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British Jews

British Jews (often referred to collectively as British Jewry or Anglo-Jewry) are British citizens who are Jewish. The number of people who identified as Jews in the United Kingdom rose by just under 4% between 2001 and 2021.

British Jews
Total population
277,653 (2021 Census) for English and Welsh Jews, 2021 Northern Irish Census for Northern Irish Jews, and (2011 Census) for Scottish Jews; does not include smaller populations in Northern Ireland and the Crown Dependencies
Core Jewish population (2018):
290,000[1]
Enlarged Jewish population (includes non-Jewish relatives of Jews) (2018):
370,000[1]
Regions with significant populations
London, Greater Manchester, Leeds, Gateshead, Brighton, St Albans, Southend; also Hertsmere, Epping Forest and East Renfrewshire
Languages
Primarily English; also Yiddish, largely spoken by Hassidic Jews; historically Spanish and Portuguese among Sephardim; immigrant languages include or have included Hebrew, Arabic, Russian and French amongst many others
Religion
Judaism or irreligion
Related ethnic groups
Other Jews

History edit

The first recorded Jewish community in Britain was brought to England in 1070 by King William the Conqueror who believed the Jewish population’s commercial skills would make his newly won country more prosperous. At the end of the 12th century, a series of blood libels and fatal pogroms were perpetrated in England, particularly on the east coast. Notably, on 16 March 1190, during the run up to the Third Crusade, the Jewish population of York was massacred at the site where Clifford's Tower now stands,[2] and King Edward I of England passed the Statute of the Jewry (Statutum de Judaismo) in 1275, restricting the community's activities, most notably outlawing the practice of usury (charging interest).[3] Fifteen years later when Edward found that many of these provisions were ignored, he expelled the Jews from England. The Jewish population emigrated to countries such as Poland which protected them by law. A small English community persisted in hiding despite the expulsion. Jews were not banned from Scotland, which was an independent kingdom until 1707; however, there is no record of a Jewish presence in Scotland before the 18th century. Jews were also not banned in Wales at the time, but England eventually annexed Wales under Henry VIII. When Henry VIII's England annexed Wales, the English ban on Jews extended to Wales. There is only one known record of a Jew in Wales between 1290 and the annexation, but it is possible individuals did persist there after 1290.

A small community of conversos was identified in Bristol in 1609 and banished. In 1656, Oliver Cromwell made it clear that the ban on Jewish settlement in England and Wales would no longer be enforced, but when Rabbi Manasseh Ben Israel brought a petition to allow Jews to return, the majority of the Protectorate Government turned it down. Despite the Protectorate government's rejection of the Rabbi's petition, the community considers 1656 to mark the readmission of the Jews to England and Wales. In mid-nineteenth century British-ruled Ireland, Daniel O'Connell, known as "The Liberator" for his work on Catholic Emancipation, worked successfully for the repeal of the "De Judaismo" law, which prescribed a special yellow badge for Jews.[4] Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881), of Jewish birth although he joined the Church of England, served in government for three decades, twice as prime minister.

The oldest Jewish community in Britain is the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish community, which traces back to the 1630s when it existed clandestinely in London before the readmission and was unofficially legitimised in 1656, which is the date counted by the Jewish community as the re-admittance of the Jews to England (which at the time included Wales). A trickle of Ashkenazi immigration primarily from German countries continued from the late 17th century to the early 19th century. As for the second wave of Ashkenazi immigration, a large wave of Ashkenazi Jewish immigrants fleeing persecution in the Russian Empire due to pogroms and the May Laws between 1880 and the imposition of tighter immigration restrictions in 1905 sought their way to the Isles. Many German and Polish Jews seeking to escape the Nazi Holocaust arrived in Britain before and after the Second World War.[5][better source needed] Around 80-90% of British Jews today are Ashkenazi.

Following de-colonisation, the late twentieth century saw Yemeni Jews Iraqi Jews and Baghdadi Jews settle in the United Kingdom.[6][7][8] A multicultural community, in 2006, British Jews celebrated the 350th anniversary of the resettlement in England.[9]

Demographics edit

Population size edit

Historical British Jewish population
YearPop.±%
17346,000—    
180017,500+191.7%
188160,000+242.9%
1900250,000+316.7%
1933300,000+20.0%
1938370,000+23.3%
1945450,000+21.6%
1980330,000−26.7%
2001266,740−19.2%
2011269,568+1.1%
2021*277,653+3.0%
Source: Data from 2001 onwards derived from the UK Census
  • 2021 data based on 2021 England and Wales census, 2021 Northern Irish census and 2011 Scottish census data
  • Data prior to 2001 based on estimates; these come from the Jewish Encyclopedia of 1901-1906, the US Holocaust Museum, and Jews in Britain-Origin and Growth of Anglo Jewry (1943)[10][11][12]

According to the 2021 United Kingdom census, there were 271,327 Jews in England and Wales, or 0.5% of the overall population,[13] whilst in the 2021 Northern Irish census, there were 439 self-identified Jews comprising just 0.02% of the population, but marking a 31% increase in numbers since the census of 2011.[14] According to the 2011 census, 5,887 Jews lived in Scotland for a total of 277,653 self-identified Jews in the United Kingdom. This does not include much smaller communities in the Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories; notably, there are Jewish communities in Gibraltar, Jersey and Bermuda, amongst others. However, this final figure is considered an undercount. Demographers David Graham and Stanley Waterman give several reasons as for why: the underenumeration for censuses in general; the question did not record secular Jews; the voluntary nature of the question; suspicion by Jews of such questions; and the high non-response rate for large numbers of Haredi Jews.[15] By comparison, the Jewish Virtual Library estimated a Jewish population of 291,000 (not limited to adherents of Judaism) in 2012, making Britain's Jewish community the fifth largest in the world.[16] This equates to 0.43% of the population of the United Kingdom. The absolute number of Jews has been gradually rising since records began; in the 2011 census, 263,346 people in England and Wales answered "Jewish" to the voluntary question on religion, compared with 259,927 in of 2001.

The 2001 Census included a (voluntary) religion question ("What is your religion?") for the first time in its history;[n 1] 266,740 people listed their religion as "Jewish".[18] However, the subject of who is a Jew is complex, and the religion question did not record people who may be Jewish through other means, such as ethnically and culturally.[19] Of people who chose Jewish as their religion, 97% put White as their ethnic group. However, a report by the Institute for Jewish Policy Research (JPR) suggests that, although there was an apparent option to write down "Jewish" for this question, it did not occur to many, because of "skin colour" and nationality bias, and that if "Jewish" was an explicit option, the results—only 2,594 respondents were Jewish solely by ethnicity—would have been different.[20] The religion question appeared in the 2011 Census, but there was still no explicit option for "Jewish" in the ethnic-group question. The Board of Deputies had encouraged all Jews to indicate they were Jewish, either through the religion question or the ethnicity one.[21]

From 2005 to 2008, the Jewish population increased from 275,000 to 280,000, attributed largely to the high birth rates of Haredi (or ultra-Orthodox) Jews.[22] Research by the University of Manchester in 2007 showed that 75% of British Jewish births were to the Haredi community.[23] Ultra-Orthodox women have an average of 6.9 children, and secular Jewish women 1.65.[24] In 2015, the Institute for Jewish Policy Research reported that in England the orthodox community was growing by nearly 5% per year, while the non-haredi community was decreasing by 0.3% per year.[25] It has been also documented that in terms of births, between 2007 and 2015, the estimated number of Strictly Orthodox births per annum increased by 35%, rising from 1,431 to 1,932. Meanwhile, the estimated number of ‘Mainstream’ (non-Strictly Orthodox) births per annum increased to a lesser extent over the same period, going from 1,844 to 1,889 (+2.4%).[26]

Historical population edit

Going into the 19th century, the Jewish population was small, likely no more than 20,000 individuals. However, the population quadrupled in just a few decades after 1881 as a large number of Jews fled oppression in the Russian Empire. The population increased by as much as 50% between 1933 and 1945, with the United Kingdom admitting around 70,000 Jews between 1933 and 1938, and a further 80,000 between 1938 and 1945. The late 1940s and early 1950s proved to be the high point, numerically speaking, for British Jewry. A decline followed, as many of the new arrivals moved to Israel, moved back to Europe, or emigrated elsewhere, and many other individuals assimilated. The decline continued into the 1990s, but has since reversed. The estimates given before the 2001 Census are likely not directly comparable to the Census, as the Census is based purely on self-identification, whereas the estimates are based on community membership, and it is probably the decline from 450,000 to 266,740 is more like a decline from 450,000 to somewhere between 300,000 and 350,000 going by the metrics of the estimators. Contemporary Jewish demographers like Sergio DellaPergola give figures around 300,000 for the British Jewish population in the early 2010s, since when it has grown.

