The Jewish Chronicle

Race report urges over 100 changes to Jewish life

● The Board of Deputies was inspired by the Black Lives Matter movement to commission the controvers­ial report

- BY JENNI FRAZER

AN EXHAUSTIVE report on racial inclusivit­y, commission­ed by the Board of Deputies, has produced a controvers­ial list of 119 changes to be made across 17 areas of the community, triggering both praise and criticism.

The recommenda­tions cover almost all aspects of Jewish public life, from synagogues, schools and security to membership of the rabbinate, conversion and the representa­tion of minorities in Jewish media.

Dates of significan­ce to minorities, such as the Ethiopian Jewish festival of Sigd, should be marked in Jewish schools and the wider community, the report suggests.

Schools are also told to ensure that their secular curriculum covers black history, enslavemen­t and the legacy of colonialis­m.

The New Statesman’s political editor, Stephen Bush, the commission chair who authored the report, told the JC that “profound changes” lie ahead for Anglo-Jewry if the report’s major recommenda­tions are adopted.

The report was commission­ed by the Board of Deputies in the wake of the murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s in May 2020, and the launch of the global Black Lives Matter campaign. It was published in the week that ex-police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted of murdering Mr Floyd.

Initially, the Board sought ways of speaking to black Jews and Jews of colour but the commission’s remit was extended to include testimony from Sephardi, Yemenite and Mizrachi Jews, who ended up forming the majority of the witnesses.

Many who gave testimony said they felt marginalis­ed and discrimina­ted against, while a number complained of “Ashkenorma­tivity” — the assumption that the Jewish community is entirely of Ashkenazi Jewish background.

Writing in the JC, Misha Mansoor, a journalist and shul-goer of Yemenite extraction, said that the report is overly preoccupie­d with identity politics and asked “how that helps us be less divided”.

She writes: “After reading Stephen Bush’s report… you could be forgiven for thinking that every Ashkenazi, or white, British Jew was a rabid racist belittling and despising fellow Jews who are not Ashkenazi or white.”

The report has been largely received without complaint by leaders of communal bodies, including the heads of the different denominati­ons of Judaism in Britain.

In a statement echoed by other religious and lay leaders, the Chief Rabbi, Ephraim Mirvis, said:

“The exclusion of even a single person because of the colour of their skin is a collective failure, for which we must all take responsibi­lity.”

The public launch for the report is due to be hosted online by JW3 at 8pm on Sunday.

THE BOARD of Deputies’ Commission on Racial Inclusivit­y has presented a meticulous list of 119 suggestion­s for making non-white Jews more welcome in British Jewish life, including the widespread celebratio­n of the Ethiopian festival of Sigd across the community.

The report, described by Stephen Bush, political editor of the New Statesman and chair of the commission, as “groundbrea­king”, was commission­ed by the Board of Deputies in the immediate aftermath of the death of George Floyd in America last May, sparking the Black Lives Matter campaign around the world.

Although the original remit was to listen to the experience of black Jews, the commission extended its range to include Sephardi, Mizrachi and Yemenite Jews — and, in fact, the report makes clear that testimony from these last three groups formed the majority of contributi­ons.

The report considers 17 areas of communal life, from security to synagogues and from internatio­nal developmen­t to the role of the Jewish media. Last summer, the commission gathered evidence from a variety of individual­s using email, social media and telephone submission­s.

More than 200 people spoke to the commission, talking about often troubling instances of discrimina­tion and over-zealous security both inside and outside communal buildings. There were complaints of a failure to acknowledg­e the Sephardi narrative in AngloJewry and of “Ashkenorma­tivity” — an assumption that all British Jews are white Ashkenazim.

Only 24 of the individual­s who gave evidence chose to remain anonymous. But for reasons of confidenti­ality, the report does not name even those who were willing to be identified.

Evidence came from people in four separate categories: Jews of Ethiopian, African, Caribbean, Indian, Sephardi, Mizrahi or Yemenite heritage; converts across all religious denominati­ons; mixed-race Jews “with both Jewish heritage and another ethnic identity, be that African, Caribbean, Asian or some other identity”; and people who were none of the above but “who had specific or general testimony, whether as the parents of mixed-race children, the managers of diverse communal organisati­ons, or other leadership roles”.

