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Gary Mond

ByGary Mond, Gary Mond

Opinion

What’s the point of the Board of Deputies in 2024?

It is no longer representative and its major roles have been taken by others

March 13, 2024 11:14
Copy of Edwin Shuker, second from right, with Board of Deputies leadership
Board of Deputies leadership
3 min read

Nominations have now closed for the election for the presidency of the Board of Deputies, which takes place on May 12. Over the coming two months there will be much debate on the Board’s future direction. All four candidates are unquestionably good, hard-working and honest people committed to the welfare of the Jewish community. I have worked closely with three of them, and am well-acquainted with the fourth.

I am not concerned here with their respective merits and demerits. Rather, I want to consider the challenges facing the victor, and what role — if any — there is for the Board now in the UK’s Jewish firmament.

The first huge problem is not the fault of the honorary officers. The Board derives its legitimacy from synagogal affiliation. About 90 per cent of its 270 Deputies represent around 135 different synagogues, with the remainder coming from different Jewish organisations. Yet the synagogue is not the key focal point of Jewish life that it once was. According to the Institute for Jewish Policy Research’s recent publication Jews in the UK today, only 57 per cent of British Jews are synagogue members, and the age split is startling — of those under 30, just 28 per cent are shul members. On top of this, another survey from seven years ago found that there were 454 synagogues in the UK, so a high proportion (including the Charedi) are not represented on the Board. These facts call into question the Board’s much-heralded claim to be a representative body for the Jewish community.

The second problem is that the Board’s major roles have been taken over by others. Some 40 years ago, the role of Jewish community security, previously carried out by the Board, was adopted by the CST. Then, in 2003, the Jewish Leadership Council was created, its role being to represent the Jewish community to government. It derives its legitimacy through its membership, which comprises most leading Jewish charities and other organisations. In 2014, the Campaign Against Antisemitism was formed and, after a substantial rally outside the Royal Courts of Justice that year, has gone from strength to strength, most recently organising a 105,000-strong rally against antisemitism. The Board’s role in this arena has been totally eclipsed and rendered irrelevant.