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Richard Verber

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Richard Verber,

Richard Verber

Opinion

Are you on Board for change?

April 19, 2012 15:42
2 min read

I am coming to the end of my first year on the Board of Deputies. As I sat in one of the monthly meetings a few weeks ago, I thought: it doesn't need to be like this.

Meetings are long and rarely run to schedule. Agendas are published, but there is often insufficient time to deal with the matters of the day. Contributing new ideas is difficult and what goes on behind the scenes is opaque at best. Deputies are often frustrated by the process, the unclear rules, and the general malaise that settles at the end of most meetings. For the benefit of the community, this must change.

The deputies are good people, who willingly give their time to serve the community. Many travel hundreds of miles to make it to London on a Sunday morning. But they are painfully unrepresentative of the community. Just 25 per cent are women, with 196 men out of a total of 260 deputies, despite women outnumbering men in the community. The entire executive is male, too. The Board is missing out on dozens and dozens of talented women who could - and should be encouraged to -offer their expertise.

Younger members of our community are also underrepresented. It is wonderful that meetings often begin with "Mazal Tovs", such as a deputy celebrating his 60th birthday. But it is dreadful that, at 60, the gentleman in question is one of the youngest in the room. According to the 2001 census, 12.4 per cent of British Jews are over 75, yet 26 per cent of deputies are over 71. About 25 per cent of British Jews are aged between 20 and 40, but that age group makes up just seven per cent of the current deputies. For the benefit of the community, this, too, must change.

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