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Tuesday 15 July 2014

Hackney Response to Dispatches - Faith Schools Undercover: No Clapping in Class

Hackney Town Hall

Following the Dispatches programme which featured unregistered Charedi yeshiva schools - broadcast on Channel 4 on 14 July - Hackney Council made the following statement:
“Our concerns about these schools date back many years, and we’ve been working with the DfE and Ofsted to try and engage with them, ensuring they provide the education and care to which all our children have the right. Councils’ powers in these situations are very limited; we have no powers of enforcement in relation to private education arrangements.
"Any action would have to come from the Department for Education and we have been working closely with them over several years. That work has so far led to 11 of these twelve schools either being visited by Ofsted, being invited to register or having entered the pre-registration stage.
"We take the welfare of all pupils extremely seriously and all allegations are thoroughly investigated."

  • Hackney’s Charedi Orthodox Jewish community is the largest in Europe, and is a long established and important part of our borough’s community, accounting for around 10% of our population.

  • We are fully aware of the many issues that arise from the Charedi approach to education, and the Council actively engages with organisations within the community wherever possible. The welfare of every child in the borough is our priority and we take all concerns very seriously.  

  • The boys to which Dispatches refer have not “gone missing from the state system” because they were never on the roll of a state school. Charedi boys are almost exclusively educated in independent schools from primary level onwards. Some parents have chosen to send their boys to unregistered schools and local authorities have no powers to intervene.   Local authorities have no way of tracking pupils who have never attended a state school. This situation also applies for all pupils attending independent schools, including Eton.

  • When local authorities become aware of an unregistered school, they have a duty to report it to the Department for Education. Hackney Council has always reported every case of which we have been made aware.  Councils have no further powers unless they have been made aware of a specific safeguarding allegation. Hackney has been working closely with the DfE regarding this issue and some progress has been made in terms of getting the schools to engage with Ofsted.

  • Any implied similarity between Charedi yeshivas and the alleged ‘Trojan Horse’ situation in Birmingham is inappropriate. Yeshivas do not attempt to establish themselves through takeovers of existing mainstream schools.

  • Yeshivas are established by the Charedi community to educate their boys in their traditions and beliefs. Like all independent schools, they are not required to follow the national curriculum.


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Monday 14 July 2014

Dispatches - Channel 4: - Between 800 and 1000 boys aged between 13 and 16 are “missing” from the school system

Click here to watch the programme

Faith Schools Undercover: No Clapping in Class

8pm Mon 14 July 2014
DURATION: 27:09

Dispatches goes undercover to question the role of faith communities in our schools.
The programme hears from those at the heart of the 'Trojan Horse' controversy in Birmingham, and films undercover in a primary school where clapping and whistling are described as 'satanic' practices.
But this is an issue that isn't just about Islam; elsewhere Dispatches uncovers a network of illegal schools where more than 1000 boys are being taught suspicion of the outside world, and the only subject is religion.

The Telegraph: Thousand boys disappear from school system

Young Jews made to attend illegal 'yeshivas' where no traditional subjects are taught and pupils are told that "everything outside is bad and evil"

Stamford Hill has a large Orthodox Jewish community
Stamford Hill has a large Orthodox Jewish community Photo: Alamy
As many as a thousand boys aged 13 to 16 have disappeared from the registered school system in East London after their parents sent them to illegal religious schools where English is not spoken and academic subjects are not taught.
Government documents obtained by Channel 4’s Dispatches and the Jewish Chronicle newspaper say that many of the schools are “operating illegally and without the most basic health, safety and child welfare checks”.
Many boys in the Orthodox Jewish community in Stamford Hill, London, “will stop secular studies at the age of 13 or 14 and start attending ‘yeshivas’ where the curriculum is solely religious,” the documents say.
Between 800 and 1000 boys aged between 13 and 16 are “missing” from the school system in the borough of Hackney alone, the papers add.
Undercover filming by Dispatches in and around the schools shows the boys packed more than 50 to a classroom in dirty, run-down buildings, some converted houses. More than a hundred boys were filmed going in to an illegal school in Lynmouth Road, Stamford Hill, arriving from 7.30 in the morning and leaving late at night. The establishment is believed to be one of twelve illegal schools in the neighbourhood.

Sunday 13 July 2014

Latest "Eruv" controversy in Golders Green

Some people wanted to build a small Eruv in Hendon, they went to D' Roberts who said he won't oppose it 

BUT now he puts up this letter. 


Looks like he even signed on behalf of R Greenberg