The Jewish Chronicle

How Covid has changed life at Moishe House

- FIRST PERSON BY JOSH POWELL Josh Powell is a resident of Moishe House Hackney

AT THE beginning of March last year, I moved into the new Moishe House in East London with three of my friends. As we unpacked our suitcases in our Hackney residence, all we could talk about was our excitement for the Friday night dinners we would host, the Shabbat candles we would light and the social action events we could run.

We couldn’t wait to start hosting activities and build our community of fellow young Jewish profession­als. But a week later, the government announced the first national lockdown.

Still we remained optimistic. We had a full three months to get settled, get to know the area and furnish our house for all the guests we were expecting to welcome. Little did we know that those 12 weeks would turn into a year, earning us the dubious distinctio­n of being the first Moishe House to have never hosted an in-person event!

My fellow residents (Fran, Laura, Rosa) and I had grown up together through LJY-Netzer, the youth movement for Liberal Judaism, where we learnt the value of leading Jewish communitie­s. After graduating from university and pondering the next stage of our lives, we turned to Moishe House because it enables people of our age to create a Jewish community hub.

And although we have not yet been able to physically welcome people into our home for dinner parties, the pandemic has afforded us the opportunit­y to get creative. Over the year, we have experiment­ed with every platform we could think of — from video chat to social media and even the postal service — to start building our community remotely.

It has definitely been a different experience for all of us and there have been some real standout moments. The convenienc­e of Zoom enabled us to run Sephardi Stories, where community members shared their family history, discoverin­g in the process that many of their stories run parallel to others. During our succah building livestream, I received a message from my mum that I was “using pop’s hammer” that he had always used to construct our family succah. Though Covid has prevented us from making in-person connection­s, it’s pushed us to engage with our community in ways we would have never considered before the pandemic.

So being this very unconventi­onal Moishe House is all that we have known. We have built our community from the ground up and our virtual model has allowed us to reach people across the UK.

This approach has been very rewarding and many people have told us that the virtual programmin­g we offer has been a real support system for them. For those who have needed to isolate, or been unable to see others physically during the pandemic, Moishe House has enabled them to stay connected and build new friendship­s.

As we look forward, one of our biggest challenges will be applying what we’ve learnt as a virtual Moishe House to in-person programmin­g.

Luckily, we recently gained a new resident, Farrah, who can offer a fresh perspectiv­e.

In particular, we can’t wait to begin to capitalise on the area we’ve moved to. Hackney was once the centre of Jewish life in London and in recent years young Jews have been returning to the area and reinvigora­ting it with a modern twist. East London events such as the drag night “Homos and Hummus” are a great example of this. We are also looking forward to maintainin­g the relationsh­ips we’ve built with organisati­ons including the World Uyghur Congress, René Cassin and Jewish Care and hope to be able to run some impactful social action events in partnershi­p with them.

Despite our excitement for all the possibilit­ies on the not-too-distant horizon, we want to ensure we don’t lose the connection­s we’ve made with our friends who live further afield. We’re envisionin­g a hybrid model where we combine in-person programmin­g with virtual webinars and livestream­s. We can’t imagine living anywhere but Moishe House and as we reopen in 2021 we are confident that we can adapt to whatever the future holds, together with the Jewish community we have built over the past year.

Our virtual model has allowed us to reach people across the UK’

 ??  ?? Josh Powell and fellow residents
Josh Powell and fellow residents

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