Migration edit

The great majority (83.2%) of Jews in England and Wales were born in the UK.[27] In 2015, about 6% of Jews in England held an Israeli passport.[25] In 2019, the Office for National Statistics estimated that 21,000 people resident in the UK were born in Israel, up from 11,890 in 2001. Of the 21,000, 8,000 had Israeli nationality.[28] In 2013, it was reported that antisemitic attacks in France led to an exodus of French Jews to the UK. This has resulted in some synagogues establishing French-language Shabbat services.[29]

In 2018, 534 Britons emigrated to Israel, representing the third consecutive annual decline. The figure was one third down on 2015 and was the lowest for five years. Meanwhile, immigration of Jews from Israel is consistently higher than emigration of Jews to Israel, at a ratio of about 3:2, meaning the British Jewish community has a net gain of Jewish immigrants, to the point Israelis now represent around 6% of the British Jewish community.[30][31]

Ethnicity edit

Jews in England and Wales by ethnic group and nationality
Ethnic group 2001 2011 2021
Number % Number % Number %
White 249,483 96.82 241,356 92.37 230,399 85.56
British 216,403 84.00 200,934 76.90 180,325 66.96
Irish 1,134 0.44 1,116 0.43 927 0.34
Irish Traveller 241 0.09 161 0.06
Roma 178 0.07
Other White 31,946 12.40 39,065 14.95 48,808 18.12
Mixed 3,038 1.18 4,209 1.61 6,029 2.24
– White and Asian 828 0.32 1,229 0.47 1,190 0.44
– White and Black Caribbean 379 0.15 778 0.30 780 0.29
– White and Black African 181 0.07 424 0.16 442 0.16
– Other Mixed 1,650 0.64 1,778 0.86 3,617 1.34
Asian 1,968 0.76 2,750 1.05 1,526 0.57
Indian 663 0.26 816 0.31 557 0.21
Chinese 104 0.04 324 0.12 159 0.06
Pakistani 353 0.14 433 0.17 261 0.10
Bangladeshi 124 0.05 222 0.08 83 0.03
– Other Asian 724 0.28 955 0.37 466 0.17
Black 893 0.35 1,591 0.61 1,611 0.60
Caribbean 535 0.21 611 0.23 649 0.24
– African 236 0.09 499 0.19 709 0.26
– Other Black 122 0.05 481 0.18 253 0.09
Other 11,376 29,719
Arab 564 0.22 422 0.16
– Other Ethnic group 2,289 0.89 10,812 4.14 29,297 10.88
TOTAL 257,671 100.0 261,282 100.0 269,293 100.0

Geographic distribution edit

The majority of the Jews in the UK live in southeastern England, particularly in and around London. Around 145,480 Jews live in London itself - more than half the Jewish population of the entire country - notably the North London boroughs of Barnet (56,620), Hackney (17,430), Camden (10,080), Haringey (9,400), Harrow (7,300), Redbridge (6,410), Westminster (5,630), Brent (3,720), Enfield (3,710), Islington (2,710) and Kensington and Chelsea (2,680). There are also 30,220 Jews living in districts that are not quite London, but are outside the boundaries of London itself, of which 21,270 are in southern Hertfordshire and 4,930 are in southwestern Essex, giving a total population of 175,690 Jews in London and the districts and boroughs immediately surrounding it, as compared to 95,640 in the rest of England and Wales combined.

In total, including communities some distance from London, just under 46,000 Jews live in the six counties bordering Greater London, of which two-thirds live in areas immediately adjacent to London. There are, in total, more than 26,400 Jews in Hertfordshire, of which 18,350 are in the borough of Hertsmere in southwestern Hertfordshire adjacent to Jewish areas in Barnet and Harrow. Towns and villages in Hertsmere with large Jewish populations include Borehamwood (6,160), Bushey (5,590), and Radlett (2,980). Some 30% of Radlett's population is Jewish, as is 20% of Bushey's and 17% of Borehamwood's, 21% of neighbouring Shenley's and 36% of nearby Elstree, which has a Jewish plurality. Further afield from London, there is also a significant community in St Albans, as well as other smaller communities throughout the county.[32] There are over 10,300 Jews in Essex, of which 4,380 live in the district of Epping Forest, in the county's southwest. There is also a significant community in Southend. In total, London and the counties around it are host to 70.56% of England and Wales' Jewish population, as of 2021.

The next most significant population is in Greater Manchester, a community of more than 28,000, mostly in Bury (10,730), Salford (10,370), Manchester (2,630), and Trafford (2,410).[33] There are also significant communities in Leeds (6,270),[34] Gateshead (2,910),[35] Brighton (2,460),[36] St Albans (2,240),[37] and Southend (2,060).[38] Some historically sizeable communities like Liverpool, Bournemouth and Birmingham have experienced a steady decline and now number fewer than 2,000 self-identifying Jews each; conversely, there are small but growing communities in places like Bristol, Oxford and Cambridge.

The most Jewish county in the UK is Hertfordshire, which is 2.23% Jewish; this is followed by the City of London, at 2.06%, and then Greater London at 1.63%. Greater Manchester is 1.00% Jewish, Essex is 0.70% and East Sussex is 0.65%. No other county is as much as 0.50% Jewish. The least Jewish county or principal area in England and Wales is Merthyr Tydfil, which is less than 0.01% Jewish despite once having had a significant community. Hertsmere and Barnet councils are the most Jewish local authorities in England, with Jews composing one in six and seven residents respectively. Finchley and Golders Green is the political constituency with the largest Jewish population in the UK.[39]

The Scottish population is concentrated in Greater Glasgow, which counts around 3,300 Jews. Over 40% of the Scottish Jewish population, or around 2,400 people, resides in or around the Glasgow suburb of Newton Mearns. Fewer than 900 Jews live in Edinburgh; the remaining 30% of Scottish Jewry is scattered throughout the country. The largest Welsh community is in Cardiff, with almost 700 Jews, comprising about a third of the Welsh Jewish population and 0.19% of the population of Cardiff itself. The only synagogue in Northern Ireland is in Belfast, where the community has fewer than 100 active members,[40] although 439 people recorded their religion as Jewish in the Northern Irish census of 2021; despite remarkable growth since the previous census in 2011, this still leaves the Northern Irish community as the smallest of the four Home Nations both in overall numbers and percentage terms. There are small communities throughout the Channel Islands, and there is an active synagogue in St Brelade, Jersey, although the Jewish population of the island is only 49.[41][42] There is only a small number of Jews on the Isle of Man, with no synagogue.[43]

Age profile edit

 
Two boys with kippot at a bus stop in Hendon, north London

The British Jewish population has an older profile than the general population. In England and Wales, the median age of male Jews is 41.2, while the figure for all males is 36.1; Jewish females have a median age of 44.3, while the figure for all females is 38.1.[18] About 24% of the community are over the age of 65 (compared to 16% of the general population of England and Wales). In the 2001 census, Jews were the only group in which the number of persons in the 75-plus cohorts outnumbered those in the 65–74 cohort.[citation needed]

Education edit

About 60% of school-age Jewish children attend Jewish schools.[44] Jewish day schools and yeshivas are found throughout the country. Jewish cultural studies and Hebrew language instruction are commonly offered at synagogues in the form of supplementary Hebrew schools or Sunday schools.

The majority of Jewish schools in Britain are funded by the government. Jewish educational centres are plentiful, large-scale projects. One of the country's most famous Jewish schools is the state-funded JFS in London which opened in 1732 and has about 2100 students. It is heavily over-subscribed and applies strict rules on admissions, which led to a discrimination court case, R (E) v Governing Body of JFS, in 2009.[45] In 2011, another large state-funded school opened in North London named JCoSS, the first cross-denomination Jewish secondary school in the UK.[46]

The Union of Jewish Students is an umbrella organisation that represents Jewish students at university. In 2011 there were over 50 Jewish Societies.[47]

British Jews generally have high levels of educational achievement. Compared to the general population, they are 40% less likely to have no qualifications, and 80% more likely to have "higher-level" qualifications.[48] With the exception of under-25s, younger Jews tend to be better educated than older ones.[49] However, dozens of the all-day educational establishments in the Haredi community of Stamford Hill, which are accused of neglecting secular skills such as English and maths, claim not to be schools under the meaning of the Department for Education.[50]

The annual Limmud festival is a high-profile educational event of the British Jewish community, attracting a wide range of international presenters.[51]

Employment and income edit

The 2001 UK Census showed that 30.5% of economically active Jews were self-employed, compared to a figure of 14.2% for the general population. Jews aged 16–24 were less likely to be economically active than their counterparts in the general population; 89.2% of these were students.[52] In a 2010 study, average income per working adult was £15.44 an hour. Median income and wealth were significantly higher than other religious groups.[53] In a 2015 study, poverty has risen the fastest per generation than other religious groups.[54]

