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In muddy French refugee camp, Torah ethics live

December 30, 2015 13:01

ByRabbi Jonathan Wittenberg, Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg

1 min read

"Compulsory tea break". The call goes around the huge warehouse five minutes' drive from the refugee camp universally known as "The Jungle" outside Calais. During the pause, a woman in a beret eyes my kippah: "Are you here over Shabbat?"

People wheel in loads of donated clothing. Philli, who runs the warehouse, is precise about what's needed: good sleeping bags; solid men's shoes; medium sized men's coats; two- and four-person tents.

In the camp, a refugee stops me. I think he's Eritrean. He says: "Jewish? There are three, four Jews." I'm not sure if he means people back home or in Calais. Our guide, from Auberge de Migrants, apologises: there are mosques here and a church, but no synagogue.

On the road through the camp, I recognise a congregant, also volunteering. The refugee crisis speaks powerfully to the Jewish consciousness. It's not just the Torah's commandment to "love the stranger"; it's the immediacy of recent experience. My father once mislaid his passport. "Why does it matter?" I asked - I was small at the time. "You'll know if you ever don't have one," he replied. Aged 16, he was a refugee from Nazism.