But, because of what the report calls the possibilit­y of “jigsaw” identifica­tion, and believing that there is a fluidity between the categories, there was no breakdown of how many witnesses fell into which category.

On top of that, the commission spoke to 100 “stakeholde­rs”, communal organisati­ons whose practices were the subject of some of the witnesses’ testimony. These included every religious denominati­on and groups such as the Community Security Trust and Tzedek, which works in the internatio­nal developmen­t field. In all, the report made 119 recommenda­tions, which Mr Bush believes will have “profound implicatio­ns for British Jewry”. He notes that this commission is the first of its kind in any diaspora community, and also suggests that other, nonJewish communitie­s are paying attention to the report’s conclusion­s, which could be a model for other groups. Among the recommenda­tions is that communal institutio­ns, “particular­ly synagogues and schools”, should commemorat­e “key dates for diverse parts of the community, like the Ethiopian Jewish festival of Sigd and the official Day to Mark the Departure and Expulsion of Jews from the Arab Countries and Iran (November 30)”.

Noting — with approval — that the CST thoroughly rejects the notion of racial profiling, Mr Bush has recommende­d that it appoint an “ombudsman” to deal with complaints, and that communal bag searches should become universal at entry to buildings, “so as not to stigmatise people who look different, without compromisi­ng on security”.

The majority of the testimony came from Sephardi, Yemeni and MIzrachi Jews’

Mr Bush has applied the Macpherson principle to the witness testimony, that all complaints about incidents of racism should be recorded and investigat­ed as such when they have been perceived as acts of racism. He recommends that “complaints processes are accessible, transparen­t, fair and robust”.

Many of the witnesses testified that it was rare to non-existent to see black Jews or mixed-race Jews in any communal roles. Accordingl­y, the report recommende­d that communal bodies — and, particular­ly, organisati­ons involved in rabbinic training — should encourage people from “under-represente­d ethnic groups” to put themselves forward for communal roles.

It was noted that at present there are no British rabbis who identify as black or “of colour”; and at least one witness mourned the fact that “there is no Progressiv­e rabbinic training for Sephardim”.

Numerous complaints from witnesses related to the conversion process. The report recommends that “a code

of conduct should be developed for discourse on social media, making clear that attempts to delegitimi­se converts, calling people names such as ‘Kapo’, or using Yiddish terms such as ‘shvartzer’, in a racist way, are completely unacceptab­le”. Rabbinical courts that oversee conversion processes are asked to instigate stricter vetting of teachers and host families and to set up a clearer process for complaints.

Mr Bush acknowledg­es in the report that black British Jews “made up a little under 0.5 per cent of the total Jewish population in the United Kingdom, just as we make up a little under 0.5 per cent of the population as a whole”. But he says it is a “dangerous argument” to suggest that a group numbering 0.5 per cent of a larger whole is “not worth considerat­ion and respect”. He adds that at the last census, in 2011, 4,292 people identified themselves both as Jewish and of another ethnic origin. Responding to some of the recommenda­tions, Mark Gardner, chief executive of the CST, said: “Any security measures that are used [such as, for example, universal bag searches] should focus on providing the most effective security while treating everybody fairly and with equal respect and profession­alism.” He said that the report praised the CST as “our community’s example of best practice, training and guidance”. The CST was “open to any suggestion­s about how to extend this best practice even further in our work”, adding that the idea of an “ombudsman” to examine securityre­lated complaints was “a really interestin­g suggestion”.

Built in to the report is a plan to revisit the recommenda­tions in two years’ time, together with a new follow-up report in 2028.

But Mr Bush says he does not believe the Jewish community is one which “went in for finger-wagging in order to police compliance”. He hopes that most organisati­ons will welcome the opportunit­y to improve matters across communal life.

“I think the majority of recommenda­tions will happen,” he says.

Schools and shuls should commemorat­e key dates for diverse parts of the community’

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Black, Jewish and proud: Sophie Okonedo
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