Marriage edit

In 2016, the Institute for Jewish Policy Research reported that the intermarriage rate for the Jewish community in the UK was 26%. This was less than half of the US rate of 58% and showed little change from the rate in the early 1980s of 23%, though more than twice the 11% level of the end of the 1960s. Around one third of the children of mixed marriages are brought up in the Jewish faith.[55][56]

Religion edit

There are around 454 synagogues in the country, and it is estimated that 56.3% of all households across the UK with at least one Jew living within them held synagogue membership in 2016.[57]: 6  The percentage of households adhering to specific denominations is as follows:

Those in the United Kingdom who consider themselves Jews identify as follows:

  • 34% Secular
  • 18% Ultra Orthodox
  • 14% Modern Orthodox
  • 14% Reform
  • 10% Traditional, but not very religious
  • 6% Liberal
  • 2% Conservative
  • 2% Sephardi [57]: 11–12 

The Stanmore and Canons Park Synagogue in the London Borough of Harrow said in 2015 that it had the largest membership of any single Orthodox synagogue in Europe.[58]

Culture edit

Media edit

There are a number of Jewish newspapers, magazines and other media published in Britain on a national or regional level. The most well known is The Jewish Chronicle, founded in 1841 and the world's oldest continuously published Jewish newspaper.[59] Other publications include the Jewish News, Jewish Telegraph, Hamodia, the Jewish Tribune and Jewish Renaissance. In April 2020, The Jewish Chronicle and the Jewish News, which had announced plans to merge in February and later announced plans for a joint liquidation, continued as separate entities after the former was acquired by a consortium.

Food edit

Cookbooks grew in popularity in Britain during the mid 1800s and shaped the overall cuisine that British Jews experienced by teaching and inspiring housewives how to cook. The shaping of Jewish food overtime told the story of their frequent migration throughout Europe. There was a lot of influence from Eastern European and Ashkenazi food. This resulted in the common staples of Anglo-Jewish women to keep bread, bagels, and potatoes consistently in their homes. Since, they had a history filled with Diaspora, dishes varied heavily and included fish, meat, spaghetti, pudding, or soup.[60]

Politics edit

 
Benjamin Disraeli in 1878, the only Prime Minister who was Jewish by birth.

Before the 2015 general election, 69% of British Jews surveyed were planning to vote for the Conservative Party, while 22% would vote for the Labour Party.[61] A May 2016 poll of British Jews showed 77% would vote Conservative, 13.4% Labour, and 7.3% Liberal Democrat.[62] An October 2019 poll of British Jews showed 64% would vote Conservative, 24% Liberal Democrat, and only 6% Labour.[63]

Jews are typically seen as predominantly middle-class, though historically many Jews lived in working-class communities of London. According to polling in 2015, politicians' attitudes towards Israel influence the vote of three out of four British Jews.[64][65]

As per a 2023 survey, four out of five British Jews identify as Zionists.[66]

In London, most of the top constituencies with the largest Jewish populations voted Conservative in the 2010 general election - these are namely, Finchley and Golders Green, Hendon, Harrow East, Chipping Barnet, Ilford North, and Hertsmere in Hertfordshire. The exceptions were Hackney North and Stoke Newington and Hampstead and Kilburn, which both voted Labour in the election. Outside the region, large Jewish constituencies voted for Labour, namely Bury South and Blackley and Broughton.[39]

Jewish MPs by election
1945–1992[67][68][full citation needed][69]
Election Labour Conservative Liberal/Alliance Other Total % of Parliament
1857 1 1 0.2
1859 3 3 0.5
1865 6 0.9
1868
1874 1
1880 1 4 5
1885 3 6 9 1.3
1886 9 1.3
1892
1895
1900 7 2 9 1.3
1945 26 0 0 2 28 4.4
1950 23 0 0 0 23 3.7
1951 17 0 0 0 17 2.7
1955 17 1 0 0 18 2.9
1959 20 2 0 0 22 3.5
1964 34 2 0 0 36 5.7
1966 38 2 0 0 40 6.3
1970 31 9 0 0 40 6.3
1974 Feb 33 12 1 0 45 7.2
1974 Oct 35 10 1 0 45 7.2
1979 21 11 1 0 32 5.0
1983 11 17 2 0 30 4.6
1987 7 16 1 0 24 3.7
1992 8 11 1 0 20 3.1
2017[70] 8 11 0 0 19 2.9
2019 5 11 0 0 16 2.5

Some MPs, such as Robert Jenrick and Keir Starmer, while not Jewish themselves, are married to Jews and have Jewish children.[71][72]

Antisemitism edit

The earliest Jewish settlement was recorded in 1070, soon after the Norman Conquest. Jews living in England at this time experienced religious discrimination and it is thought that the blood libel which accused Jews of ritual murder originated in Northern England, leading to massacres and increasing discrimination.[2] The Jewish presence continued until King Edward I's Edict of Expulsion in 1290.[3]

Jews were readmitted into the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland by Oliver Cromwell in 1655, though it is believed that crypto-Jews lived in England during the expulsion.[4] Jews were regularly subjected to discrimination and humiliation which waxed and waned over the centuries, gradually declining.[5]

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the number of Jews in Britain greatly increased due to the exodus from Russia, which resulted in a large community forming in the East End of London.[6] Popular sentiment against immigration was used by the British Union of Fascists to incite hatred against Jews, leading to the Battle of Cable Street in 1936, when the fascists were forced to abandon their march through an area with a large Jewish population when the police clearing the way were unable to remove barricades defended by trade unionists, left wing groups and residents.[7]

In the aftermath of the Holocaust, undisguised racial hatred of Jews became unacceptable in British society. Outbursts of antisemitism emanating from far right groups continued, however, leading to the formation of the 43 Group led by Jewish ex-servicemen which broke up fascist meetings from 1945 to early 1950.

Records of antisemitic incidents have been compiled since 1984, although changing reporting practices and levels of reporting make comparison over time difficult. The Community Security Trust (CST) was formed in 1994 to "[protect] British Jews from antisemitism and related threats".[73] It works in conjunction with the police and other authorities to protect Jewish schools, Synagogues, and other community institutions.

Polling data from the Campaign Against Antisemitism reveals that almost half of British Jews have contemplated leaving the UK since the 2023 Hamas attack on Israel due to rising antisemitism.[66]

Communal institutions edit

British Jewish communal organisations include:

