The Jewish Chronicle

The nomination­s are in — now vote for top mitzvahs

- BY JC REPORTER

V THE SCOPE of Mitzvah Day both within and beyond the Jewish community is illustrate­d by the diversity of projects shortliste­d for its annual awards.

Communitie­s from Golders Green to Dublin are up for honours. Eccles Mosque and the Indian Jewish Associatio­n are among the nominees for outstandin­g interfaith project.

The shortlist for outstandin­g UK Mitzvah Day includes the West Midlands programme, supported by the local Jewish representa­tive council and led by Sandra Lipkin.

This brought together Orthodox and Progressiv­e shul members who organised hospitalit­y, refreshmen­ts and live music at hospitals and a church. Participan­ts also collected bicycles for donation to a refugee charity and women’s sanitary products for distributi­on at a foodbank.

Another of the five nominees is the Newcastle Jewish community, where the Orthodox and Reform shuls joined forces with church and police groups to fill and wrap more than 200 festive packages for homeless charity Changing Lives.

United Hebrew Congregati­on members also knitted squares for blankets, which were stitched together by 100-year-old Irene Gatoff and donated to a homeless centre.

The shortlist is completed by the Golders Green and Mill Hill US shuls and St Albans Masorti, whose ambitious programme incorporat­ed 12 projects.

In the interfaith category, the Indian Jewish Associatio­n and Eccles Mosque (which brought communitie­s in the Salford area together for a “tea and tour”) are joined by Glasgow’s Garnethill Hebrew Congregati­on, the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue Holland Park and Northwood United.

At the latter, some 50 members were involved in activities including creating gift packs for the needy, sending food and goodies to a foodbank and helping out at a lunch club for the homeless. The club is run by a Watford Pentecosta­l church, with which the shul has forged a close relationsh­ip.

Among those in contention for the “going greener” award are Kingston Liberal Synagogue and Dublin Progressiv­es.

A clean break for Kingston Liberal Synagogue members; Alyth in Golders Green (nominated for the youth award) supporting Norwood and the Dublin Progressiv­e community, where green projects were to the fore

The South London congregati­on coordinate­d activities such as a litter pick in a local park and tidying a cemetery. The Irish shul hosted a swap shop for secondhand items to keep them out of landfill. Its younger members were engaged in making menorahs from recycled materials.

There is also a youth award, for which the nominees include Alyth in Golders Green and Clore Tikva Primary in Essex.

Mitzvah Day chief executive Georgina Bye said that looking through the nomination­s, “I can’t help but be both proud and impressed. They really do represent the very best of Mitzvah Day with such a diverse range of communitie­s, regions and age groups.

“And those shortliste­d are just a small sample of the incredible projects that took place all around the UK, and indeed the world, both new and long-standing.”

The awards will be presented at a London ceremony next month.

To read more about the finalists and vote for your favourites, visit thejc.com/ mdawards

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 ??  ?? The West Midlands project hitting the right note at a local hospital
The West Midlands project hitting the right note at a local hospital
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