`I`m not sorry for faith schools`
Transcription
`I`m not sorry for faith schools`
28 COMMENT thejc.com THE JEWISH CHRONICLE 27 september 2013 comment&analysis Maybe Buddhism gets it... David Robson I N her very enjoyable biography, published this week, the actress Rula Lenska talks about her adherence to a Japanese form of Buddhism where if you want or need something to happen you chant for it and it often comes to pass. How well the want-chant success rate stands up to statistical examination I cannot say. What I do know is that it’s very different from the Jewish way. Go through the full Yom Kippur liturgy and there is absolutely nowhere for specific requests. Yes, we beat ourselves on the chest innumerable times and catalogue every possible sin from aleph to taf , but nobody invites us to specify to the Almighty what sort of assistance may be most useful in the coming year — help with weight loss, an improvement in the demand for my friend’s light fittings, a not-tooexpensive solution to my car’s gearbox problems and other such pressing matters. All we are offered is the rather nebulous possibility of being sealed in the Book of (good) Life. I had gone to shul with just one specific and infinitely tiny request of the King of the Universe. It was saturday and I really like to watch Match of the Day without knowing the football results; this can be hard to achieve in the outside world but as I was in my seat at 9am and didn’t move from it once until 8.15pm, I was fairly confident. I have often felt the Yom Kippur service isn’t long enough, and so it proved. There was a half-hour break between musaf and minchah, from 4.30 to 5pm. The man a few I had just seats away from me left and one tiny a few minutes later request of the returned looking redeemed and upliftAlmighty ed as one might after hours of fervent prayer. Clearly, he had something spiritual to impart to those who had remained through the livelong day: “ sunderland 1, Arsenal 3,” he proclaimed, “spurs 2, Norwich 0.” It was enough to make me want to become a Buddhist. A Buddhist might have brought better weather over succot. We are less hardy than we were. When I was young we had no central heating and there would be precious little difference in temperature between our house and a succah (not that we had one). succot of course is the only time Jewish men are supposed to do DIY as part of the religion. “Could you build a shelter?” asks Kirsty Young on Desert Island Discs. ‘”shelter, shmelter...” To be honest, I don’t celebrate the festival any more, which is ungrateful of me because when I was at Jewish boarding school it was a godsend. If we were already back for Rosh Hashanah and none of the festivals fell on shabbat the whole autumn term became a work-free zone. so thank you, Shemini Atzeret! How very different from the sorely-tried Bruce Gold in Joseph Heller’s novel Good as Gold. His elderly father, who lives in Florida, returns north only for (very painful) family High Holy Day gatherings. Much to Bruce’s dismay he stays until after Simchat Torah, a festival he wonders if Dad was making it up. Another fortnight is too much to bear. If only he’d been a Buddhist. You’ll always be Lilywhites Barry Frankfurt A s A Panini-sticker-collecting kid, the albums provided a lesson in football trivia that has stayed with me to this day. The stadium names, the players’ places of birth and the nicknames for every club, are etched in my memory. My beloved Arsenal are of course the Gunners. Everton will always be the Toffeemen. United are the Red Devils and Tottenham Hotspur the Lilywhites — but never the Yids. some of my Jewish friends supported spurs, others Arsenal. In the 80s, we had David Dein, they had Irving scholar. Neither club was Jewish. Both were Jew-ish. In fact, as the Jewish Museum’s upcoming Four Four Jew exhibition highlights, Arsenal were nearly a decade ahead of their North London rivals in using the match-day programme to wish Jewish fans a Happy New Year at Rosh Hashanah. One-nil to the Arsenal (again), but this isn’t the time or place for point scoring. The latest furore over spurs fans calling themselves the “Yid Army” has not only touched these pages but reached Downing street and the media here and across the world. As an Arsenal fan — a statement that will no doubt tint what follows in the eyes of the myopic and tribal —it is clear. spurs fans are right. As they so triumphantly sang at home to Norwich earlier this month, they can sing what they want. I just wish they wouldn’t. The worst thing the Football Association could have done was to make a pronouncement on the issue. Telling 38,000 football fans not to do something is pretty much guaranteed to have the exact opposite response. Instead of helping to address the problem, the FA has managed to inflame and spotlight it all at once. The impact that this has on Jewish fans of other teams should not be ignored. I have been subjected to antisemitic abuse because of the association. On one occasion, in Munich of all places, a coach full of Arsenal supporters spent the 45-minute journey from the Beer Hall to the Olympic stadium extolling the virtues of Hitler’s Jewish policy. Why? Because gassing the Jews would get rid of all spurs fans. Obvious, really. I’ve heard the argument, supported by David Cameron, that it is crazy to punish those who use the phrase in a positive way. The Prime Minister said it was the mens rea (a concept that has no doubt been debated