Become a Member
Opinion

Time to find out once more who we really are

So much has changed within our community — and beyond — since the last major survey

November 17, 2022 14:38
GettyImages-157286694.jpg
2 min read

It was almost a decade ago — in 2013 — when the Institute for Jewish Policy Research conducted the last major national survey of Jewish identity in the UK. At that time the UK was still in the EU, Donald Trump was just a real-estate guy, a global pandemic sounded like a Hollywood movie storyline, and Benjamin Netanyahu (remember him?) was Prime Minister of Israel. Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.

That survey revealed several interesting insights about who we are. It demonstrated that we were becoming more polarised — the most Orthodox and most secular parts of the community were growing, at the expense of the centrist Orthodox middle ground. It proved that the intermarriage rate was stabilising, and posited that it may even have peaked. It showed how remarkably charitable British Jews were, and that we tended to give to general charities more than to Jewish ones. And contrary to common perception, it demonstrated that a higher proportion of younger Jews were religiously observant than older Jews — indeed, the younger we were, the more religiously observant we were likely to be.

The results helped community leaders to understand more about these trends, and the secondary analysis of the data that has been done subsequently has been used to quietly inform the policy choices of numerous community charities. But the extraordinary social and political volatility since that time — the pandemic, the economic crisis, the energy crisis, climate change, the war in Ukraine, political populism, Brexit, Israel’s military conflicts with Hamas and Islamic Jihad, increased anxiety about antisemitism — demands that we take a new look at how we understand our Jewish identities today.

Have these factors changed how we live our Jewish lives or is our Jewishness more stable than that? Is it altered by the unpredictability surrounding us or do we carry on regardless, along the same Jewish trajectories we would otherwise have done?