More than £1.2m raised for WJR as plight of Ukrainian Jews in focus
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More than £1.2m raised for WJR as plight of Ukrainian Jews in focus

Philippe Sands QC addresses more than 500 guests at Guildhall, as the humanitarian charity raises funds for the poorest Jews in the world

Jack Mendel is the former Online Editor at the Jewish News.

The World Jewish Relief Dinner included guests (from left): Henry Grunwald, Dan Rosenfield, Chief Rabbi Mirvis and his wife Valerie, and Linda Rosenblatt.
The World Jewish Relief Dinner included guests (from left): Henry Grunwald, Dan Rosenfield, Chief Rabbi Mirvis and his wife Valerie, and Linda Rosenblatt.

More than £1.2million was raised at World Jewish Relief (WJR)’s annual dinner on Monday, as the charity brought the plight of Ukraine’s community into sharp focus.

Keynote speaker at the Guildhall was Philippe Sands QC, who told 500 diners how WJR helped his family escape Nazi Europe in 1938, before speaking about his book, East West Street.

He told guests: “It is an honour to be here tonight to support this extraordinary organisation,” before urging people to donate
to help those in need.

At the dinner, which was attended by Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis and Israeli Ambassador to the UK Mark Regev, and hosted by broadcaster Jacky Klein, guests heard about the charity’s work supporting more than 42,000 people across 19 countries in the past year.

Philippe Sands speaking at the WJR dinner

Marking 80 years since the Kindertransport, which saved hundreds of Jewish children from the Nazis, and 85 years since the founding of WJR, the organisation honoured longstanding volunteer Harry Heber, who arrived in the UK in 1938 on one of the first transports.

He was given the inaugural Outstanding Volunteer Award to mark 20 years of service, dispatching glasses to those in need.

His initiative has facilitated the dispatch of nearly 60,000 prescriptions in 15 countries around the world.

Funds raised by guests will go towards helping the world’s poorest Jews, including 18,000 older people and more than 3,000 people who suffer from poverty and unemployment.

WJR chief executive Paul Anticoni said: “I never fail to be bowled over by the kindness of World Jewish Relief’s supporters.”

He thanked them “on behalf of the Jewish communities we support in Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine”.

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