See also edit

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The question had appeared in the past several censuses in Northern Ireland.[17] In Scotland there were two questions: "What religion, religious denomination or body do you belong to?" and "What religion, religious denomination or body were you brought up in?".[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b DellaPergola, Sergio (2019), "World Jewish Population, 2018", in Dashefsky, Arnold; Sheskin, Ira M. (eds.), American Jewish Year Book 2018, vol. 118, Springer International Publishing, pp. 361–449, doi:10.1007/978-3-030-03907-3_8, ISBN 9783030039066, S2CID 146549764
  2. ^ Design, SUMO. "The 1190 Massacre: History of York".
  3. ^ Prestwich, Michael. Edward I p 345 (1997) Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-07157-4.
  4. ^ "History", , archived from the original on 2010-02-22.
  5. ^ Jews escaping from German-occupied Europe to the United Kingdom
  6. ^ Sherwood, Harriet (2018-05-05). "Iraq-born refugee could become first Arabic speaker to head Britain's Jews". The Guardian. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  7. ^ . www.jewishmuseum.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2018-07-18. Retrieved 2018-07-18.
  8. ^ Ahroni, Reuben (1994). The Jews of the British Crown Colony of Aden: History, Culture, and Ethnic Relations. BRILL. ISBN 978-9004101104.
  9. ^ "EJP looks back on 350 years of history of Jews in the UK", (in-depth article), European Jewish Press, 30 October 2005, archived from the original on 3 May 2011, retrieved 1 April 2011.
  10. ^ "Jewish Population of Europe in 1933". www.encyclopedia.ushmm.org. Retrieved 2023-01-09.
  11. ^ "A summary history of immigration to Britain". www.migrationwatchuk.org. Retrieved 2023-01-09.
  12. ^ "Britain: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries". www.jwa.org. Retrieved 2023-01-09.
  13. ^ "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics". www.ons.gov.uk. Retrieved 2022-11-29.
  14. ^ "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics". www.nisra.gov.uk. 7 September 2022. Retrieved 2023-10-31.
  15. ^ a b Graham, David; Waterman, Stanley. "Underenumeration of the Jewish Population in the UK 2001 Census" (subscription required). Population, Space and Place 12 (2): 89–102. March/April 2005. doi:10.1002/psp.362.
  16. ^ "The Jewish Population of the World (2010)". Jewish Virtual Library. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  17. ^ Graham, Schmool & Waterman 2007, p. 18.
  18. ^ a b Graham, Schmool & Waterman 2007, p. 3.
  19. ^ Graham, Schmool & Waterman 2007, pp. 12–13.
  20. ^ Graham, Schmool & Waterman 2007, pp. 20–21.
  21. ^ "Census 2011". Board of Deputies of British Jews. Accessed 10 August 2011.
  22. ^ Pigott, Robert. "Jewish population on the increase". BBC News. 21 May 2008. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  23. ^ "Majority of Jews will be Ultra-Orthodox by 2050" 2013-10-17 at the Wayback Machine. University of Manchester. 23 July 2007. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  24. ^ Butt, Riazat. "British Jewish population on the rise". The Guardian. 21 May 2008. Accessed 10 August 2011.
  25. ^ a b Sokol, Sam (20 November 2015). "Israel emigration to UK outstrips aliya, says report". Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
  26. ^ Casale Mashiah, Donatella (2018). (PDF). Institute for Jewish Policy Research & Board of Deputies of British Jews. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-01-06. Retrieved 2019-01-06.
  27. ^ Graham, Schmool & Waterman 2007, p. 5.
  28. ^ "New figures show near-doubling of Israeli-born UK residents since 2001". Jewish News. 29 November 2019. Retrieved 3 December 2019.
  29. ^ "Exodus to the UK as French Jews escape antisemitism". Jewish Chronicle. February 21, 2013. Accessed January 23, 2014.
  30. ^ Rocker, Simon (19 March 2019). "Aliyah from Britain falls for third year in a row". The Jewish Chronicle.
  31. ^ "Aliyah from UK close to lowest level as just 534 made the move in 2018". Jewish News. 20 March 2019.
  32. ^ "London by religion: Analysis". TheGuardian.com. 21 January 2005.
  33. ^ "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics".
  34. ^ "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics".
  35. ^ "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics".
  36. ^ "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics".
  37. ^ "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics".
  38. ^ "Religion, England and Wales - Office for National Statistics".
  39. ^ a b Boyd, Jonathan (May 2015). (PDF). jpr.org.uk. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-11-12. Retrieved 2020-11-08.
  40. ^ "JCR-UK: Belfast Jewish Community & Synagogues (Hebrew Congregations), Northern Ireland".
  41. ^ "JCR-UK: The Channel Islands Jewish Community".
  42. ^ "There are 49 Jews left on the British island of Jersey. The pandemic has pushed their one synagogue to the brink". 24 July 2020.
  43. ^ "JCR-UK: Isle of Man Jewish Community".
  44. ^ "The Future of Jewish Schools", p. 7.
  45. ^ "Jewish school admissions unlawful". BBC News. 25 June 2009. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  46. ^ Kessler, Sarah. "A Cross-Denominational Approach to High School in the U.K.". The Forward. 21 January 2009. Accessed 3 April 2011. 2 April 2011.
  47. ^ "About Us" 2011-05-15 at the Wayback Machine. Union of Jewish Students. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  48. ^ Graham, Schmool & Waterman 2007, p. 79.
  49. ^ Graham, Schmool & Waterman 2007, pp. 79–80.
  50. ^ Titheradge, Noel (27 February 2018). "Should a school be in a place like this?". BBC News. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  51. ^ Gringras, Robbie. "Writing the Limmud theme song ". Haaretz. 8 January 2010. Accessed 1 April 2011. 1 April 2011.
  52. ^ Graham, Schmool & Waterman 2007, p. 87.
  53. ^ Field, Clive (27 April 2010). "Economic Inequality and Religion". Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  54. ^ Heath, A. and Li, Y. (2015) Review of the relationship between religion and poverty; an analysis for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation. CSI Working paper 2015-01. Page 16. Downloaded from http://csi.nuff.ox.ac.uk/
  55. ^ Rocker, Simon (7 July 2016). "Intermarriage at record high – but rate of increase slows". Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  56. ^ Graham, David (5 July 2016). "Jews in couples: Marriage, intermarriage, cohabitation and divorce in Britain". IJPR. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  57. ^ a b Casale Mashiah, Donatella (2017). Synagogue membership in the United Kingdom in 2016 (PDF). Institute for Jewish Policy Research & Board of Deputies of British Jews.
  58. ^ "Welcome to our shul! This week: Stanmore and Canons Park".
  59. ^ "The Jewish Chronicle and Anglo-Jewry, 1841–1991". Cambridge University Press. Accessed 3 April 2011.
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Sources edit

  • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 August 2013. (430 KB). All-Party Parliamentary Group against Antisemitism. September 2006. Accessed 1 April 2011. 24 November 2010. See .
  • "The Future of Jewish Schools" (PDF). (995 KB). Jewish Leadership Council. 2008. Accessed 4 April 2011.
  • Graham, David; Schmool, Marlena; Waterman, Stanley (18 May 2007), (PDF), Institute for Jewish Policy Research, archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2011, retrieved 22 July 2011, 4.93 MiB. See webpage 2018-04-03 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Graham, David; Vulkan, Daniel (13 May 2010), (PDF), Institute for Jewish Policy Research, archived from the original (PDF) on 26 July 2011, retrieved 3 April 2011, 2.68 MiB. See webpage 2017-12-01 at the Wayback Machine.
  • Casale Mashiah, Donatella; Boyd, Jonathan (14 July 2017), Synagogue membership in the United Kingdom in 2016, Institute for Jewish Research

Further reading edit

  • Anti-Semitism Worldwide 1999/2000. Stephen Roth Institute. Distributed by the University of Nebraska Press. pp. 125–135.
  • Cesarani, David (1994). The Jewish Chronicle and Anglo-Jewry, 1841–1991. Cambridge University Press.
  • Cesarani, David. "British Jews". Liedtke, Rainer; Wendehorst, Stephan. (eds) (1999). The Emancipation of Catholics, Jews and Protestants: Minorities and the Nation State in Nineteenth-Century Europe. Manchester University Press. pp. 33–55.
  • Endelman, Todd M. (2002). The Jews of Britain, 1656 to 2000. University of California Press.
  • Spector, Sheila A. (ed) (2002). British Romanticism and the Jews: History, Culture, Literature. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Valins, Oliver; Kosmin, Barry; Goldberg, Jacqueline. "The future of Jewish schooling in the United Kingdom". Institute for Jewish Policy Research. 31 December 2002. Accessed 4 April 2011.
  • London, Louise (2003). Whitehall and the Jews, 1933–1948: British Immigration Policy, Jewish Refugees and the Holocaust. Cambridge University Press.
  • Schreiber, Mordecai; Schiff, Alvin I.; Klenicki, Leon. (2003). The Shengold Jewish Encyclopedia (3rd edition). Schreiber Publishing. pp. 79–80.
  • Wynne-Jones, Jonathan; additional reporting by Jeffay, Nathan. "Is this the last generation of British Jews?". The Daily Telegraph. 26 November 2006. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  • Shindler, Colin. "The Reflection of Israel Within British Jewry". Ben-Moshe, Danny; Segev, Zohar (eds) (2007). Israel, the Diaspora, and Jewish Identity. Sussex Academic Press. pp. 227–234.
  • Butt, Riazat. "Faith in numbers". The Guardian. 20 November 2007. Accessed 4 April 2011.
  • Lawless, Jill. "London's Jewish Museum reopens after major facelift". Associated Press via USA Today. 17 March 2010. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  • Graham, David; Boyd, Jonathan. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 June 2011. (1.64 MB). Institute for Jewish Policy Research. 15 July 2010. Accessed 4 April 2011. 22 July 2011. See webpage.
  • Brown, Mick. . The Daily Telegraph. 25 February 2011. Accessed 1 April 2011.
  • "Publications on British Jews from the Berman Jewish Policy Archive @ NYU Wagner".

