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The reason Lord Sacks became a rabbi

B’nai B’rith is celebrating 100 years in the UK. At least one prominent figure has reason to be grateful to the organisation.

February 4, 2010 14:34
Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks

By

Robyn Rosen,

Robyn Rosen

4 min read

More than 4 decades ago, a 20-year-old student took a trip which changed his life. He spent two months in the United States in 1968, meeting some of the leading thinkers of American Jewry. That student was Jonathan Sacks, now the Chief Rabbi, Lord Sacks, who recalls how his formative experience in the US was made possible by a travel grant awarded by B’nai B’rith UK.

“I owe the organisation a great personal debt,” he says. “That trip changed my life. Because of it, I eventually decided to become a rabbi and dedicate my life to serving the Jewish community. That I owe to B’nai B’rith First Lodge, and I am sure there are many others who could tell a similar story.”

His tribute comes as the organisation celebrates its centenary — the First Lodge of B’nai B’rith UK was established 100 years ago, in February 1910. A celebratory dinner will be held next week, with the Chief Rabbi as guest of honour.

It is a landmark anniversary, but B’nai B’rith is actually much older. It was born in October 1843 when a group of 12 young Jewish men of German origin met in New York to establish a support organisation for the Jewish immigrants flooding into the country.