LONG READS Issue 959 · May 3, 2023

Crown Jews

Ties past and present between Britain's monarchy and its Jews

Crown Jews
Ties past and present between Britain’s monarchy and its Jews
As Britain’s Jews will be marking this week’s “Coronation Shabbos” with kiddushim, special tefillos for the peace of the kingdom, and an invitation for the chief rabbi to stay with King Charles over the weekend in order to attend, the historical record tells of different, more challenging times: of occasional protection by the king and relative stability, but also of expulsions, pogroms and mass murders. A millennium timeline of survival

When King Charles III is crowned in Westminster Abbey this week, it will be in a ceremony whose central moments are drawn from the Tanach.

Screened from the thousands watching inside the ancient building, and the vast audience expected to watch the media coverage, are the moments when the king is anointed — a ritual harking back to the coronation of Shlomo Hamelech by Tzaddok HaKohein, as recorded in Sefer Melachim (interestingly, the haftarah of this week calls the Kohanim “Bnei Tzaddok” in a reference to that early Kohein Gadol.)

So conscious is the echo of the Jewish kings of old that the oil used for the ceremony was produced on the Mount of Olives to emphasize the source of the tradition, which British monarchs have followed for centuries.

But while Shabbos will prevent an audience of Britain’s notably royalist Jews from tuning in, the Biblical motifs highlight a relationship between the Crown and the Jewish community that dates back almost one thousand years.

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