Friday, September 11, 2009

Admissions Criteria of British Jewish School Bend After Court Decision

Yesterday's London Jewish Chronicle reports that for the first time London's Jewish Free School has admitted a student who was not considered Jewish under Orthodox religious law as interpreted by the Office of Britain's Chief Rabbi. The student's mother was converted to Judaism by a rabbi from one of the non-Orthodox movements in Judaism. Earlier this year, Britain's Court of Appeal ruled that the school's traditional admission criteria amounted to unlawful racial discrimination, and said that publicly supported Jewish schools could favor Jewish students only if they base their selections on a student's faith, and not his or her ethnicity. (See prior posting.) The case is being appealed. (See prior posting.) Apparently the decision to admit this student was made after the student's parents appealed to an independent panel of the Brent Council, which is the school’s local authority. Unless the Court of Appeal decision is overturned, beginning next year Jewish schools will have to rewrite their admissions policies. Britain's United Synagogue says that parents who will need certificates of synagogue attendance for their children to show their Jewish faith should register at their local synagogue by next week. [Thanks to Rabbi Michael Simon for the lead.]