Jewish community helps reopen Somali Bravanese centre six years after arson

Jewish community helps reopen Somali Bravanese centre six years after arson.

Rabbis from across the religious spectrum are joined by faith minister Lord Younger, as the community rallies rounds its Muslim neighbours to inaugurate its new centre.



A new London base for the Somali Bravanese Welfare Association was officially opened last night in the presence of local Jews who have supported the community since the arson attack on its former centre six years ago.

Rabbis from across the religious spectrum were among the first to offer support to their neighbours in the wake of the 2013 assault, with Finchley Reform Synagogue hosting Ramadan prayers and annual iftar celebrations following an idea from Citizens UK.

Community members also provided free legal support and were at the forefront of a campaign for the new centre.

Last night, new faith minister Lord Younger cut the ribbon to formally open the facility in East Finchley, telling guests: “What sends the greatest message that hate won’t win are events like today.”



The minister – standing in for Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick who was unable to attend due to Brexit business in the House – said the entire country still finds the attack “profoundly shocking” and insisted that no stone go unturned to find the perpetrators who are yet to be brought to justice.


But he said the “selfless” support of local faith communities and others in the efforts to rebuild were a shining example to the country. Saying he had been “moved” by a video produced by Jewish News telling the story of the last six years, he added: “This government will find shoulder to shoulder in facing down hatred and in interfaith cooperation.”

Rabbi Miriam Berger of Finchley Reform praised the community’s “resilience” time and again, recalling how the Bravanese had also previously faced persecution in Somalia.

“Mazeltov means well done and good luck and what better word to say to you tonight,” she told the 150-strong gathering that including a number of local councillors who had supported the community. “It was one idiot that creates this situation but a whole community who said we can create a new chapter from here.”

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Children of Somali bravanese welfare association and FRS performing

Former Barnet police commander Adrian Asher recalled how the attack in the days after the murder of Lee Rigby could have been the “spark” for widespread troubles in the capital. The fact it wasn’t had nothing to do with the police, he said, but rather was down to the fact local communities refused to be torn apart. “It was an extraordinary few days,” he added.

Guests were entertained by children of the Somali Bravanese community and FRS singing ‘saalam, shalom’ together. Board of Deputies President Marie van der Zyl said: “Despite so many similarities between our faiths so often there is a divide between our communities. It’s so important to bridge that divide.

“What a fantastic example of cohesion this centre offers. Talking is not enough. Acts of solidarity are what we need if we’re going to create a more cohesive society.”

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Interfaith leaders after the reopening of the centre

Former Barnet Council leader Richard Cornelius, who was thanked for helping to bring about the new centre, joked that he’d “never been bounced into spending £1m so easily” following a campaign for funding for the new centre. He said the building is a symbol that something “even better” can come out of tragedy.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said: “I’ve been to the synagogue who opened their doors during the month of Ramadan and allowed the congregation to pray their Ramadan prayers. The rabbi is amazing, she opened her doors.”

“The power of that is important because it meant those Muslims who may have pre-judged for unfair reasons their Jewish neighbours got to see the openness friendliness and the fraternity of the Jewish community.”

“I saw, and I’ve been there a few times, the friendship that’s developed between north London Muslims and the Jewish community in north London, and that friendship is now stronger and it will go forward, and I think another example of London being a beacon to the rest of the world.”

“I remember going to iftars in the synagogue where the local rabbi Laura opened her doors to Muslims and others and we made the point during those iftars that where else in the world would you have an example of the Jewish community working so closely with the Muslim community? I just wish other cities around the world would learn some of the lessons from our city.”

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Rabbi Miriam Berger addressing the event

“It’s a good example of the interfaith work that takes place in our city, a good example of the power of solidarity and fraternity when not just Abrahamic faiths come together but those of all different backgrounds. It’s a badge of pride for those of us who are Londoners that at the time of the awful fire the Jewish community stepped up, put out a hand of friendship and demonstrated not just the best of Judaism but also in my view the best of London.”

The event was compered by SBWA director Asmaa Ali, and also addressed by its chair Abubakar Ali.

https://jewishnews.timesofisrael.co...omali-bravanese-centre-six-years-after-arson/

Are their kids selling drugs and knifing one another?
 

repo

Bantu Liberation Movement
VIP
Those are our cousins doing us a favor and we must return the favor one day.
 
