Limmud


Limmud is a British-Jewish educational charity which, in the UK, produces a large annual winter festival and several other regional events throughout the year on the theme of Jewish learning. Limmud is not affiliated to any strand of Judaism, stating "We have no part to play in the debates between/across denominations" in its mission statement. Limmud markets itself as open to "anyone interested in Jewish learning".
Limmud was originally a conference for "educators", basing itself on CAJE, the Conference on Alternatives in Jewish Education of North America. Taking CAJE's volunteer ethos, not paying presenters and not using people's titles, Limmud has grown to be a large international organisation. During the 1990s there was the significant change as Limmud reinvented itself as a community gathering, giving rise to a significant increase in the number of attendees and leading it to be described as "British Jewry's greatest export". The Limmud model has now spread to many other countries.
A distinctive feature of Limmud is that the events are organised by volunteers, who also take part as equals in what is now called the Limmud Festival. Limmud's largest group of volunteers are in their 20s and 30s. Around half of the UK "Forty under 40" have volunteered for Limmud and a former Chair of Limmud, Elliott Goldstein, topped the list.

History

Limmud held its first conference in 1980 for 80 people organised by Alastair Falk, Michael May, Jonathan Benjamin and Clive Lawton, inspired by a visit to the Coalition for the Advancement of Jewish Education in North America. Its aim was to build bridges between professional and nonprofessional educators and between those of differing religious commitments. The next year participation had doubled and all aspects of Jewish learning were covered.
By 1996 the main Limmud conference had expanded and moved to Oxford with attendance of over 1,000, 250 sessions and 140 speakers, becoming the largest Jewish conference in Europle. During this period the organisation also held smaller one day events in Glasgow and Leeds.
In 1999 the first non-UK Limmud was held in Sydney, Australia.
2006 saw Limmud appoint its first full-time Executive Director, Raymond Simonson. Prior to this Limmud had been run by part-time directors.
The late 2000s saw Limmud participation in the UK grow dramatically. In 2007 Limmud held their conference at Warwick University, with 2,000 participants and 600 at Limmud Fest, a smaller summer festival. With numbers more than doubling in 2008 to 7,000 for their UK events. International conferences were now held in Cape Town, Johannesburg, Hungary, Atlanta, Buenos Aires, Bulgaria, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Poland, Stockholm, Ukraine, Germany, Turkey, Toronto, New York and France.
Limmud Conference moved to Birmingham for Conference 2015, with a record 2,800 participants. New Limmud groups include Arizona, Mar del Plata, Australia, Tel Aviv, Chile and Essen.
In 2018 Limmud Conference became Limmud Festival. Limmud set up affiliates in North America and Israel. Limmud estimates there are 40,000 participants annually in a Limmud worldwide, run by 4,000 volunteers. In 2017 Limmud was also awarded the Jerusalem Unity Prize for contribution to Jewish life, presented by Israeli President Rivlin.

Organisation

Limmud is a company and a charity. It is run by a board of directors and trustees, all of whom are volunteers. Initially, there was no difference between Limmud the organisation and Limmud Conference, the annual event, so the chairs of the Conference/Festival team were the chairs of the organisation. In 1990, a chair for the organisation who was separate from the Conference chairs was appointed for the first time. In 2006, Limmud International was created, as a separate unit within Limmud to manage relationships with other Limmud groups around the world. Limmud International was absorbed back into Limmud at the end of 2016.
Chairs of Limmud Conference/Festival
1980–1981 Alistair Falk, Michael May, Jonathan Benjamin, Clive Lawton
1982–1984 Steve Miller
1985 Tina Elliott
1986 Jonathan Benjamin
1987 Alan Wilkinson
1988 Madeline Ismach
1989 Alistair Falk
1990–1994 Andrew Gilbert
1995 Natan Tiefenbrun
1996 Yvonne Krasner, Marc Soloway, Judy Trotter
1997 Micah Gold, Jonny Persey, Marc Soloway
1998 Micah Gold
1999 Jacqueline Nicholls, Claire Straus
2000 Andrew Levy, Abe Sterne
2001 Claire Mandel, Carolyn Bogush
2002 Juliet Simmons
2003 Fleurise Luder, Eliot Kaye
2004 Batya Elliott, Paul Turner
2005 David Century, Shoshana Bloom
2006 Jason Caplin, Natalie Grazin
2007 Kevin Sefton
2008 Libby Burkeman and Charles Darwish
2009 Rebecca Lester and David Israel
2010 Danielle Nagler and Steven Fisher
2011 Shoshana Bloom and Jonathan Walters
2012 David Renton
2013 Oliver Marcus and Richard Verber
2014 Shana Boltin and Jonathan Robinson
2015 Joanna Ish-Horowicz, Michael Gladstone and Claire Samuel
2016 Benjamin Crowne and Steven Weller
2017 Abigail Jacobi and Anna Lawton
2018 Jonathan Robinson
2019 Ben Lewis, Hannah Brady and Dan Heller
2020 Elliot Jebreel and Robert Simmons
Chairs of Limmud
1990–1997 Andrew Gilbert
1998–2001 Judy Trotter
1998–2000 Natan Tiefenbrun
2001–2003 Claire Straus
2003–2005 Claire Mandel
2006–2009 Elliott Goldstein
2010–2012 Carolyn Bogush
2013–2015 Kevin Sefton
2016–2019 David Hoffman
2019– Shoshana Bloom
Chairs of Limmud International
2006–2009 Andrew Gilbert
2010–2012 Uri Berkowitz, Helena Miller
2013–2014 David Hoffman
2015–2016 David Bilchitz
Chair of Limmud North America
2017–2019 Shep Rosenman
2019– Faye Rosenberg-Cohen, Sivie Twersky
Chair of Limmud Israel
2018– Danielle Nagler
Limmud's first professional appointment in 1998 was of Clive Lawton as part-time Executive Director; he gradually became backed by a full-time administrator. In 2006 Limmud recruited its first full-time Executive Director, Raymond Simonson, former Director of UJIA Makor: The Centre for Informal Jewish Education. When Simonson became Chief Executive of London's Jewish Community Centre, now JW3, in 2012, he was succeeded by Shelley Marsh. She stepped down from the role in 2015. Mike Schindler was the Limmud Director of Operations and the senior professional in the organisation between March and August 2015, and then Dani Serlin was Acting Executive Director until February 2016. In February 2016, Limmud appointed the current Chief Executive, Eli Ovits, as senior professional.

