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Jonathan Boyd

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Jonathan Boyd,

Jonathan Boyd

Opinion

We must ask these three questions

The potential for Jews to be seen as stereotypes is only likely to grow, with all the perils that entails

August 3, 2017 11:25
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2 min read

Since publishing the JPR/Board of Deputies report on synagogue membership last month, I have been asked many questions about its findings.

Is the problem that young adults aren’t joining synagogues until much later than they used to? Is it that religious conservatism is preventing synagogues from evolving into attractive modern institutions? Is the British Jewish community destined to become a “tale of two cities”, based only in London and Manchester?

These are all good questions. But underpinning them are three deeper questions, all of which, I believe, ought to find their way on to the agenda of the community.

First: is Jewish belonging as a whole in decline, or are patterns of belonging simply changing? The report finds a decline of 20 per cent in synagogue membership since 1990, caused partly by demography, partly by disengagement. However, we also know that there are many other ways in which people can “belong” to the Jewish community that are not captured by the report’s findings. People can be members of Jewish organisations other than synagogues, or attend a synagogue regularly without being a member. They can be strongly committed to an alternative or “pop-up” minyan that doesn’t have a formal membership scheme, or they can feel a close affinity to a synagogue without ever paying membership dues.

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