Glasgow Jewish Educational Forum

Archive for the ‘Meetings’ Category

Alex Salmond Meeting: Change of Date

Posted by Admin on November 10, 2007

Due to circumstances beyond our control, the date for the meeting with the First Minister, the Rt Hon Alex Salmond MSP, has been changed. The reason for this is that we have been informed by Bute House that Mr Salmond has Parliamentary business to attend to on that night. The meeting will now take place two days earlier on Tuesday 19th February, 2008 at Eastwood Park Theatre at 8.15 pm. We apologise for any inconvenience this may cause.

Please note that there will be no sale of tickets on the night; all tickets must be paid for in advance. If you would like to purchase a ticket for the event, please use the Contact form on the website to place your order.

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First Minister to address the Jewish Community

Posted by Admin on October 12, 2007

We are delighted to announce that the First Minister, the Rt Hon Alex Salmond MSP, has accepted Glasgow Jewish Educational Forum’s invitation to address the Glasgow Jewish Community.

Mr Salmond will speak at a public lecture in early 2008. The issue under discussion will be:

“Why will an SNP-run Scotland be good for the Scottish Jewish Community?”

This is the first time since the establishment of the Scottish Parliament that the First Minister has addressed the Jewish Community in his own right, and we are honoured that he has agreed to speak at an event to be held under the auspices of GJEF.

The lecture will be open to all members of the community and we anticipate a very high demand for tickets. We are currently in the process of finalising the arrangements for the meeting, and the exact date will be announced within a few weeks. 

Update, 14th October: The date and venue for the meeting have now been confirmed. The lecture will take place at Eastwood Park Theatre on Tuesday 19th February, 2008 at 8.15 pm.

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Posted in General, Meetings | 578 Comments »

Balloon Debate: A Great Success

Posted by Admin on October 2, 2007

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GJEF would like to express a very belated thank you to all the speakers who participated in the community Balloon Debate. The debate was conducted in a spirit of warmth and openess, and it exemplified our community at its finest.

Congratulations to Paul Livingston of the Youth Forum, whose bravura performance won the vote for the best presentation.

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A few apercus from Paul’s presentation:

Ladies and Gentleman, if Martin Luther King had lived in Glasgow 40 years ago he may have said something like “I have a dream that one day on the green grass of Rouken Glen, little FZY boys and little FZY girls will be able to join hands with little RSY boys and little RSY girls as brothers and sisters.

Well Ladies and Gentleman, largely down to the Youth Forum, that dream is now a reality. The tribalism which once affected our Youth in Glasgow (and largely still exists in the adult community) has been swept away by the values of consensus and co-operation which the Youth Forum has strived to promote.

It is my opinion that the in-fighting which infects our community, with people eager to promote their own views as facts and others’ as slander, is the single biggest factor in the continuing decay of our community.  With certain organisations suppressing any dissent within their ranks, the Youth Forum’s policy of encouraging different opinions is a breath of fresh air.

Resources for downloading:

Paul Livingston Presentation (Word)

Jewish Telegraph – Balloon Debate Article  (pdf)     

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Autumn Lecture Series in Preview

Posted by Admin on July 30, 2007

We are proud to announce the programme for our autumn lectures.

This series of lectures will explore some of the key issues facing Jews in the contemporary world. Our guest speakers include some of the leading intellectual figures in Anglo-Jewry.

Our first event, which will be held on Sunday 16th September at Giffnock Synagogue Banqueting Suite, will take the form of a balloon debate, in which participants will look at how the community plans for the future. The issue to under discussion is:

“Turn the clock forward 10 years, and please tell the community why you will still exist and why your services will still be required?”

The idea is to celebrate some of the many positive things in the Glasgow Jewish Community. Each organisation’s representative will speak for a maximum of five minutes and say what part they will play in the Community in ten years time, and how the organisation’s contribution in a decade will be important. After that there will be three specific questions to each organisation.

Refreshments will then follow. Afterwards there will be an opportunity for some general questions and a vote (by secret ballot) will then be taken, not with a view to disposing of organisations, but as to which group has made the most impressive presentation. This will be followed by the announcement of the winner and the organisation will receive a memento.

The following communal organisations have so far agreed to take part:

Calderwood Lodge, Reform Synagogue, Wizo, UJIA, Youth Forum and JLGB.

We are currently involved in discussions with other communal organisations regarding the remaining places for the debate.

On Thursday 11th October Dr Edie Friedman, Executive Director of JCORE – Jewish Council for Racial Equality, will discuss the role of the organisation in promoting race equality education.

On Sunday 11th November Antony Lerman, Executive Director of the Institute for Jewish Policy Research, will examine the issue of contemporary anti-Semitism in the UK.

On Wednesday 28th November Clive Lawton, Executive Director of Limmud and Trustee of Tzedek, and Dr Brian Klug, Senior Research Fellow and Tutor in Philosophy at St. Benet’s Hall, will consider Jewish identity in the modern world.

We also have plans for other events and lectures which will be announced in due course.

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Jonathan Freedland Podcast

Posted by Admin on April 29, 2007

We are proud to present the first ever GJEF Podcast™. Our inaugural broadcast features a recording of the Jonathan Freedland lecture, in which he considers the issue of “How can the British Jewish Community best support Israel?”

To listen to the lecture, which is divided into five sections, click on the play button to activate the audio player, and then click on it again to stream the audio.

