Community Corner

Jewish Federation Discusses Population with Leaders

More numbers crunched from Jewish Population Study

There is a higher rate of poverty in the Cleveland Jewish community than in other cities that have gathered this population data, like Chicago and Baltimore, said Erika Rudin-Luria during a breakfast presentation to Jewish community leaders Tuesday.

The  contracted Jewish Policy and Action Research (JPAR), a professional survey services company, to phone people in all of Cuyahoga and parts of Portage, Geauga, Lake, Summit and Lorain Counties.

Rudin-Luria is the vice president of community development at the Jewish Federation of Cleveland and part of the team that has worked closely on the study.

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Nineteen percent of Cleveland Jews are at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty level, she said – or makes less than $29,000 annually for a two-person household.

Rudin-Luria said that it’s too early to say how the Federation will use this information until they are able to identify that community. She noted that determining the geography –  in what part of the region these people reside – will be especially important in deciding how to move forward.

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But the Cleveland Jewish community is unique in another way: its members identified strong connections to Israel* in themselves – much higher than in Jews in Detroit, Baltimore or Chicago.

Rudin-Luria said she has not determined what it is about this community that makes them feel more connected to Israel than in other cities.

But this could mean that the Federation’s potential to serve the community – and garnish donations and help - could be high.

The last survey, conducted in 1996, found that 83 percent of households in Beachwood have at least one person who identifies as Jewish.

The 2011 survey determined that 89 percent of Beachwood's population is Jewish, though the percentage of households is not published.

*Editor's Note: The original version of this article reported that the strong connection was with Judaism.

Does it surprise you that we have more poverty in our Jewish community than in other cities?

Why do you think our Jewish community has such a strong connection with Israel?

Tell us in the comments!

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