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We must mobilise again to save Bevis Marks

Here’s how you can lodge your objections with the City of London

May 13, 2024 09:57
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Bevis Marks Synagogue (Photo by Dan Dennison/Getty Images)
2 min read

Whenever I find myself in a new city, like many Jewish tourists I find myself drawn to its synagogues, particularly those that are very old and speak to the quirks of Jewish history.

Each one tells a tale of a Diaspora community; both its highs and lows. Take the Touro synagogue in Newport, Rhode Island, America’s oldest shul. It was founded in 1763 by Sephardic Jews most likely from the West Indies, a witness to the birth of the United States and to the changing make up of the country’s Jewry over the generations.

There’s the fascinating Paradesi Synagogue in Cochin, Kerala, or the Musmeah Yeshua Synagogue in Myanmar, visiting which was a rare treat. Closer to home, that the Great Synagogue of Amsterdam is still standing and conducting services today is a remarkable feat. This community withstood the horrors of Nazi occupation and after the Second World War, regrouped and kept on going.

Around the same time the Dutch Sephardi community established their synagogue, Jews had just been allowed back into Britain after 400 years of exile. The new British Jews knew they needed a synagogue that would stand the test of time, so they established Bevis Marks in East London – a tribute to its Dutch cousin.