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Miriam Shaviv

ByMiriam Shaviv, Miriam Shaviv

Opinion

Your community needs you!

I invite JC readers to email me with ideas for the improvement of Anglo-Jewish life, and will publish the best

February 25, 2010 14:07
2 min read

How can we improve our community? Many of us have probably had strong - even radical - ideas over the years, but few opportunities to act on them. As in most communities, individuals have relatively little clout.

Anglo-Jewry is certainly characterised by powerful, centralised institutions and deep-seated traditions. While this has many advantages - such as wide-ranging services and a sense of rootedness - there are also disadvantages. These include a tendency to rely on top-down management, and complacency about change. It seems a high price to pay. With our numbers and resources rapidly shrinking, we need every good idea we can get.

In America, media outlets have recently been engaged in a marathon effort to find new ideas that could "transform the Jewish future". Their offerings - 59 in all - include sending young Jews to spend time in far-flung communities; an artists' residency; an organisation that would tailor individual programmes of Jewish experiences to the unaffiliated; an internet programme that would allow each family to create a personal haggadah; and many other innovative proposals.

We need to do some brainstorming here, too. So, during March, I am going to feature on my JC blog "21 ideas to transform our Jewish community". Each working day, I will be publishing one original, practical suggestion for Anglo-Jewry. I hope the project will not only generate discussion but that the best ideas will actually be taken up. I have invited community personalities to contribute but I also invite readers to email me with their own ideas, and will feature the best ones.