The JC
17th September 2015
The Jewish community’s response to the refugee crisis expanded this week, with the announcement of plans for a public meeting to canvas opinion on the most productive ways to help.
More than £180,000 has been raised in the past week by World Jewish Relief’s appeal to help Syrian refugees.
A website is also to be set up to inform British Jews how to volunteer and donate money and items to the ongoing aid efforts.
In a statement on Wednesday, Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis praised the WJR campaign and said: “At this time of year, as we pledge financial support to a range of causes close to our hearts, I call upon our community to dig extra deep and set aside an additional contribution, however small, which will go towards providing urgent relief for refugees whose lives have been devastated by the current crisis.”
The Board of Deputies said it would host a public meeting in response to the crisis. The announcement came after a closed meeting last Thursday for religious movements, charities and other bodies to discuss cross-communal aid efforts.
Representatives of the United Synagogue, Masorti, Reform, and Liberal movements attended the session, as did human-rights charity René Cassin, the Jewish Council for Racial Equality (Jcore), and the Jewish Leadership Council.
The Board’s senior vice-president, Richard Verber, said: “A public meeting is the best way to update people on what we want to do and it will be a chance for them to feed into that.”
The public meeting will take place after the High Holy Days.
Communal leaders agreed to set up a website – www.supportrefugees.org.uk – that “will be a one-stop shop for the community to get information about how they can assist in the crisis”. It will include sections dedicated to aid efforts, donations and volunteering.
Mr Verber said: “The public meeting will allow people in the community to get involved, share ideas and ask questions, and that will then feed back into the website.”
Liberal Jewish communities around the UK spent Rosh Hashanah welcoming and supporting refugees.
Northwood and Pinner Liberal Synagogue is working with churches in the area to act as a hub for donations. Members are being asked to bring sleeping bags, winter clothing, and tents, to be sent via West London Synagogue’s drop-in centre to those in need of shelter.
South London Liberal Synagogue is collecting items to go to Calais in October, as well as appealing for people to provide rooms for refugees or to take in children.
Click here to read more: http://www.thejc.com/news/uk-news/145118/campaigns-help-refugees-growing
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