was produced by Jumpstart, a Los-Angeles based organisation set up to encourage Jewish innovation, which found that over the past decade more than 200 new Jewish organisations have been launched in Europe.

When you take account of the relative Jewish populations, this means that there have been almost twice as many Jewish start-ups per capita in Europe as in the US. The findings might surprise some people, observed the report's general editor, Shawn Landres. "The perception that Jewish life in Europe is about memorialising the past, or shoring up shrinking populations of increasingly assimilated Jews is not what we found," he wrote.