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Jonathan Boyd

ByJonathan Boyd, Jonathan Boyd

Opinion

Belonging to a shul matters

The standard assumption about why this has happened is that former members have simply lost interest. But is this true, asks Jonathan Boyd.

July 6, 2017 10:27
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3 min read

The trend continues. Synagogue membership figures have been declining for at least a generation, if not considerably longer. Indeed, since 1990, they have fallen by 20 per cent, from about 100,000 member households to about 80,000 today, a loss of 776 on average per annum. Expressed slightly differently, of every five households holding synagogue membership in 1990, one no longer does.

The standard assumption about why this has happened is that one former member has simply lost interest. Judaism no longer compels or engages: time formerly spent in synagogue is now dedicated instead to other more compelling tasks, such as saving the whales, demonising Israel or checking Facebook.

But is this true? Might that former member be doing something else instead? Might there be an alternative explanation?

It turns out that there is, to some degree at least. It’s true to say that they no longer participate in Jewish life. It’s true to say that they no longer make any tangible contribution to our community at all. It’s even true to say that they remain cold in the face of any Jewish communal concern. But the reason for this is not because they don’t care about Jewish life any more. On the contrary, they spend every moment of every day in a Jewish space. The only problem is that the space they spend time in is a Jewish cemetery.