David Goldberg Introduction:

Jonathan Freedland, Part I:

Jonathan Freedland, Part II:

Jonathan Freedland, Part III:

Jonathan Freedland, Part IV:

Jonathan Freedland, Part V:

(All recordings are © GJEF Sound Recorders)

Posted in Audio, Issues, Meetings | 4 Comments »

News of Forthcoming Meetings

Posted by Admin on April 14, 2007

Our next lectures will examine the relationship between diaspora communities and Israel, and the ethical tradition of Judaism:

On Monday 23rd April, Jonathan Freedland will speak on “How can the British Jewish Community best support Israel”.

On Thursday 26th April, Rabbi Professor Naftali Rothenberg, Senior Research Fellow at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, will speak on “Caring for Minority Groups – The Jewish Ethical Obligation”.

For more information, please see the advert below.

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Posted in Meetings | 11 Comments »

Reflections on Jewish-Muslim Dialogue

Posted by Admin on March 25, 2007

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The relationship between Judaism and Islam was explored at a unique symposium which was held on Sunday 25th March.

The event, which took the form of a dialogue between the Islamic scholar Mona Siddiqui and the Middle East analyst Tony Klug, examined how Jews are perceived by the Muslim community.

Speaking at the third lecture sponsored by the Glasgow Jewish Educational Forum, Professor Mona Siddiqui, Director of the Centre for the Study of Islam at Glasgow University, explored the history of relations between the two faiths, and their different approaches to the shared traditions of what she referred to as “Scripture, Story and Salvation”.

Dr Siddiqui noted that while there was an ambivalence towards the Jewish people in the Koran, there was, however, “no systematic theology of hatred towards Jews and Judaism”. The Muslim community’s perception of Jews was, she emphasised, related directly to the Arab-Israeli conflict and its understanding of Western foreign policy in the Middle East. She added that when the conflict is refracted through that prism, “the complexity is lost”.

Her interlocutor, Dr Tony Klug, Senior Policy Consultant at the Middle East Policy Initiative Forum, gave a brief history of Jewish-Arab dialogue from 1984 to the present day. Citing the work of the scholar Bernard Lewis, he rejected the view that Islamic hostility towards Israel and the Jewish people was based on an inherent hatred of Jews; rather, he argued that it was a consequence of “an inevitable response to occupation”, and “the offspring of the tragic conflict in the Middle East”.

While he acknowledged the rise of anti-Semitic currents in the Arab and Muslim worlds, Dr Klug argued that a just resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict would counter the enmity which exists at present. He affirmed his continuing support for a two-state solution, a position which he first set out in a Fabian Society pamphlet, “A Tale of Two Peoples”, published in 1973.

In relation to the Middle East conflict, Dr Siddiqui said that while she agreed with Dr Klug’s analysis, there was a moral imperative on the part of Europe and America to find a solution. As regards the UK, she said that the Muslim community was, in many respects, attempting to define its place in the post-colonial world. While the community was not monolithic, she noted that, in recent years, it had become more insular and there had been a resurgence of conservative tendencies in which identity was expressed through religious belief. 

Dr Klug expressed the hope that, in the long run, rapprochement between the two peoples would be established on the basis of an understanding of the history of the other. 

We welcome your thoughts on these issues.

Posted in Issues, Meetings | 21 Comments »

As Others See Us

Posted by Admin on March 14, 2007

Our next meeting, which takes place on Sunday 25th March, will examine how we are perceived by the Muslim community.

Professor Mona Siddiqui, Director of the Centre for the Study of Islam, at the University of Glasgow, will take part in a dialogue with Dr Tony Klug. (For more information, please see the advert below).

Mona Siddiqui Flyer

Some useful resources on the issue of relations between Jews and Muslims:

Tony Klug: Challenging Stereotypes (pdf)

Audio archive of Professor Siddiqui’s regular contributions to Thought for the Day on BBC Radio 4 (Real Player required)

Posted in Meetings | 18 Comments »

Breaking News

Posted by Admin on March 12, 2007

Paul Edlin, Vice-President of the Board of Deputies, has reneged on his commitment to debate with Dr Brian Klug about Independent Jewish Voices. His ostensible reason for cancellation was that the title of the meeting was not what he had agreed. GJEF disputed this, but, in an effort to facilitate the meeting, asked him to put forward his own title. He maintained his refusal.

Instead, he has suggested that he would like GJEF to give him a platform to have a discussion with the Glasgow Jewish Representative Council. Paul Edlin is the Honorary Treasurer of that organisation so the reality is that he would like to have a conversation with himself. GJEF turned this option down immediately.

We will now actively pursue a replacement speaker who is prepared to have a meaningful debate with IJV and will announce this shortly. GJEF are merely facilitating a debate to allow the community to discuss what we believe is a critical issue, and we are completely impartial on the issue of IJV.

Posted in Meetings | 46 Comments »

New Meeting: Who Represents the Interests of British Jewry?

Posted by Admin on March 1, 2007

On Thursday 10th May, Dr Brian Klug, one of the founding members of Independent Jewish Voices, and Paul Edlin, Vice-President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, will debate the issue of: “Who represents the British Jewish Community in matters to do with Israel, and is it possible for any one group to represent the community?”

This is the first time that a representative of the Board of Deputies has shared a platform with a member of Independent Jewish Voices, and it promises to be a lively and thought-provoking meeting. (Venue to be confirmed)

Posted in Meetings | 41 Comments »