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By

Patricia Lipert

Opinion

The JC at 175: A lifeline for communities, and families, near and far

November 10, 2016 11:55
St Michael’s Mount, Penzance
1 min read

Receiving the JC each week is a cause for celebration in our house, located at the western tip of England, overlooking St Michael's Mount outside Penzance.

It arrives most weeks on Friday morning just in time for a quick read prior to Shabbat and often provides much fodder for lively discussion on Friday night when other members of the Cornish Jewish community, Kehillat Kernow, often join us for Friday night dinner.

When Jews live far away from major cities, the paper is often the only regular contact we have with the greater communities in the UK, Israel and world Jewry. The JC reminds us how we are all members of the family of Israel, all circles within circles, and how deeply embedded these connections and responsibilities are.

There are many reasons why the JC is so vital to those of us living in the hinterlands. First, most Cornish Jews have come from somewhere else: other parts of the UK, Europe, the Middle East, south-east Asia, and America, representing both Sephardi and Ashkenazi traditions.