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Simon Rocker

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

Analysis

The Rabbis' letter protesting Labour antisemitism was an extraordinary display of unity

Simon Rocker cannot remember when so many Orthodox rabbis have put their names alongside representatives from non-Orthodox synagogues

July 19, 2018 12:03
People demonstrate against Labour antisemitism in Parliament Square in March
1 min read

The letter signed this week by 68 British rabbis calling on Labour to listen to the Jewish community about antisemitism was an extraordinary display of unity.

Extraordinary because I can recollect no other occasion in 30-odd years when so many Orthodox rabbis have put their names alongside representatives from non-Orthodox synagogues.

The signatories spanned the denominational spectrum from Liberal to Charedi. True, there was just a single Charedi rabbi, Avrohom Pinter, a former Labour councillor in Hackney, who signed it in the name of the schools of which he is principal rather than as a member of London’s main Charedi umbrella body, the Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations.