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The Ark’s long voyage is done

This month sees Robin and Nitza Spiro closing down Spiro Ark, ending its function as umbrella and funder for their multifarious activities. It is the moment to celebrate all that they have done

September 10, 2020 12:16
Robin and Nitza Spiro
4 min read

Robin and Nitza Spiro sit side by side in their Hampstead sitting room — he a handsome, dignified man approaching his nineties, she in her eighties, a forcefield of energy, charisma and charm. For decades their commitment, generosity, imagination and pioneering spirit have made them superheroes of Jewish education. From Belsize Park to Boca Raton, from Chelsea to China, there are Jews and gentiles who have been illuminated by them.

This month sees the couple closing down Spiro Ark, their registered charity, ending its function as umbrella and funder for their multifarious activities. It is the moment to celebrate all that they have done. “Thank you dear Spiros,” says one letter, “I wish you both all the best, I am a disciple, a student and can hold my head high as a proud knowledgeable Jew due to your inspiration, teaching and example.”

“You have achieved so much and helped others to achieve so much by expanding their horizons helping them lead happier and more fulfilled lives,” reads another.

The couple met in Israel over half a century ago — Robin, an Oxford law graduate, who had come out to settle; Nitza, born in Jerusalem, the only child of a father from a Chasidic family in Brody, Ukraine, who found it hard to get work because he was a Communist but, a ferocious autodidact, eventually became a water engineer. Her mother, from Lvov, a teacher, had lost most of her family in the Holocaust. Wracked with anxiety and fear, she forbad Nitza to ride bicycles and held her back from school trips, a cottonwool wrapping that only provoked her adventurousness.