Icons of Britain's Jewish past now back on display
London Jewish Museum reopens after two years of closure and a 10 million pound expansion.
By The Associated Press Tags: Jewish World Israel newsThey are icons of Britain: a Victorian-era statesman, a World War I soldier-poet, fish and chips.
They're also Jewish - evidence of the 1,000-year history of Jews in Britain, whose story is told in a museum reopening this week after a 10 million pound ($15 million) expansion.
"Fish and chips, which everyone thinks of as very English, is in fact Sephardic Jewish," said celebrity chef Nigella Lawson, who helped relaunch the London Jewish Museum on Tuesday after a two-year closure. Many believe that Britain's national dish has its origins in fried fish introduced to the country by Spanish and Portuguese Jews.
Food and the nature of Britishness both play a significant part in the museum, which has expanded from a Victorian house in London's Camden Town to a former piano factory next door, tripling its floorspace. Among the interactive displays is a chance to smell chicken soup cooking in a recreated East End immigrant's kitchen.
There also is a cavalcade of historical figures, both famous and obscure, including 19th-century Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli; war poet Isaac Rosenberg, killed on the Western Front; and Daniel Mendoza, an 18th-century boxing champion of England.
Their stories sit alongside those of humbler figures - laborers, seamstresses, trade unionists, entertainers.
"We're telling the story of the Jewish community in London, but we're also telling the story of London," said Sarah Jillings, the museum's exhibition project director.
Britain's 300,000-strong Jewish community stretches back to 1066, when the first Jews arrived with William the Conqueror's invading Norman army.
The museum attests to a thriving medieval community. One of its star displays is a 13th-century mikvah, or ritual bath, uncovered in what is now the heart of London's financial district.
England's entire Jewish population was expelled by King Edward I in 1290 after years of anti-Semitic violence, and Jews were only readmitted in 1656 under Oliver Cromwell, who had overthrown the monarchy.
From there, the museum tells an evocative tale - common to many immigrant communities - of dislocation and hard work, prejudice and resistance, and the gradual move from inner-city tenements to greater prosperity in the suburbs.
There are many Jewish museums, Holocaust museums - extraordinary places - around the world, said Alan Yentob, creative director of the BBC and a patron of the museum. But this is one that tells the story of an immigrant culture, and therefore chimes with many people around the world today.
One gallery is devoted to the Holocaust, focusing on the experience of one British survivor of Auschwitz, while another holds a large display of Jewish ceremonial art.
The venue calls itself the only museum in London dedicated to a minority group.
Its curators acknowledge that the history of Briton's Jews is also the history of anti-Semitism. For centuries Jews were barred from many professions, including serving in Parliament - Disraeli was allowed because he had converted to Christianity as a teenager. A century ago, the press ran sensationalist headlines about alien newcomers as tens of thousands of Jews fleeing persecution in Eastern Europe settled in Britain.
In recent years Jewish community leaders have reported a rise in anti-Semitic incidents, attributed in part to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the dwindling number of people with memories of the Holocaust.
The museum sees its role as helping to build social cohesion. It predicts that a majority of the 65,000 visitors expected this year will not be Jewish, and will include many groups of schoolchildren.
Lawson said the history of the Jewish community is deeply interwoven with the fabric of this country - and is primarily a positive story.
The history of the Jews is very much told in terms of persecution, she said. It's interesting to question that.
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I knew it! Pickled herring, smoked lox, gefillte fish-- I always felt there was that missing link in Jewish cooking-- and now we know: when Isabella and Ferdinand expelled the Jews of Spain, they not only took their famous 14th c. illuminated Hagaddahs with them (like the Bird's Egg, the Barcelona and the Sarajevo), they also brought with them fish and chips--and came to England because they didn't want to wrap their fish in their precious manuscripts and knew there was the JC waiting for them in England.
You have a very naive idea of how law works in England, Phineas (either that, or you're being ironic). A law or decree does not have to be officially repealed for it to be inapplicable. It can only apply insofar as it does not conflict with more recent legislation, and statutes that have not been enforced for centuries are in abeyance. Serfdom was never officially abolished, but if the Duke of Kent expects me to go and live in a little hut on his land and work it for free, he's got another thing coming.
There are rather more Ashkenazim than Sephardim amongst distinguished British Jews. For every Montefiore there is a Rothschild and so on. But it's true that, for their tiny numbers, Britain's Sephardi community has produced a dazzling array of talent. But, there again, so have the decendents of the 1930s refugees from Nazism.
he's got long black hair,dark skin tone,beard and the deepest brown eyes,he's open-minded,humble,generous,honest,helpful and sensible and we are narrow-minded,thick-skined,talkative,selfish,boasful and rude want zion's kingdom now!
Oliver Cromwell let the Jews back in perfectly properly - but of course there wasn't a king then so a royal decree would not have been rescinded then - and was superfluous later. Am comfortable with my status - and the new museum is fab and really interesting for kids too.
In 1290, King Edward I issued an edict expelling all Jews from England. This royal decree has never been rescinded. Jews are illegally in England, and as such, should be immediately expelled.
Are, as you probably learned, of Sephardic origins. I'll let list them, otherwise you're just have to go back and read your history: And this is particularly addressed to the Israelis of Moroccan descent, as the past 200years, those Moroccan Jews have played a big roles in the building of UK. Their descendants are illustrious Bishops, Lords, great reknown writers Sebagh-Montefiore, Philip Guedalia, the Perry (Peretz).....
When Baroness Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister her Cabinet included so many distinguished Jews that they were referred to as the 'Old Estonians' as a takeoff on the usual 'Old Etonians'! Chief Rabbi Lord Immanuel Jakobovits enjoyed a closeness to the P M at least as great as the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Although some media seem to focus on anti-Semitism, the reality is that Anglo-Jews have achieved many recent successes, including a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, a Speaker of the House, a Leader of the Conservative Party, and many distinguished figures in the media and arts.
Some years back the Jewish Museum won the Museum of the Year award. Patron of the Jewish Museum is H R H Prince Charles. Some have used the history of Anglo-Jewry as a model of immigrant integration, with successive waves of Jews combining an Orthodox religious establishment with Anglicisation and full participation in British life. This was symbolised by the election of Lord Mayor Waley Cohen who walked behind the Lord Mayor's official carriage at the annual Saturday morning Lord Mayor's parade to avoid chilul Shabbos.