at great length at White Hart Lane), the crimi- nal intent, that matters. This is not about whether or not spurs fans mean any harm. They don’t, and to try and punish them is both futile and unnecessary. It is also the case that there can be no excuse for antisemitism, whatever the basis or provocation. But this misses the point. When the spurs supporters Trust talks about “reclaiming” the word “Yid”, it is unclear from whom it is being reclaimed and on whose behalf. Jews What does have, for a long time, used the word when it mean to speaking about themreclaim the selves. It already has a word ‘Yid’? non-offensive meaning in much the same way the N-word does when used by those within certain black communities. Imagine the reaction if Arsenal fans decided that being Gooners was a bit passé and now was the time to “reclaim” a word on behalf of the club’s black supporters with whom it shares a long and proud history. You would hope that common sense would prevail. If spurs fans really care so much about raising the esteem in which the pintele Yid of north London is held, then spare a thought for the vast majority of Jewish football fans who don’t support your team. Being a Lilywhite won’t offend anyone. Barry Frankfurt is MD of Creative & Commercial and an Arsenal season-ticket holder. I’m not sorry for faith schools Sandy Rashy A sPIRITED debate quickly descended into a tablethumping row as a close friend and I discussed the effect of faith schools after the experience was played out in last week’s JC. He regurgitated the conventional misgivings: a Jewish school promotes insularity, ignorance and a fear of mingling with the non-Jewish world from university to the workplace. As a former Naima JPs and JFs student who happily blended in with non-Jewish friends at university and work, I found accusations of insularity to be patronising from a person who had been educated at a single-sex, educationally selective and pricy private school. Many people mistakenly assume that going to a school like JFs (the largest Jewish school in Europe with over 2,000 students) segregates the student from other sectors of UK society. But they’re wrong. There’s more to British society than faith — whether it’s mixing with the opposite sex, culture or class — and from my experience, JFs was a mixing pot of diversity. I would never have met my loud, noisy friends in any other environment. Many of us excelled academically, others had a more creative flair, while a few budding entrepreneurs spent more time in detention for using school hours to sell knock-off clothing. After school, we often flocked to the nearby newsagent for sugar-hits and magazines, before running to catch our bus to respective family homes in Bishops Avenue (Billionaires’ Row), more middle-class Edgware or council flats in Hackney. We may have all been Jewish — but we all came from different parts of UK society. Our religious background wasn’t uniform. My friends’ bar and batmitzvahs were not all held at Us synagogues — many were Reform and others took place at little-known houseconverted Charedi shuls in stamford Hill. I watched Zionist students proudly paint a blue star of David on their face during Yom Ha’atzmaut school celebrations, and then go on to sit next to classmates who would boycott the event until the Messiah duly arrived. I Insularity learned to be tolerant does not of people who came feature from different reliin these gious backgrounds. Faith schools are schools nationally renowned for their academic excellence and religious education. As a Jewish student, learning about your religion, the state of Israel and historical factors from what led to its creation — from Herzl to the Holocaust — is nothing to be ashamed about. Classmates often find it easy to bond over Friday night dinners, their bubbe’s latest embarrassing antic and upcoming holiday to Eilat. There’s no reason to be apologetic about a shared culture in a stimulating Jewish environment. Granted, I left school with minimal knowledge of other faiths, but I later learned about them via extra-curricular dance classes, books and university lectures. No doubt, I would not have been able to study the strong Jewish communal feeling with which I left school. I have never felt the need to explain or qualify my Judaism. I went on to apply my school experience to a professional setting on graduating from Birmingham University and BPP Law school. My Jewish education did not hinder my ability to work with Eastern Europeans asking for benefits at legal pro bono centres; it did not hinder my ability to advise Arab shaykhahs shopping for the latest handbag brand at top fashion houses; it did not instil me with an overwhelming fear of being the only Jew, let alone woman, in a plummy boardroom at a top stockbroking firm. In fact, my diverse education taught me about tolerance. Today I regularly speak to Jewish schools from Immanuel to Yavneh and Hasmonean. Hasmonean Girls have embarked — to the surprise of a number of people — on a number of interfaith projects, from participating in national charities to planting pots at (non-Jewish) community centres. Insularity does not feature on their curriculum. While I have chosen to further my career at the JC, my Jewish schoolfriends have gone on to become lawyers, doctors, dentists, teachers and artists in the non-Jewish world. And I have been assured that their education and Jewish identity helped many to do so. Sandy Rashty is a JC reporter