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Geoffrey Alderman

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

If I were Scottish, I wouldn't vote for independence

March 14, 2014 07:59
2 min read

On September 18, the people of Scotland will vote in a referendum that will decide the country’s future — to remain part of the United Kingdom or to become wholly self-governing.

How should Scotland’s Jewish communities vote? While it may seem an unmitigated chutzpah for an English Jew to give advice to brethren north of the border, I propose to throw caution to the wind, because it seems to me, after talking to a completely unrepresentative cross-section of Jewish Scots, that there are some important questions they seem unwilling (or perhaps unable) to confront.

According to the 2011 census there were then 5,887 inhabitants of Scotland who identified themselves as Jewish — around one-tenth of one per cent of Scotland’s total population. Scottish Jewry is contracting by more than eight per cent compared with 2001. Communities this small, however vibrant and self-confident, are not self-sufficient. This must have a bearing on the independence issue.

Take shechita, for example. At the moment, there is virtually no shechita in Scotland: supplies of kosher meat and poultry are imported. Would the government of an independent Scotland permit this to continue? For that matter, would it permit shechita to operate? When I put this to the SNP, its spokesperson seemed genuinely perplexed. And this perplexity only deepened when I asked whether — supposing shechita did recommence in Scotland — the nationalist party would have any objection to the statutory rabbinical commission (based, it should be noted, in England) continuing to be the religious licensing authority for Jewish slaughtermen operating in Scottish abattoirs.