The Jewish Chronicle

HEIM FROM HOME ON CANVEY ISLAND

- JENNI FRAZER

THE TRULY remarkable thing about the BBC’s programme, Canvey: The Promised Island, is that it was made at all.

So many attempts have been made over the years to portray the Strictly Orthodox community, and so many of them have ended in failure — often because of the understand­able reluctance of the community to be filmed, photograph­ed or interviewe­d.

But filmmaker Riete Oord, who produced and directed this winning documentar­y, struck gold when she came across this gift of a story, the move of Chasidic Jews to the improbable Essex enclave of Canvey Island, in a desperate attempt to find more space for their families.

Oord’s film depended on three pillars: the Chasid Naftali who, with his wife Miriam, longed for a decent place outside Stamford Hill to bring up their growing brood; the less Orthodox but knowledgea­ble Jewish neighbour Steve, who acted as a sort of interprete­r for the Chasidim and the Canvey Islanders; and finally and most bizarrely Chris Fenwick, the long-time manager of the pub rock band, Dr Feelgood, said to be Canvey Island’s greatest export.

As Oord’s commentary made clear, Canvey Island is an odd destinatio­n for any kind of outsider, let alone Chasidic Jews. It is said to be 70 per cent white and Christian, and its church is packed on Sundays to hear rousing sermons from its Barbados-born minister, the Rev David Tudor.

Seventy per cent is a number which resonates in Stamford Hill, too — that’s the number of

Jewish families dependent on child and housing benefits. And only 15 per cent of the Strictly Orthodox men are in full-time employment.

Canvey Island, if it has a mindset, is just as insular in its own way as the incoming Chasidim. St George’s flags flutter from buildings and many of the residents pronounce themselves English, rather than British. They are utterly pro-Brexit and if you were looking for the most unsuitable place in Britain to put a group of Strictly Orthodox, strangely-dressed Chasidim, Canvey would be high on the list.

But that is reckoning without the cheerful optimism of Chris Fenwick, who is absolutely determined — despite the many hurdles in his way — to welcome the newcomers to Canvey. Not everyone is of the same mind as Chris: Barry, due to be the next mayor, is dubious about the level of integratio­n possible between the two communitie­s and expresses unhappines­s when a group of Jewish women venture on to the beach — but as far away from Canvey sunbathers as they can be.

“Why are they so far away?” worries Barry. But the women, many of whom have plainly never had the opportunit­y to take their children to the beach before, are quietly enjoying themselves, even if it does mean splashing about in the sea fully dressed. Almost certainly they don’t want to sit next to the Canveyites for reasons of modesty — and because they are unsure of the welcome.

The veteran Stamford Hill housing guru, Ita Symons, is more aware than most of previous attempts to break out of the London neighbourh­ood in a bid to garner more space.

She recalls a trial in Milton Keynes. “But the animosity we experience­d there! And then I was told about Canvey Island. And I went, and I was impressed”. It was the warmth of the welcome which impressed her, which doesn’t reflect well on Milton Keynes.

The Chasidim, according to the film, are taking things slowly. The community now own 30 houses on Canvey and one of the loveliest moments is when Naftali, living in near squalor in Stamford Hill, sees for the first time the property he hopes to rent — the garden, he tells the builder, is 12 times the size of his present home.

A benefactor has bought an unused Canvey school which has been turned into a temporary shul and community centre. Fresh meat and fish deliveries will arrive weekly from London until the community sets up its own shops.

In a meet-and-greet, fraught with possible pitfalls, a heavily tattooed Canvey Islander insists to a Chasidic chef that he has to come and open a bagel shop — “and I’ll be your best customer!” he roars. The chef nods nervously, unsure whether the tattooed Biff (yes, that really is his name) is winding him up.

It’s left to Ita Symons to thank the Canvey Islanders, whom she refers to as “the non-Jewish community” — I doubt whether the Canveyites have ever defined themselves in that way before — for “being so warm and welcoming to us. I hope we will not let you down”.

It’s fine, now. But I wonder whether the delicate relationsh­ip between Canvey and the Chasidim will survive a tripling of the current Jewish population. Let’s see in a year’s time.

Come and open a bagel shop here, I’ll buy them!

THE HEAD of a housing associatio­n which works with the strictly Orthodox Jewish community has said high property prices is pushing Jews out of Stamford Hill.

Suzanne Wolfe, chief executive of Industrial Dwellings Society (IDS) which manages over 1,500 homes across London, said the Jewish neighbourh­ood’s costs were being driven up by a shortage of suitable housing.

“Stamford Hill is just simply full. High property prices in London are forcing Jews to more outlying areas.”

Estimates put the strictly Orthodox community in Stamford Hill at around 30,000, growing at a rate of five per cent annually.

IDS has housed four Stamford Hill families in

Canvey Island, Essex, where there is a growing Orthodox community, as featured in a BBC documentar­y this week. “The families were in absolutely dire housing need,” Ms Wolfe said. “For one family, the housing conditions were so abysmal, the ceiling had collapsed in one of the rooms where the children were playing. One child had to snatch another child out of the way of falling masonry.

“I handed the keys to the father who said to me: ‘You’ve got to us just in time. We couldn’t have managed another year.’”

IDS was establishe­d in 1885 by Nathan Rothschild to improve living conditions for Jews in the overcrowde­d East End of London and continues to specialise in “culturally specific housing”. It manages more than 1,000 homes in the borough of Hackney alone, and plans to build more than 500 homes over the next ten years, particular­ly in areas outside London such as Hertsmere.

 ?? PHOTOS: BBC PICTURES ?? Exploring the beach
PHOTOS: BBC PICTURES Exploring the beach
 ??  ?? New neighbours
New neighbours
 ?? PHOTO: IDS ?? Suzanne Wolfe
PHOTO: IDS Suzanne Wolfe

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