External links edit

  • Anglo-Jewish Archives. University of Southampton

british, jews, often, referred, collectively, british, jewry, anglo, jewry, british, citizens, jewish, number, people, identified, jews, united, kingdom, rose, just, under, between, 2001, 2021, total, population277, 2021, census, english, welsh, jews, 2021, no. British Jews often referred to collectively as British Jewry or Anglo Jewry are British citizens who are Jewish The number of people who identified as Jews in the United Kingdom rose by just under 4 between 2001 and 2021 British JewsTotal population277 653 2021 Census for English and Welsh Jews 2021 Northern Irish Census for Northern Irish Jews and 2011 Census for Scottish Jews does not include smaller populations in Northern Ireland and the Crown Dependencies Core Jewish population 2018 290 000 1 Enlarged Jewish population includes non Jewish relatives of Jews 2018 370 000 1 Regions with significant populationsLondon Greater Manchester Leeds Gateshead Brighton St Albans Southend also Hertsmere Epping Forest and East RenfrewshireLanguagesPrimarily English also Yiddish largely spoken by Hassidic Jews historically Spanish and Portuguese among Sephardim immigrant languages include or have included Hebrew Arabic Russian and French amongst many othersReligionJudaism or irreligionRelated ethnic groupsOther Jews Contents 1 History 2 Demographics 2 1 Population size 2 2 Historical population 2 2 1 Migration 2 2 2 Ethnicity 2 3 Geographic distribution 2 4 Age profile 2 5 Education 2 6 Employment and income 2 7 Marriage 3 Religion 4 Culture 4 1 Media 4 2 Food 5 Politics 6 Antisemitism 7 Communal institutions 8 See also 9 Notes and references 9 1 Notes 9 2 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editMain articles History of the Jews in England 1066 1290 History of the Jews in England History of the Jews in Scotland History of the Jews in Wales and History of the Jews in Northern Ireland The first recorded Jewish community in Britain was brought to England in 1070 by King William the Conqueror who believed the Jewish population s commercial skills would make his newly won country more prosperous At the end of the 12th century a series of blood libels and fatal pogroms were perpetrated in England particularly on the east coast Notably on 16 March 1190 during the run up to the Third Crusade the Jewish population of York was massacred at the site where Clifford s Tower now stands 2 and King Edward I of England passed the Statute of the Jewry Statutum de Judaismo in 1275 restricting the community s activities most notably outlawing the practice of usury charging interest 3 Fifteen years later when Edward found that many of these provisions were ignored he expelled the Jews from England The Jewish population emigrated to countries such as Poland which protected them by law A small English community persisted in hiding despite the expulsion Jews were not banned from Scotland which was an independent kingdom until 1707 however there is no record of a Jewish presence in Scotland before the 18th century Jews were also not banned in Wales at the time but England eventually annexed Wales under Henry VIII When Henry VIII s England annexed Wales the English ban on Jews extended to Wales There is only one known record of a Jew in Wales between 1290 and the annexation but it is possible individuals did persist there after 1290 A small community of conversos was identified in Bristol in 1609 and banished In 1656 Oliver Cromwell made it clear that the ban on Jewish settlement in England and Wales would no longer be enforced but when Rabbi Manasseh Ben Israel brought a petition to allow Jews to return the majority of the Protectorate Government turned it down Despite the Protectorate government s rejection of the Rabbi s petition the community considers 1656 to mark the readmission of the Jews to England and Wales In mid nineteenth century British ruled Ireland Daniel O Connell known as The Liberator for his work on Catholic Emancipation worked successfully for the repeal of the De Judaismo law which prescribed a special yellow badge for Jews 4 Benjamin Disraeli 1804 1881 of Jewish birth although he joined the Church of England served in government for three decades twice as prime minister The oldest Jewish community in Britain is the Spanish and Portuguese Jewish community which traces back to the 1630s when it existed clandestinely in London before the readmission and was unofficially legitimised in 1656 which is the date counted by the Jewish community as the re admittance of the Jews to England which at the time included Wales A trickle of Ashkenazi immigration primarily from German countries continued from the late 17th century to the early 19th century As for the second wave of Ashkenazi immigration a large wave of Ashkenazi Jewish immigrants fleeing persecution in the Russian Empire due to pogroms and the May Laws between 1880 and the imposition of tighter immigration restrictions in 1905 sought their way to the Isles Many German and Polish Jews seeking to escape the Nazi Holocaust arrived in Britain before and after the Second World War 5 better source needed Around 80 90 of British Jews today are Ashkenazi Following de colonisation the late twentieth century saw Yemeni Jews Iraqi Jews and Baghdadi Jews settle in the United Kingdom 6 7 8 A multicultural community in 2006 British Jews celebrated the 350th anniversary of the resettlement in England 9 Demographics editPopulation size edit Historical British Jewish populationYearPop 17346 000 180017 500 191 7 188160 000 242 9 1900250 000 316 7 1933300 000 20 0 1938370 000 23 3 1945450 000 21 6 1980330 000 26 7 2001266 740 19 2 2011269 568 1 1 2021 277 653 3 0 Source Data from 2001 onwards derived from the UK Census 2021 data based on 2021 England and Wales census 2021 Northern Irish census and 2011 Scottish census data Data prior to 2001 based on estimates these come from the Jewish Encyclopedia of 1901 1906 the US Holocaust Museum and Jews in Britain Origin and Growth of Anglo Jewry 1943 10 11 12 According to the 2021 United Kingdom census there were 271 327 Jews in England and Wales or 0 5 of the overall population 13 whilst in the 2021 Northern Irish census there were 439 self identified Jews comprising just 0 02 of the population but marking a 31 increase in numbers since the census of 2011 14 According to the 2011 census 5 887 Jews lived in Scotland for a total of 277 653 self identified Jews in the United Kingdom This does not include much smaller communities in the Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories notably there are Jewish communities in Gibraltar Jersey and Bermuda amongst others However this final figure is considered an undercount Demographers David Graham and Stanley Waterman give several reasons as for why the underenumeration for censuses in general the question did not record secular Jews the voluntary nature of the question suspicion by Jews of such questions and the high non response rate for large numbers of Haredi Jews 15 By comparison the Jewish Virtual Library estimated a Jewish population of 291 000 not limited to adherents of Judaism in 2012 making Britain s Jewish community the fifth largest in the world 16 This equates to 0 43 of the population of the United Kingdom The absolute number of Jews has been gradually rising since records began in the 2011 census 263 346 people in England and Wales answered Jewish to the voluntary question on religion compared with 259 927 in of 2001 The 2001 Census included a voluntary religion question What is your religion for the first time in its history n 1 266 740 people listed their religion as Jewish 18 However the subject of who is a Jew is complex and the religion question did not record people who may be Jewish through other means such as ethnically and culturally 19 Of people who chose Jewish as their religion 97 put White as their ethnic group However a report by the Institute for Jewish Policy Research JPR suggests that although there was an apparent option to write down Jewish for this question it did not occur to many because of skin colour and nationality bias and that if Jewish was an explicit option the results only 2 594 respondents were Jewish solely by ethnicity would have been different 20 The religion question appeared in the 2011 Census but there was still no explicit option for Jewish in the ethnic group question The Board of Deputies had encouraged all Jews to indicate they were Jewish either through the religion question or the ethnicity one 21 From 2005 to 2008 the Jewish population increased from 275 000 to 280 000 attributed largely to the high birth rates of Haredi or ultra Orthodox Jews 22 Research by the University of Manchester in 2007 showed that 75 of British Jewish births were to the Haredi community 23 Ultra Orthodox women have an average of 6 9 children and secular Jewish women 1 65 24 In 2015 the Institute for Jewish Policy Research reported that in England the orthodox community was growing by nearly 5 per year while the non haredi community was decreasing by 0 3 per year 25 It has been also documented that in terms of births between 2007 and 2015 the estimated number of Strictly Orthodox births per annum increased by 35 rising from 1 431 to 1 932 Meanwhile the estimated number of Mainstream non Strictly Orthodox births per annum increased to a lesser extent over the same period going from 1 844 to 1 889 2 4 26 Historical population edit Going into the 19th century the Jewish population was small likely no more than 20 000 individuals However the population quadrupled in just a few decades after 1881 as a large number of Jews fled oppression in the Russian Empire The population increased by as much as 50 between 1933 and 1945 with the United Kingdom