Union of Jewish Women


The Union of Jewish Women was a trade union and the first national Jewish women's society in Britain. The UJW was formed with the intention of bringing women's perspectives to matters of importance to the Jewish community.

Formation

The UJW was formed in 1902. Poor Russian Jewish immigrants settling in the East End of London created demand for services for this community. And also opportunities for
women's activism and the UJW was formed to address issues that Jewish women faced.
It was inspired by the National Union of Women Workers, and in 1900, a group of Jewish women gathered at the home of Lady Louisa de Rothschild and decided to organise the May 1902 Conference of Jewish Women.

Work

The Union declared itself to be an “all-embracing sisterhood,” forming a “bond between Jewish women of all degrees and all shades of opinion, religious, social and intellectual.”.
The Union organized a system of volunteers trained to help women seeking employment and to assist Jewish charitable institutions. Before World War I the UJW was composed primarily of upper-class women who had little contact with the working class women the organisation was created to help.
The UJW had mixed success; in 1924 the Council of the United Synagogue voted against the franchise for women, though many of those individual Synagogues had already agreed to support it. In order to be more effective, the UJW joined many women's organisations to promote further extension of women's suffrage.

Notable members