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Opinion

Let's not let Margate die

Is the decline of Margate's Jewish community inevitable? Not at all, says Keren David

October 3, 2017 13:02
Margate beach at low tide
1 min read

How sad to hear that Margate’s shul cancelled its High Holy Day services this year, because they could not muster a minyan. The synagogue chairman explains that there are only eight regular worshippers. Young Jews move away, he says, “because there is nothing here for them”.

Nothing? I don’t think so. Let’s have a little more fighting spirit. Margate has a huge amount to offer Jews, young and old.

There’s a beautiful beach, and the glorious Turner Contemporary art gallery on the seafront. The town has become a magnet for hipsters, and is gentrifying furiously. There are vintage shops, cafes serving smashed avocado even a  a mysterious shell grotto. And it’s less than two hours by train to London.

Biggest draw of all, are the house prices. Struggling to afford a one-bed terrace in Borehamwood (the UK’s most miserable area, according to official statistics released this week)? £300,000 in Margate would get you a five-bedroom family home.