The Jewish Chronicle

Warm, wise and witty; June was our trailblaze­r

- TRIBUTE JENNI FRAZER

IN THE 80s and 90s, if you were at a Jewish public meeting and June Jacobs walked in, you knew you were in for a treat. Inevitably, June’s contributi­on — from a defiantly left-of-centre perspectiv­e — raised the hackles of many present. Some, it is true, merely disagreed with her politicall­y.

But many men at these meetings — and they were overwhelmi­ngly male-dominated — seemed personally affronted that a woman — and a strikingly attractive woman, too, not someone they could write off with rude jokes or gestures — had the temerity to be intelligen­t, too.

It is a measure of June’s extraordin­ary reach that among those her family first chose to apprise of her death were Palestinia­n politician­s and a Strictly Orthodox rabbi — all June Jacobs, fighting for Soviet Jews of whom, I am sure, will equally mourn her.

I first encountere­d June — and there was nothing grand about her, she was always “June” rather than “Mrs Jacobs” — at a Soviet Jewry event at St Martin’s-in-the-Fields. Playwright Tom Stoppard was there, I think, giving a reading; and members of the 35s, the Women’s Campaign for Soviet Jewry, were there, too. June was founder and first chair of the National Council for Soviet Jews and was on familiar terms with every refusenik you could think of, regularly travelling to Moscow and Leningrad to meet and help those who desperatel­y wanted to leave.

But even after the success of the Soviet Jewry campaign, when she became president of the Internatio­nal Council of Jewish Women, her heart was with Israeli politics and the peace camp of the left.

One of her specialiti­es was her generous open-handedness, characteri­sed by the legendary kitchen suppers she would hold in the basement of the Camden house she had lived in for decades. Saying vaguely, “I can’t cook, you know, there are just a few bits”, June would lay on a small banquet, welcoming everyone with down-toearth hospitalit­y. Israeli politician­s were frequent visitors and June knew not just the “stars”, but also the backroom movers and shakers.

She came over as slightly dithery, though she was anything but. Think of a British Jewish version of Lucille Ball, and you’re getting close. Add a great sense of style and dress, and always, always, a carrier bag full of vital papers.

She had a wicked sense of humour and frequently enlivened dull meetings for me with glorious, unreportab­le and unrepeatab­le gossip about the protagonis­ts. I can hear her now, her blonde hair always immaculate­ly styled, cracking up laughing about some slightly pompous Jewish community leader.

And she was a ferocious letterwrit­er, too, principall­y to the JC, but often elsewhere.

June owed nothing to anyone, so she didn’t care about offending anyone. She was overwhelmi­ngly her own person, beholden to no communal macher, content to plough her own furrow. She wasn’t rich, but she managed a fearsome travel schedule, slotting in two or three obligation­s on one trip so that one event subsidised another. Every time I met her she was off somewhere else, often to Latin America, an itinerary few people half her age could manage.

The community establishm­ent didn’t know what to make of June Jacobs. She was a maverick, a woman who wouldn’t behave like a quiescent housewife, but a woman who was determined to have her say. She made other women feel better and more confident about being independen­t of mind and spirit, in the days when you could write the number of strong-minded Jewish women leaders on the back of a postage stamp. She paved the way for some of the toughminde­d women we are fortunate to have in our community today: because I am as certain as can be that without June, there would be no Marie van der Zyl, no Laura Marks, no Louise Jacobs.

And as for those endless, dreary, prolix, communal meetings… if I encountere­d June Jacobs there it brightened up my day entirely. Ten minutes of conversati­on with June would cheer me up, even as she was helping me to learn who to trust — and to whom I should never give the time of day.

In short — and this fond tribute must necessaril­y be so — there was no-one quite like June. Men and women alike — not everyone, of course, she had her enemies, too — spoke warmly of her, as once met, never forgotten. She made an impact and she made a difference, and that is something to which we could all aspire. She will be greatly missed.

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