The Jewish Chronicle

Irresistib­le change

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Three weeks ago, the Campaign Against Antisemiti­sm did not exist. Three months from now, it might no longer. As a pop-up campaign, it might just as easily pop down. In the new, social media-driven, grassroots-organised world, success and failure are no longer measured by longevity and standing but by immediate impact. Its swiftly organised rally on Sunday drew an estimated 4,500 people — including the Chief Rabbi and the President of the Board of Deputies. And that is the real point. The rally is a physical manifestat­ion of a change that could, sooner rather than later, render simply irrelevant the establishe­d bodies and methods of our community leadership. In recent weeks, we have reported the widespread dissatisfa­ction with the response to rising antisemiti­sm by the Board and the Jewish Leadership Council. In earlier times, that dissatisfa­ction might have produced a lot of moaning, some angry letters to the

and nothing else.

But in a world where Facebook and Twitter can link millions in minutes, the like-minded can now organise new campaigns overnight. Which is how a group of previously unheralded grass-roots activists put together the biggest communal rally of the year. And how they secured the presence of the Chief Rabbi and the President of the Board. Both have been criticised for doing too little — and were effectivel­y dragged into attending by the sheer energy of the organisers. But however undignifie­d the booing of Vivian Wineman and Laura Marks might have been, the Board should not simply dismiss it as unworthy. Because it demonstrat­es a real feeling of anger that the representa­tive body of British Jews is simply not doing that basic job — representi­ng British Jews. The sensible response would be take a long look at itself and work out how it can adapt to the demands of the twentyfirs­t century.

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