Order Achei Brith
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- The United Jewish Friendly Society was formed on 1 January 1949 from an amalgamation of two Jewish friendly societies, the Order Achei Brith and the Order Achei Ameth. The Order Achei Brith grew from the formation in 1888 of a friendly society to provide insurance against complete loss of income and as a means of social life among a group of Jewish refugees who had fled to Britain to escape religious persecutions in Central and Eastern Europe. The first branch was called the King Solomon Lodge and contributions were paid ensuring payment in cases of sickness, death and mourning. In 1894 a second branch was formed, the King David Lodge, and from this the Order Achei Brith emerged. A second association, the Order Achei Ameth, was founded in 1897: by 1903 it had expanded to 12 lodges, a membership of 1,070 and in the same year it founded its first ladies’ lodge. Later developments included mixed lodges and Achei Brith founded a Juveniles Section in 1929. In 1924, the Order Achei Brith was presented by Mr and Mrs Isaac Seligman with Shoyswell Manor, Etchingham Sussex, for use as a convalescent home; it was requisitioned by the government and used as an old people’s home during the war, returning to its former use in 1946. In 1950, on the closure of the Convalescent Home of the Association of Jewish Friendly Societies, members of other societies were offered places at Shoyswell. The home was transferred to Eastbourne in 1956, where it continued to be known as the Seligman Convalescent Home. The United Jewish Friendly Society was dissolved on 31 December 1979.[1]
There were reportedly sixteen lodges mentioned in the Jewish Year Book of 1901/2.[2]
Lodges
- Michael Simons Lodge, No. 128, Order Achei Brith - Glasgow
- Order Achei Brith. Last Sunday, at the White Hart Hotel, the L. S. Abrahamson Lodge, No. 25, Order Achei Brith (Pontypridd) was consecrated, 35 members. Bro I. Grose, President, Bro V. Bleiden Vice-President, D. Cohen, Treasurer, I. Yellin, Secretary.[3]
- Rev. G. J. Emanuel Lodge, No. 19, Order Achei Brith, Birmingham, Members, 114, p C woolf, T. M. Gold, S. W. Fagensohn.[4]
Resources
- https://portal.ehri-project.eu/units/gb-003350-ms_180
- Order Achei Brith and Shield of Abraham Paperback – 18 July 2009 by Raffalovitch J (Author) This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction
Notes
- ↑ https://jewishmuseum.org.uk/collections/research-centre/research-digitisation/ujfsc/
- ↑ https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/3439-bnei-zion
- ↑ Jewish Chronicle, 22 January 1904, page 33. Source
- ↑ Jewish Year Book, 1907. https://jscn.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/JewishYearBook1907a.pdf