admitting around 70 000 Jews between 1933 and 1938 and a further 80 000 between 1938 and 1945 The late 1940s and early 1950s proved to be the high point numerically speaking for British Jewry A decline followed as many of the new arrivals moved to Israel moved back to Europe or emigrated elsewhere and many other individuals assimilated The decline continued into the 1990s but has since reversed The estimates given before the 2001 Census are likely not directly comparable to the Census as the Census is based purely on self identification whereas the estimates are based on community membership and it is probably the decline from 450 000 to 266 740 is more like a decline from 450 000 to somewhere between 300 000 and 350 000 going by the metrics of the estimators Contemporary Jewish demographers like Sergio DellaPergola give figures around 300 000 for the British Jewish population in the early 2010s since when it has grown Migration edit The great majority 83 2 of Jews in England and Wales were born in the UK 27 In 2015 about 6 of Jews in England held an Israeli passport 25 In 2019 the Office for National Statistics estimated that 21 000 people resident in the UK were born in Israel up from 11 890 in 2001 Of the 21 000 8 000 had Israeli nationality 28 In 2013 it was reported that antisemitic attacks in France led to an exodus of French Jews to the UK This has resulted in some synagogues establishing French language Shabbat services 29 In 2018 534 Britons emigrated to Israel representing the third consecutive annual decline The figure was one third down on 2015 and was the lowest for five years Meanwhile immigration of Jews from Israel is consistently higher than emigration of Jews to Israel at a ratio of about 3 2 meaning the British Jewish community has a net gain of Jewish immigrants to the point Israelis now represent around 6 of the British Jewish community 30 31 Ethnicity edit Jews in England and Wales by ethnic group and nationality Ethnic group 2001 2011 2021 Number Number Number White 249 483 96 82 241 356 92 37 230 399 85 56 British 216 403 84 00 200 934 76 90 180 325 66 96 Irish 1 134 0 44 1 116 0 43 927 0 34 Irish Traveller 241 0 09 161 0 06 Roma 178 0 07 Other White 31 946 12 40 39 065 14 95 48 808 18 12 Mixed 3 038 1 18 4 209 1 61 6 029 2 24 White and Asian 828 0 32 1 229 0 47 1 190 0 44 White and Black Caribbean 379 0 15 778 0 30 780 0 29 White and Black African 181 0 07 424 0 16 442 0 16 Other Mixed 1 650 0 64 1 778 0 86 3 617 1 34 Asian 1 968 0 76 2 750 1 05 1 526 0 57 Indian 663 0 26 816 0 31 557 0 21 Chinese 104 0 04 324 0 12 159 0 06 Pakistani 353 0 14 433 0 17 261 0 10 Bangladeshi 124 0 05 222 0 08 83 0 03 Other Asian 724 0 28 955 0 37 466 0 17 Black 893 0 35 1 591 0 61 1 611 0 60 Caribbean 535 0 21 611 0 23 649 0 24 African 236 0 09 499 0 19 709 0 26 Other Black 122 0 05 481 0 18 253 0 09 Other 11 376 29 719 Arab 564 0 22 422 0 16 Other Ethnic group 2 289 0 89 10 812 4 14 29 297 10 88 TOTAL 257 671 100 0 261 282 100 0 269 293 100 0 Geographic distribution edit The majority of the Jews in the UK live in southeastern England particularly in and around London Around 145 480 Jews live in London itself more than half the Jewish population of the entire country notably the North London boroughs of Barnet 56 620 Hackney 17 430 Camden 10 080 Haringey 9 400 Harrow 7 300 Redbridge 6 410 Westminster 5 630 Brent 3 720 Enfield 3 710 Islington 2 710 and Kensington and Chelsea 2 680 There are also 30 220 Jews living in districts that are not quite London but are outside the boundaries of London itself of which 21 270 are in southern Hertfordshire and 4 930 are in southwestern Essex giving a total population of 175 690 Jews in London and the districts and boroughs immediately surrounding it as compared to 95 640 in the rest of England and Wales combined In total including communities some distance from London just under 46 000 Jews live in the six counties bordering Greater London of which two thirds live in areas immediately adjacent to London There are in total more than 26 400 Jews in Hertfordshire of which 18 350 are in the borough of Hertsmere in southwestern Hertfordshire adjacent to Jewish areas in Barnet and Harrow Towns and villages in Hertsmere with large Jewish populations include Borehamwood 6 160 Bushey 5 590 and Radlett 2 980 Some 30 of Radlett s population is Jewish as is 20 of Bushey s and 17 of Borehamwood s 21 of neighbouring Shenley s and 36 of nearby Elstree which has a Jewish plurality Further afield from London there is also a significant community in St Albans as well as other smaller communities throughout the county 32 There are over 10 300 Jews in Essex of which 4 380 live in the district of Epping Forest in the county s southwest There is also a significant community in Southend In total London and the counties around it are host to 70 56 of England and Wales Jewish population as of 2021 The next most significant population is in Greater Manchester a community of more than 28 000 mostly in Bury 10 730 Salford 10 370 Manchester 2 630 and Trafford 2 410 33 There are also significant communities in Leeds 6 270 34 Gateshead 2 910 35 Brighton 2 460 36 St Albans 2 240 37 and Southend 2 060 38 Some historically sizeable communities like Liverpool Bournemouth and Birmingham have experienced a steady decline and now number fewer than 2 000 self identifying Jews each conversely there are small but growing communities in places like Bristol Oxford and Cambridge The most Jewish county in the UK is Hertfordshire which is 2 23 Jewish this is followed by the City of London at 2 06 and then Greater London at 1 63 Greater Manchester is 1 00 Jewish Essex is 0 70 and East Sussex is 0 65 No other county is as much as 0 50 Jewish The least Jewish county or principal area in England and Wales is Merthyr Tydfil which is less than 0 01 Jewish despite once having had a significant community Hertsmere and Barnet councils are the most Jewish local authorities in England with Jews composing one in six and seven residents respectively Finchley and Golders Green is the political constituency with the largest Jewish population in the UK 39 The Scottish population is concentrated in Greater Glasgow which counts around 3 300 Jews Over 40 of the Scottish Jewish population or around 2 400 people resides in or around the Glasgow suburb of Newton Mearns Fewer than 900 Jews live in Edinburgh the remaining 30 of Scottish Jewry is scattered throughout the country The largest Welsh community is in Cardiff with almost 700 Jews comprising about a third of the Welsh Jewish population and 0 19 of the population of Cardiff itself The only synagogue in Northern Ireland is in Belfast where the community has fewer than 100 active members 40 although 439 people recorded their religion as Jewish in the Northern Irish census of 2021 despite remarkable growth since the previous census in 2011 this still leaves the Northern Irish community as the smallest of the four Home Nations both in overall numbers and percentage terms There are small communities throughout the Channel Islands and there is an active synagogue in St Brelade Jersey although the Jewish population of the island is only 49 41 42 There is only a small number of Jews on the Isle of Man with no synagogue 43 Age profile edit nbsp Two boys with kippot at a bus stop in Hendon north London The British Jewish population has an older profile than the general population In England and Wales the median age of male Jews is 41 2 while the figure for all males is 36 1 Jewish females have a median age of 44 3 while the figure for all females is 38 1 18 About 24 of the community are over the age of 65 compared to 16 of the general population of England and Wales In the 2001 census Jews were the only group in which the number of persons in the 75 plus cohorts outnumbered those in the 65 74 cohort citation needed Education edit About 60 of school age Jewish children attend Jewish schools 44 Jewish day schools and yeshivas are found throughout the country Jewish cultural studies and Hebrew language instruction are commonly offered at synagogues in the form of supplementary Hebrew schools or Sunday schools The majority of Jewish schools in Britain are funded by the government Jewish educational centres are plentiful large scale projects One of the country s most famous Jewish schools is the state funded JFS in London which opened in 1732 and has about 2100 students It is heavily over subscribed and applies strict rules on admissions which led to a discrimination court case R E v Governing Body of JFS in 2009 45 In 2011 another large state funded school opened in North London named JCoSS the first cross denomination Jewish secondary school in the UK 46 The Union of Jewish Students is an umbrella organisation that represents Jewish students at university In 2011 there were over 50 Jewish Societies 47 British Jews generally have high levels of educational achievement Compared to the general population they are 40 less likely to have no qualifications and 80 more likely to have higher level qualifications 48 With the exception of under 25s younger Jews tend to be better educated than older ones 49 However dozens of the all day educational establishments in the Haredi community of Stamford Hill which are accused of neglecting secular skills such as English and maths claim not to be schools under the meaning of the Department for Education 50 The annual Limmud festival is a high profile educational event of the British Jewish community attracting a wide range of international presenters 51 Employment and income edit The 2001 UK Census showed that 30 5 of economically active Jews were self employed compared to a figure of 14 2 for the general population Jews aged 16 24 were less likely to be economically active than their