Limmud events in the UK

Limmud Festival

Limmud Festival, takes place every year in the last week of December and is the organisation's flagship event. It was inspired by the CAJE conference in the United States and now attracts more than 2,000 participants annually; in 2015 the numbers rose to 2,750. A typical day at Limmud Festival includes around 200 sessions spanning religious, cultural and political aspects of Jewish life. After the first conferences at Carmel College, Limmud Conference has been held at Portsmouth Polytechnic, Oxford Brookes University, Worcester, Manchester, the University of Nottingham and Warwick University. Since 2015 this annual event has been held at the hotels surrounding Pendigo Lake, near Birmingham.

Limmud summer events

Limmud held a summer event in the last week of August which was called Limmud Fest from 2004 to 2012 and Limmud in the Woods from 2013 to 2016. It involved camping as well as staying indoors, had a less intense programme centred on Shabbat and is more cultural and outdoors-focused than its winter sibling. Limmud Fest had a peak attendance of 650 people; Limmud in the Woods was attended by around 200–250 young adults and young families.

Day and weekend Limmud events

The first Day Limmud was in Sheffield in the early 1980s, followed by Leeds in the mid-1990s. Day and weekend Limmuds are now held at a number of venues in the UK, including Birmingham, Cambridge, Harrow, Hull, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, and the Thames Valley.
In the past, Limmud events have also been held in Bournemouth, Brighton, Glasgow, Hackney, Newcastle, South London and South East London.

Other Limmud events in UK

Other events run by Limmud in the UK. either on their own or in partnership with others. have included music events and the Florence Melton Adult Mini-School, organised in partnership with the London Jewish Cultural Centre.

Limmuds around the world

The Limmud model has now spread to many other countries. More than ninety communities in 42 countries on six continents have hosted Limmud events including, in 2013 for the first time, Hong Kong, Peru, India and Montenegro.
UK

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Africa, Asia and Australasia
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- Limmud Beijing, Limmud Shanghai





Limmud SA- Limmud Cape Cape Town, Limmud Durban, Limmud Johannesburg
North America
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Latin America
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Limmud Costa Rica
Europe


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- Limmud Berlin, Limmud Cologne, Limmud Essen, Limmud Frankfurt A.M, Limmud Freiburg, Limmud Hamburg, Limmud Munich
-Limmud Italia in Jerusalem

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Limmud FSU
Events based upon the Limmud concept
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Relationships with Orthodoxy in Britain

The former London United Synagogue Beth Din's Head Dayan, Chanoch Ehrentreu, advised Orthodox rabbis not to attend Limmud Conference. However, in the UK many United Synagogue pulpit rabbis have attended Limmud. In December 2010 Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet of Mill Hill United Synagogue, who had been seen as a notable absentee and critic of Limmud, attended, took part in and taught at Limmud's 30th annual Conference. Following this he wrote on the synagogue's website: "upon return all I could ask myself was, 'where was I until now?"
Jonathan Sacks did not attend Limmud whilst being Chief Rabbi but attended when he was the head of Jews College. Sacks, when looking back on his rabbinate, considers Limmud to be one of the great successes of his time.
Controversy erupted again in 2013 when newly elected Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis announced his decision to attend. Subsequently, a public notice signed by seven leading Orthodox rabbis including Dayan Chanoch Ehrentreu and Rabbi Avrohom Gurwicz was published in the Jewish Tribune, highly critical of pluralism and urged "God-fearing Jews" not to participate in Limmud. This sparked condemnation by non-Charedi communal leaders, with Jewish Leadership Council chairman Mick Davis, Board of Deputies president Vivian Wineman and United Synagogue president Stephen Pack writing to The Jewish Chronicle describing the statement as showing "a shocking failure of leadership". The Jewish Chronicle itself described the statement as "crass, ill-judged and ultimately self-defeating". Mirvis's attendance at the 2013 Limmud Conference was well received by fellow participants. At least nine other United Synagogue rabbis also attended the event.