Didn't even know there was a Barawani community in London

@Waaqo of Punt

They aren't as rowdy like us and have less footprints on social media than us "Ethnic Somalis"

The biggest winners in the recent Israeli elections are the Arab Parties, they won 13 seats and for the first became the third biggest party in Israel. They will play a major role in who forms a government and they lean towards the Labor Party and want Netanyahu kicked out of office.

Electoral gains revive old dilemma for Israeli Arabs.

NAZARETH, Israel — When election results confirmed that an Arab alliance had emerged as the third largest bloc in Israel’s parliament, its leader Ayman Odeh reached for the Old Testament, tweeting in Hebrew from Psalm 118 that the stone which was rejected had become the cornerstone.

His message: The Arab community, long shunted to the margins of Israeli society, is going to use its newfound influence to set the country on a more equitable path.

The results left the two biggest parties deadlocked, but marked a victory for the Arab bloc and put Odeh in a strong position to become the first Arab opposition leader, an official role that would allow him to receive high-level security briefings and meet visiting heads of state. Outraged at what they see as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s racist policies and incitement, most of the bloc recommended his opponent, former army chief Benny Gantz, as prime minister, the first time Arab parties have backed an Israeli candidate since 1992.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/worl...ebf73a-e2a4-11e9-b0a6-3d03721b85ef_story.html
 
This is like the maffia helping you. Now you owe them. Jews are doing everything to destroy nationalism and weaken the west while in their country they are super racists
 
The current Somali Minister of Immigration in Canada, HE Ahmed Hussein started a program for Jewish professionals to mentor newly Somali graduates in Toronto 10 years ago.

Somalis, Jews team up in Toronto.

Somalis in Canada, a relatively new immigrant community, is getting help for a more veteran immigrant group of Canadians: Jews.

The Toronto Star reports on the unusual partnership between the Canadian Somali Congress, the United Jewish Appeal of Greater Toronto and the Canadian Jewish Congress. The program is the brainchild of the Canadian International Peace Project, which brings together diverse groups to work on peace, security and development projects.

A first-generation Somali Canadian immigrant, Toronto law student Ayan Hersi didn’t know whom to turn to for advice and help pursuing her career.

But an innovative program, announced yesterday, is expected to give the 27-year-old woman and youth from her 250,000-strong community – one of Greater Toronto’s and Canada’s most impoverished – a needed lift by matching them with mentors from the more established Jewish community.

“Our generation is still young and the future is in our hands. Unlike others, we can’t call so and so and ask for help,” said Hersi, who has an undergraduate degree in equity studies, political science and African studies, and is pursuing a law degree at University of Toronto.

“We always have to go outside the community for help,” she added. “I am the first in my family to have graduated from a university, and studying law.”

https://www.jta.org/2008/10/29/united-states/somalis-jews-team-up-in-toronto

Two years later, a similar program was started in Ottawa.

Jewish community to mentor Ottawa Somalis
Social Sharing

Ottawa's Jewish community is volunteering to help young Somali-Canadians develop contacts in the city and break into professional fields.

The Canadian Somali Congress and the Canadian International Peace Project are holding an information and registration session this Saturday at Carleton University for Somali-Canadian university and college students and young professionals who might like to have a mentor.

The Canadian Somali-Jewish Mentorship Project in Ottawa is modelled on a successful program established in Toronto by Ahmed Hussen, president of the Canadian Somali Congress.

Hussen came up with the idea after running into a young Somali-Canadian with a degree in accounting who was working at Tim Hortons. The young man couldn't get the practical experience he needed to get chartered because he didn't know any accountants.

"We sent an open letter to all Canadian communities in Canada, and we said, 'We are the Somali community in Canada. We have a deficit of professionals. And we have a surplus of people who want to be mentored,'" he said. "And the first and fastest community to respond was the Jewish community."

Upon reflection, it's not surprising that the Jewish community stepped forward, Hussen said, as Jews went through similar growing pains in decades past.

"They know what it's like not to be able to get access to certain professions."

Mark Zarecki, head of Jewish Family Services of Ottawa, said he has no doubt mentors will sign up.

He said there is a "streak" in the Jewish community of tikkun olam — a Hebrew term that means "healing the world."

"And I think this fits that concept of helping other communities." Zarecki said.

Hussen said he hopes one day Somali-Canadian professionals in turn will be able to take their turn mentoring a new generation of immigrants from somewhere else.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/jewish-community-to-mentor-ottawa-somalis-1.919365
 
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