counterparts in the general population 89 2 of these were students 52 In a 2010 study average income per working adult was 15 44 an hour Median income and wealth were significantly higher than other religious groups 53 In a 2015 study poverty has risen the fastest per generation than other religious groups 54 Marriage edit In 2016 the Institute for Jewish Policy Research reported that the intermarriage rate for the Jewish community in the UK was 26 This was less than half of the US rate of 58 and showed little change from the rate in the early 1980s of 23 though more than twice the 11 level of the end of the 1960s Around one third of the children of mixed marriages are brought up in the Jewish faith 55 56 Religion editThere are around 454 synagogues in the country and it is estimated that 56 3 of all households across the UK with at least one Jew living within them held synagogue membership in 2016 57 6 The percentage of households adhering to specific denominations is as follows Orthodox consisting of the United Synagogue the Federation of Synagogues and independent Orthodox synagogues 42 8 Strictly Orthodox synagogues aligned with the Union of Orthodox Hebrew Congregations and others of a similar ethos 23 5 Reform Movement for Reform Judaism and Westminster Synagogue and Chaim V Tikvah and Hastings and District Jewish Society 19 3 Liberal Liberal Judaism and Belsize Square Synagogue 8 2 Masorti Assembly of Masorti Synagogues 3 3 Sephardi 2 9 Those in the United Kingdom who consider themselves Jews identify as follows 34 Secular 18 Ultra Orthodox 14 Modern Orthodox 14 Reform 10 Traditional but not very religious 6 Liberal 2 Conservative 2 Sephardi 57 11 12 The Stanmore and Canons Park Synagogue in the London Borough of Harrow said in 2015 that it had the largest membership of any single Orthodox synagogue in Europe 58 Culture editMedia edit There are a number of Jewish newspapers magazines and other media published in Britain on a national or regional level The most well known is The Jewish Chronicle founded in 1841 and the world s oldest continuously published Jewish newspaper 59 Other publications include the Jewish News Jewish Telegraph Hamodia the Jewish Tribune and Jewish Renaissance In April 2020 The Jewish Chronicle and the Jewish News which had announced plans to merge in February and later announced plans for a joint liquidation continued as separate entities after the former was acquired by a consortium Food edit Cookbooks grew in popularity in Britain during the mid 1800s and shaped the overall cuisine that British Jews experienced by teaching and inspiring housewives how to cook The shaping of Jewish food overtime told the story of their frequent migration throughout Europe There was a lot of influence from Eastern European and Ashkenazi food This resulted in the common staples of Anglo Jewish women to keep bread bagels and potatoes consistently in their homes Since they had a history filled with Diaspora dishes varied heavily and included fish meat spaghetti pudding or soup 60 Politics edit nbsp Benjamin Disraeli in 1878 the only Prime Minister who was Jewish by birth Before the 2015 general election 69 of British Jews surveyed were planning to vote for the Conservative Party while 22 would vote for the Labour Party 61 A May 2016 poll of British Jews showed 77 would vote Conservative 13 4 Labour and 7 3 Liberal Democrat 62 An October 2019 poll of British Jews showed 64 would vote Conservative 24 Liberal Democrat and only 6 Labour 63 Jews are typically seen as predominantly middle class though historically many Jews lived in working class communities of London According to polling in 2015 politicians attitudes towards Israel influence the vote of three out of four British Jews 64 65 As per a 2023 survey four out of five British Jews identify as Zionists 66 In London most of the top constituencies with the largest Jewish populations voted Conservative in the 2010 general election these are namely Finchley and Golders Green Hendon Harrow East Chipping Barnet Ilford North and Hertsmere in Hertfordshire The exceptions were Hackney North and Stoke Newington and Hampstead and Kilburn which both voted Labour in the election Outside the region large Jewish constituencies voted for Labour namely Bury South and Blackley and Broughton 39 Jewish MPs by election1945 1992 67 68 full citation needed 69 Election Labour Conservative Liberal Alliance Other Total of Parliament 1857 1 1 0 2 1859 3 3 0 5 1865 6 0 9 1868 1874 1 1880 1 4 5 1885 3 6 9 1 3 1886 9 1 3 1892 1895 1900 7 2 9 1 3 1945 26 0 0 2 28 4 4 1950 23 0 0 0 23 3 7 1951 17 0 0 0 17 2 7 1955 17 1 0 0 18 2 9 1959 20 2 0 0 22 3 5 1964 34 2 0 0 36 5 7 1966 38 2 0 0 40 6 3 1970 31 9 0 0 40 6 3 1974 Feb 33 12 1 0 45 7 2 1974 Oct 35 10 1 0 45 7 2 1979 21 11 1 0 32 5 0 1983 11 17 2 0 30 4 6 1987 7 16 1 0 24 3 7 1992 8 11 1 0 20 3 1 2017 70 8 11 0 0 19 2 9 2019 5 11 0 0 16 2 5 Some MPs such as Robert Jenrick and Keir Starmer while not Jewish themselves are married to Jews and have Jewish children 71 72 Antisemitism editMain article Antisemitism in the United Kingdom The earliest Jewish settlement was recorded in 1070 soon after the Norman Conquest Jews living in England at this time experienced religious discrimination and it is thought that the blood libel which accused Jews of ritual murder originated in Northern England leading to massacres and increasing discrimination 2 The Jewish presence continued until King Edward I s Edict of Expulsion in 1290 3 Jews were readmitted into the Commonwealth of England Scotland and Ireland by Oliver Cromwell in 1655 though it is believed that crypto Jews lived in England during the expulsion 4 Jews were regularly subjected to discrimination and humiliation which waxed and waned over the centuries gradually declining 5 In the late 19th and early 20th centuries the number of Jews in Britain greatly increased due to the exodus from Russia which resulted in a large community forming in the East End of London 6 Popular sentiment against immigration was used by the British Union of Fascists to incite hatred against Jews leading to the Battle of Cable Street in 1936 when the fascists were forced to abandon their march through an area with a large Jewish population when the police clearing the way were unable to remove barricades defended by trade unionists left wing groups and residents 7 In the aftermath of the Holocaust undisguised racial hatred of Jews became unacceptable in British society Outbursts of antisemitism emanating from far right groups continued however leading to the formation of the 43 Group led by Jewish ex servicemen which broke up fascist meetings from 1945 to early 1950 Records of antisemitic incidents have been compiled since 1984 although changing reporting practices and levels of reporting make comparison over time difficult The Community Security Trust CST was formed in 1994 to protect British Jews from antisemitism and related threats 73 It works in conjunction with the police and other authorities to protect Jewish schools Synagogues and other community institutions Polling data from the Campaign Against Antisemitism reveals that almost half of British Jews have contemplated leaving the UK since the 2023 Hamas attack on Israel due to rising antisemitism 66 Communal institutions editBritish Jewish communal organisations include Anglo Jewish Association Association of Jewish Refugees Board of Deputies 1760 CCJO Rene Cassin Community Security Trust Institute for Jewish Policy Research Jewish Board of Guardians Jewish Book Council Jewish Care Jewish Council for Racial Equality Jewish Genealogical Society of Great Britain Jewish Leadership Council 74 JW3 a London venue Kisharon League of British Jews League of Jewish Women Leo Baeck Institute London Liberal Judaism Limmud London Jewish Forum London Jewish Cultural Centre Maccabaeans Mitzvah Day International Movement for Reform Judaism Norwood Scottish Council of Jewish Communities Tzelem UCL Institute of Jewish Studies UK Jewish Film Festival Union of Jewish Students United Restitution Organization United Synagogue Union of Jewish Women World Jewish ReliefSee also edit nbsp United Kingdom portal nbsp Judaism portal List of British Jews List of Jewish communities in the United Kingdom History of the Jews in England History of the Jews in Scotland History of the Jews in Ireland History of the Jews in the Isle of Man Emancipation of the Jews in the United KingdomNotes and references editNotes edit The question had appeared in the past several censuses in Northern Ireland 17 In Scotland there were two questions What religion religious denomination or body do you belong to and What religion religious denomination or body were you brought up in 15 References edit a b DellaPergola Sergio 2019 World Jewish Population 2018 in Dashefsky Arnold Sheskin Ira M eds American Jewish Year Book 2018 vol 118 Springer International Publishing pp 361 449 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 03907 3 8 ISBN 9783030039066 S2CID 146549764 Design SUMO The 1190 Massacre History of York Prestwich Michael Edward I p 345 1997 Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 07157 4 History Jewish Ireland archived from the original on 2010 02 22 Jews escaping from German occupied Europe to the United Kingdom Sherwood Harriet 2018 05 05 Iraq born refugee could become first Arabic speaker to head Britain s Jews The Guardian Retrieved 2018 07 18 The Jewish Museum www jewishmuseum org uk Archived from the original on 2018 07 18 Retrieved 2018 07 18 Ahroni Reuben 1994 The Jews of the British Crown Colony of Aden History Culture and Ethnic Relations BRILL ISBN 978 9004101104 EJP looks back on 350 years of history of Jews in the UK On Anglo Jewry in depth article European Jewish Press 30 October 2005 