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Opinion

We are gradually becoming majority Charedi

The implications for Anglo-Jewry are huge, and we need to grasp how things will change

July 4, 2022 09:04
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a crowded group of religious Jewish Men dancing at a wedding
2 min read

The data are in. There are 2.1 million Charedi Jews in the world today, comprising one in seven of the global Jewish population. By 2040 they are projected to reach about four million and comprise at least one in five. That’s not speculation; it’s as certain as any demographic projection ever gets.

The figures in the UK are even more striking. 80,000 Charedi Jews live here, constituting one in four of the whole. In fact, Charedi Jews comprise a larger fraction of the total Jewish population here than in any other country in the world, bar Belgium. And by 2040, the proportion here will be somewhere between one in every two or three.

It’s difficult to imagine what these demographic changes will mean for Jews in this country. We have grown used to a certain status quo, whereby modern orthodoxy holds centre stage as represented by the United Synagogue and the Chief Rabbi, and where non-orthodox forms of Judaism are fully included in umbrella frameworks such as the Board of Deputies and Jewish Leadership Council. Theological differences persist of course, and occasionally cause tensions, but for the main part, we tend to live and let live in a — how can I put this? — very British kind of way.

In the meantime, in a parallel world, Charedi Jews have been getting on with their lives. Long seen as marginal by the mainstream, the assumption there has often been that the Charedi community is largely a remnant of pre-modern Judaism that belongs to a former age. The resultant view has often been one of disengagement; they wouldn’t want to talk to us, and we’d rather steer clear anyway, so probably best just to ignore them and wait for their inevitable demise.

Topics:

demography