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Edie Friedman

ByEdie Friedman, Edie Friedman

Opinion

Let’s listen to Isaiah and share our bread with the hungry

September 21, 2012 11:57
3 min read

My grandparents escaped from Europe to America for a life free from persecution and poverty. Yet, after one generation, I went back, crossing the Atlantic in the opposite direction for a year of study that became a lifetime.

I was privileged to have been part of the social activism of 1960s' America. But, by the decade's end, optimism had given way to despair that our efforts to create a more just world had not materialised. I left a country that was still recovering from the poison of McCarthyism, was rife with conflict over Vietnam and with a black population still denied access to the "American Dream".

I also left an America where Jews, religious and secular, played a disproportionate role in many of the social movements. The Britain I moved to was a country that had institutionalised outstanding social provision through the creation of the welfare state yet, paradoxically, I found that the Jewish community was not as overtly involved in issues of social justice.

Fast-forward 40 years and Britain looks to me like a very different place, with government-steered austerity cuts to state services. The Institute for Fiscal Studies expects the cuts will cause the number of children growing up in poverty to rise by a staggering 400,000 children by 2015. The UK's largest network of food banks, the Trussell Trust, has in the past three years doubled the number of people it feeds.