archived from the original on 3 May 2011 retrieved 1 April 2011 Jewish Population of Europe in 1933 www encyclopedia ushmm org Retrieved 2023 01 09 A summary history of immigration to Britain www migrationwatchuk org Retrieved 2023 01 09 Britain Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries www jwa org Retrieved 2023 01 09 Religion England and Wales Office for National Statistics www ons gov uk Retrieved 2022 11 29 Religion England and Wales Office for National Statistics www nisra gov uk 7 September 2022 Retrieved 2023 10 31 a b Graham David Waterman Stanley Underenumeration of the Jewish Population in the UK 2001 Census subscription required Population Space and Place 12 2 89 102 March April 2005 doi 10 1002 psp 362 The Jewish Population of the World 2010 Jewish Virtual Library Accessed 1 April 2011 Graham Schmool amp Waterman 2007 p 18 a b Graham Schmool amp Waterman 2007 p 3 Graham Schmool amp Waterman 2007 pp 12 13 Graham Schmool amp Waterman 2007 pp 20 21 Census 2011 Board of Deputies of British Jews Accessed 10 August 2011 Pigott Robert Jewish population on the increase BBC News 21 May 2008 Accessed 1 April 2011 Majority of Jews will be Ultra Orthodox by 2050 Archived 2013 10 17 at the Wayback Machine University of Manchester 23 July 2007 Accessed 1 April 2011 Butt Riazat British Jewish population on the rise The Guardian 21 May 2008 Accessed 10 August 2011 a b Sokol Sam 20 November 2015 Israel emigration to UK outstrips aliya says report Jerusalem Post Retrieved 7 September 2018 Casale Mashiah Donatella 2018 Vital statistics of the UK Jewish population births and deaths PDF Institute for Jewish Policy Research amp Board of Deputies of British Jews Archived from the original PDF on 2019 01 06 Retrieved 2019 01 06 Graham Schmool amp Waterman 2007 p 5 New figures show near doubling of Israeli born UK residents since 2001 Jewish News 29 November 2019 Retrieved 3 December 2019 Exodus to the UK as French Jews escape antisemitism Jewish Chronicle February 21 2013 Accessed January 23 2014 Rocker Simon 19 March 2019 Aliyah from Britain falls for third year in a row The Jewish Chronicle Aliyah from UK close to lowest level as just 534 made the move in 2018 Jewish News 20 March 2019 London by religion Analysis TheGuardian com 21 January 2005 Religion England and Wales Office for National Statistics Religion England and Wales Office for National Statistics Religion England and Wales Office for National Statistics Religion England and Wales Office for National Statistics Religion England and Wales Office for National Statistics Religion England and Wales Office for National Statistics a b Boyd Jonathan May 2015 Where Jewish Votes May Matter Most The Institute for Jewish Policy Research Guide to the 2015 General Election in the UK PDF jpr org uk Archived from the original PDF on 2020 11 12 Retrieved 2020 11 08 JCR UK Belfast Jewish Community amp Synagogues Hebrew Congregations Northern Ireland JCR UK The Channel Islands Jewish Community There are 49 Jews left on the British island of Jersey The pandemic has pushed their one synagogue to the brink 24 July 2020 JCR UK Isle of Man Jewish Community The Future of Jewish Schools p 7 Jewish school admissions unlawful BBC News 25 June 2009 Accessed 1 April 2011 Kessler Sarah A Cross Denominational Approach to High School in the U K The Forward 21 January 2009 Accessed 3 April 2011 Archived 2 April 2011 About Us Archived 2011 05 15 at the Wayback Machine Union of Jewish Students Accessed 1 April 2011 Graham Schmool amp Waterman 2007 p 79 Graham Schmool amp Waterman 2007 pp 79 80 Titheradge Noel 27 February 2018 Should a school be in a place like this BBC News Retrieved 3 April 2018 Gringras Robbie Writing the Limmud theme song Haaretz 8 January 2010 Accessed 1 April 2011 Archived 1 April 2011 Graham Schmool amp Waterman 2007 p 87 Field Clive 27 April 2010 Economic Inequality and Religion Retrieved 9 July 2019 Heath A and Li Y 2015 Review of the relationship between religion and poverty an analysis for the Joseph Rowntree Foundation CSI Working paper 2015 01 Page 16 Downloaded from http csi nuff ox ac uk Rocker Simon 7 July 2016 Intermarriage at record high but rate of increase slows Jewish Chronicle Retrieved 22 May 2020 Graham David 5 July 2016 Jews in couples Marriage intermarriage cohabitation and divorce in Britain IJPR Retrieved 22 May 2020 a b Casale Mashiah Donatella 2017 Synagogue membership in the United Kingdom in 2016 PDF Institute for Jewish Policy Research amp Board of Deputies of British Jews Welcome to our shul This week Stanmore and Canons Park The Jewish Chronicle and Anglo Jewry 1841 1991 Cambridge University Press Accessed 3 April 2011 Panayi Panikos 2011 12 19 Migration Cuisine And Integration The Anglo Jewish Cookbook From The Lady To The Princess New Formations 74 74 108 121 doi 10 3898 NewF 74 06 2011 ISSN 0950 2378 General Election Poll PDF survation com 2015 04 07 Jewish Chronicle survey results May 2016 The Jewish Chronicle 30 May 2017 Retrieved 7 September 2018 EXCLUSIVE ELECTION POLL One quarter of UK Jews set to vote Lib Dem Jewish News 30 October 2019 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Huge majority of British Jews will vote Tory JC poll reveals The JC 7 April 2015 How Ed Miliband Lost Britain s Jewish Voters Archived 2015 04 12 at the Wayback Machine The Jewish Daily Forward 8 April 2015 a b Nearly half of UK Jews considered leaving due to antisemitism poll The Jerusalem Post JPost com 2023 12 18 Retrieved 2023 12 18 Medding Peter Y 1 January 1995 Studies in Contemporary Jewry XI Values Interests and Identity Jews and Politics in a Changing World OUP USA Institute of Contemporary Jewry Hebrew University of Jerusalem ISBN 9780195103311 via Google Books Jewish Identity in British Politics The Case of the First Jewish MPs 1858 87 Crewe Ivor 16 October 2015 The Politics of Race Routledge ISBN 9781317382973 via Google Books Election 2017 Winners and losers on a night of drama The Jewish Chronicle 16 June 2017 Retrieved 7 September 2018 Harpin Lee 15 September 2019 Communities minister Robert Jenrick vows to tackle parts of local Government corrupted by antisemitism The Jewish Chronicle Retrieved 15 September 2019 After Corbyn UK Labour elects Keir Starmer Zionist with Jewish wife as leader AFP Times of Israel staff April 4 2020 About CST CST Protecting Our Jewish Community cst org uk Retrieved 2019 07 31 Members Sources edit Report of the All Party Parliamentary Inquiry into Antisemitism PDF Archived from the original PDF on 22 August 2013 430 KB All Party Parliamentary Group against Antisemitism September 2006 Accessed 1 April 2011 24 November 2010 See inquiry website The Future of Jewish Schools PDF 995 KB Jewish Leadership Council 2008 Accessed 4 April 2011 Graham David Schmool Marlena Waterman Stanley 18 May 2007 Jews in Britain A Snapshot from the 2001 Census PDF Institute for Jewish Policy Research archived from the original PDF on 26 July 2011 retrieved 22 July 2011 4 93 MiB See webpage Archived 2018 04 03 at the Wayback Machine Graham David Vulkan Daniel 13 May 2010 Synagogue membership in the United Kingdom in 2010 PDF Institute for Jewish Policy Research archived from the original PDF on 26 July 2011 retrieved 3 April 2011 2 68 MiB See webpage Archived 2017 12 01 at the Wayback Machine Casale Mashiah Donatella Boyd Jonathan 14 July 2017 Synagogue membership in the United Kingdom in 2016 Institute for Jewish ResearchFurther reading editAnti Semitism Worldwide 1999 2000 Stephen Roth Institute Distributed by the University of Nebraska Press pp 125 135 Cesarani David 1994 The Jewish Chronicle and Anglo Jewry 1841 1991 Cambridge University Press Cesarani David British Jews Liedtke Rainer Wendehorst Stephan eds 1999 The Emancipation of Catholics Jews and Protestants Minorities and the Nation State in Nineteenth Century Europe Manchester University Press pp 33 55 Endelman Todd M 2002 The Jews of Britain 1656 to 2000 University of California Press Spector Sheila A ed 2002 British Romanticism and the Jews History Culture Literature Palgrave Macmillan Valins Oliver Kosmin Barry Goldberg Jacqueline The future of Jewish schooling in the United Kingdom Institute for Jewish Policy Research 31 December 2002 Accessed 4 April 2011 London Louise 2003 Whitehall and the Jews 1933 1948 British Immigration Policy Jewish Refugees and the Holocaust Cambridge University Press Schreiber Mordecai Schiff Alvin I Klenicki Leon 2003 The Shengold Jewish Encyclopedia 3rd edition Schreiber Publishing pp 79 80 Wynne Jones Jonathan additional reporting by Jeffay Nathan Is this the last generation of British Jews The Daily Telegraph 26 November 2006 Accessed 1 April 2011 Shindler Colin The Reflection of Israel Within British Jewry Ben Moshe Danny Segev Zohar eds 2007 Israel the Diaspora and Jewish Identity Sussex Academic Press pp 227 234 Butt Riazat Faith in numbers The Guardian 20 November 2007 Accessed 4 April 2011 Lawless Jill London s Jewish Museum reopens after major facelift Associated Press via USA Today 17 March 2010 Accessed 1 April 2011 Graham David Boyd Jonathan Committed concerned and conciliatory The attitudes of Jews in Britain towards Israel PDF Archived from the original PDF on 6 June 2011 1 64 MB Institute for Jewish Policy Research 15 July 2010 Accessed 4 April 2011 22 July 2011 See webpage Brown Mick Inside the private world of London s ultra Orthodox Jews The Daily Telegraph 25 February 2011 Accessed 1 April 2011 Publications on British Jews from the Berman Jewish Policy Archive NYU Wagner External links editAnglo Jewish Archives University of Southampton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title British Jews amp oldid 1221504791, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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