JCR-UK 

 

 


JCR-UK is a genealogical and historical website. It is not the official website of the organisation discussed below.

Former Liberal Judaism

Liberal Judaism (LJ), a grouping of liberal congregations, was the most radical of the various synagogue movements in the United Kingdom. Membership of Liberal congregations in 2016 (including the unaffiliated Belsize Square Synagogue) constituted some 8.2% of synagogue membership in the United Kingdom.1. 

In April 2023, Liberal Judaism together with the larger Movement for Reform Judaism (MRJ) announced their intentions to merge into one Progressive Jewish movement, which merger was approved at extraordinary general meetings of both organisations held on 18 May 2025 and became effective on 1 January 2026 with the formation of the Movement for Progressive Judaism (MPJ).

Basic Data

Name:

Liberal Judaism

Former Names:

Jewish Religious Union (1902 until 1911)

Jewish Religious Union for the Advancement of Liberal Judaism (1911 until 1958)

Union of Liberal and Progressive Synagogues (ULPS) (1944 until 2002)

Head Office:

The Montagu Centre, 21 Maple Street, London W1T 4BE

Date Formed:

1902

Ceased Activity:

1 January 2026

Ritual:

Liberal and Progressive Judaism

Affiliation:

A Founding Member of the World Union for Progressive Judaism from 10 July 1926 until the merger.

Website:

https://www.liberaljudaism.org/ (still active as of February 2026, but no longer being updated)

Burial Society:

Jewish Joint Burial Board of 1 Victory Road, Wanstead E11 1UL (serving several Reform, Masorti, Liberal and Independent Communities in England), established 1968.

Legal and Charitable Status:

On 5 November 2012, 'Liberal Judaism (ULPS)" was incorporated as a registered company (company no: 08281223), a private company limited by guarantee without a share capital (and with an exemption from use of the word 'Limited').3.

It is also a registered charity (No: 1151090), registered on 5 March 2013.4.

History6.

The founding father of British Liberal Judaism was Claude Montifiore, who at a meeting held on 19 February 1902 was instrumental in founding the Jewish Religious Union (JRU), a society that grew as a result of an article, entitled "Spiritual Possibilities in Judaism To-day", by Lily Montagu which appeared in the Jewish Quarterly Review in January 1899.

The society, which was not a synagogue, held its first prayer service on 18 October 1902 in the Wharncliffe Rooms at the Great Central Hotel, Marylebone Road, London in 1902. Services were held on Saturday afternoons so as not to conflict with regular Shabbat morning services in synagogues. At the time, these services were not seen as the prelude to the setting up of a separate denomination within Anglo-Jewry.

Following the first service, the JRU accepted an invitation from London's then only Reform synagogue, the West London Synagogue, to discuss the possibility of services being held there, but the stipulation made by the synagogue, such as the right to veto the content of the services and the refusal to allow men and women to sit together, were unacceptable to the JRU.

By 1909, the JRU decided that the time had come to set up its own synagogue and this was achieved in 1911 with the opening of the Liberal Jewish Synagogue in London. By 1928, two other Liberal congregations had been founded in London and one in Liverpool. In 1944, the JRU (which had added the words "for the Advancement of Liberal Judaism" to its name in 1911) was reorganised as the "Union of Liberal and Progressive Synagogues", changing its name to "Liberal Judaism" in 2002.

Congregations

In 1949 there were 11 member congregation.  As at the date of the 2026 merger, there were 35 LJ communities (formerly referred to as constituent synagogues) throughout Britain and Ireland7. and two affiliated communities in Denmark and the Netherlands. At one time, the organisation also included a community in Luxembourg and the Bene Israel Rodef Shalom congregation of Bombay (now Mumbai), India (which became directly affiliated to the WUPJ).
The following is a list of congregations or communities which were, at any time, affiliated to LJ.


Greater London and Vicinity:

 

Unaffiliated Congregations, with Liberal / Progressive or Egalitarian Tradition:

 


Provincial and Outer London:

* An LJ congregation or community active on 1 January 2026 and which became a constituent of MPJ.

An LJ congregation previously affiliated to MRJ.

An unaffiliated congregation or group, active on 1 January 2026, which was formerly affiliated to LJ.

A congregation, formerly affiliated to LJ but which became affiliated to MRJ.

A congregation formerly affiliated to both LJ and MRJ, but which merged into a congregation, active on 1 January 2026, solely affiliated to MRJ.

# An LJ congregation that merged with another LJ congregation, prior to 1 January 2026.

 

 

Bibliography, On-line Articles and Other Material
relating to the Liberal Judaism Movement

on JCR-UK

  • Annual Reports filed with Companies House and the Charities Commission (pdf):

  • Selected Bibliography:

    • The Synagogues of London by Paul Lindsay, 1993 (Valentine Mitchell, London)

    • Israel Isidor Mattuck: Architect of Liberal Judaism by Pam Fox, 2016 (Vallentine Mitchell)

 

Cemeteries of Liberal Judaism in the Greater London Area

In addition, many municipal cemeteries throughout Britain have sections
reserved for non-Orthodox Jewish burials.

 


References and Notes   (returns to main text)

  1. "Jewish News", Issue No. 1010, 6 July 2017, pp. 1, 4, quoting a report by the Board of Deputies Policy Reseach, carried out between April and September 2016.

  2. Reserved.

  3. Companies House website accessed February 2026. Clicking on the company number of this will take you to the registration on the Companies House website.

  4. Charities Commission website, accessed February 2026. Clicking on the charity number of this will take you to the charity's registration on the Charities Commission website

  5. Reserved.

  6. Primary source: A place to Call My Jewish Home - Memories of the Liberal Jewish Synagogue 1911-2011 by Pam Fox, pp 1-5.

  7. Extracted from list on MPJ website, accessed January 2026.

Synagogal Organisation in the United Kingdom

London Jewish Community home page


Page created: 27 June 2017
Page most recently amended: 15 February 2026

Research and formatting by David Shulman


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