The Jewish Chronicle

Shuls and black churches in CCJ dialogue venture

- BY SIMON ROCKER

THE COUNCIL of Christians and Jews has initiated a new programme to encourage dialogue between synagogues and black majority Christian congregati­ons.

Groups from London, Leeds and Leicester took part in the launch event last week, which was addressed by Rabbi Joseph Dweck, head of the S & P Sephardi Community and one of the CCJ’s five Jewish presidents.

He was joined by the Rev Dr Israel Olofinjana, director of the One People Commission at the Evangelica­l Alliance, and Canon Lusa Nsenga-Ngoy, black and minority ethnic mission and ministry enabler to Leicester Diocese.

The CCJ is looking to twin two black majority congregati­ons with synagogues.

CCJ chair Bishop Michael Ipgrave said that “in a time of growing social polarisati­on, this initiative is welcome. CCJ has the capacity to lead on these issues within the UK and we would also welcome the opportunit­y to work with like-minded partners across Europe.”

Rabbi Dweck spoke of the experience of being a minority within a minority.

“There is a special bond between Jews, particular­ly Sephardi Jews, and people of colour,’ he told the JC afterwards. “I welcome this initiative and look forward to its results.”

Canon Nsenga-Ngoy recalled his emigration as a child from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Belgium.

Reflecting on the transgener­ational traumas of the Holocaust and the transatlan­tic slave trade, Dr Olofinjana said: “We cannot forget — but we can go on a journey together to experience healing.”

CCJ interim director Nathan Eddy observed that “there was a time when this sort of dialogue would have been seen as niche. But no longer. There is broad interest in these conversati­ons.”

He noted the reports on race published last year by the Board of Deputies and the Church of England, both of which were released on Stephen Lawrence Day, commemorat­ing the murder of the black South London teenager in 1993.

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