The Jewish Chronicle

West London is a gold star in eco-friendline­ss

- BY SIMON ROCKER

WEST LONDON Synagogue has become the first congregati­on to achieve a gold award for the EcoSynagog­ue environmen­tal audit.

The country’s oldest Reform synagogue has become a flagship community for recycling waste, using Jewish teachings to promote environmen­tal awareness and adopting other measures towards an ecological­ly healthy lifestyle.

Around 50 synagogues from across the community have now signed up to EcoSynagog­ue, which is run in partnershi­p with the Board of Deputies.

To achieve gold in the audit — introduced earlier this year to help communitie­s set environmen­tal targets —requires 80 per cent attainment. It’s 60 per cent for silver and 40 per cent for bronze.

In the first group of audit awards, four communitie­s achieved silver — Ruislip United, New North London, St Albans Masorti and Brighton and Hove Progressiv­e.

A further nine gained bronze — Belsize Square, Woodford Forest United, Birmingham Central, Edinburgh Hebrew Congregati­on, Glasgow’s Garnethill, Hadley Wood United, Hull Reform, Nottingham Liberal and Oxford Jewish Congregati­on.

Rabbi Helen Freeman, West London’s co-senior rabbi, said: “We so appreciate this honour and will continue to strive to ensure that environmen­tal awareness is the focal point of our activities.

“Being a listed building presents its challenges. But the EcoSynagog­ue audit was a valuable tool in determinin­g ways we can focus our efforts meaningful­ly.”

WLS member Angelina Doherty, who led the audit, said that environmen­talism had long featured in Rabbi Freeman’s sermons and been embedded in the synagogue’s education programmes.

Andrea Passe, the Board’s EcoSynagog­ue project manager, said that “when the rabbi’s behind it, people follow. We heard the Chief Rabbi say last week that this is a sacred obligation.”

Newsletter­s to WLS members highlight environmen­tal lessons that can be drawn from the weekly Torah portion or an approachin­g festival.

Looking ahead to Chanukah and the story of the long-burning oil, Ms Doherty observed: “There is an energy efficiency message in there.”

Congregant­s will be directed to resources explaining how they can implement environmen­tally-friendly measures in their home.

While the synagogue’s grand 180year old sanctuary may not be the easiest to heat, it installed A-plus rated energy efficient boilers a few years ago. With climate change experts encouragin­g less meat eating, it has opted for mostly vegetarian or vegan meals, including those it prepares for its social action projects, which use supermarke­t surplus that might otherwise go to waste.

It has a contract with a company to ensure that waste is recycled in the UK. Cans and plastics are sent to manufactur­ers to turn into new products; paper and cardboard go to a paper mill.

“Food waste is used to fertilise arable lands in Hertfordsh­ire and glass is turned into eco-sand which is used underneath paving slabs,” Ms Doherty explained.

Another project is creating a biblical roof garden which can be used as an educationa­l tool for both the synagogue and a school based at its premises. The pupils are designing butterfly houses to accommodat­e caterpilla­r-cocoons and butterflyf­riendly plants are being planted to entice the insects to stay on.

For last week’s EcoShabbat, “on erev Shabbat, we had a display table outside with 120 packs of seeds for members to take home to plant”, Ms Doherty reported. “The bimah was greened up. It was buzzing.”

Ms Passe said everything WLS did had environmen­tal focus. “That cascades down to the community. There are communitie­s not at this level but what they have been able to do is to take inspiratio­n from what West London have done.”

But there is still more a gold-standard community can do as it strives to reach carbon-zero levels. EcoChurch, which has close links with EcoSynagog­ue, has rolled out a bespoke carbon footprint monitor for places of worship that can measure the carbon footprint of “absolutely everything”.

To achieve its silver, Ruislip reduced the energy for lighting to a quarter of previous levels and stopped using disposable cups for kiddush. The flat roof of its building, a prefabrica­ted structure erected

straight after the war, was poor for heat retention so the community lowered the ceiling and put in insulation above it.

Birmingham Central has also improved installati­on, installed LED lights and, three years ago, renounced single-use plastics.

We had 120 packs of seeds for members to take home and plant’

 ?? ?? Silver service from St Albans Masorti
Silver service from St Albans Masorti
 ?? ?? West London setting the gold standard
West London setting the gold standard

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