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Status
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Income
£0.0K
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Spending
£3.3K
Public benefits
Public Benefit The charity provides funds for the provision of and maintenance of buildings used for religious practice. The direct benefit is the promotion, maintenance and increase of individual and collective knowledge and understanding of the Orthodox Jewish Religion through the education provided by Jewish religious colleges and community
organisations. The charity provides funds to religious establishments. The direct benefit is raised awareness and understanding of Orthodox beliefs and practices amongst the members of the Jewish faith thereby giving them a moral framework which encourages them to be good citizens. The charity provides grants to organisations working to prevent and relieve poverty. The direct benefit is the improvement in their education and health. The organisation's activities will benefit the recipients and this is measured by the sense of well being resulting from a good orthodox religious education which in turn will result in improved behaviour through being involved in religious educational advancement. In addition it will also provide inspiration to appreciate the orthodox Jewish way life and education which gives a direct benefit of being a good, responsible citizen. We have not identified any risks of possible detriment or harm that might result from the organisation's purpose. Beneficiaries are persons of Jewish religion and those partaking in Jewish religious education and the poor amongst the Jewish community throughout the world. Maintaining synagogues to provide facilities for worship and running religious educational establishments. There are no personal benefits to any trustee apart from incidental benefits such as a sense of well-being for the trustees who are volunteers.
... [more] [less]What your organisation does
The Charity is a grant making charity which supports other charities who promote the Jewish religion and furtherance of the Jewish religious education. The charity makes grants to these charities that support Jewish schools and intuitions such as Kollel - an advanced Talmudical college for married students. The grants fall under the heading of
religious education concerning Orthodox Jewish faith. The charity also makes grants to other charities that alleviate poverty among the Jewish community. There is a great deal of evidence available to demonstrate that Orthodox Jews in general suffer higher levels of poverty than other members of society and accordingly the trustees will feel it appropriate to concentrate the efforts in providing the public benefit that would flow from alleviating that area of poverty. Factors such as large family sizes, the requirement to live in areas where their religious requirement are available ( which results in higher accommodation costs) , the amounts that need to be spent on religious necessitates such Jewish education, kosher food and other religious requites are onerous.
... [more] [less]The charity’s classifications
- The prevention or relief of poverty
- The advancement of education
- The advancement of religion
- The relief of those in need by reason of youth, age, ill-health, disability, financial hardship or other disadvantage
Who the charity helps
- Adult training
- Ethnic minorities
- Older people
How the charity works
- Grant making