Workbook
For British Jewish Families
Diaspora, Identity, and the Relationships That Hold the History
Your family carried Jewish history for generations. Now your family writes its chapter.
For British Jewish families working through the intersection of Jewish heritage — Ashkenazi, Sephardi, Mizrahi, and other traditions — British identity, and the ongoing question of what it means to be Jewish in Britain across generations. Families carrying history and asking what to do with it.
The Name It First Experience
Your family carries Jewish history. Whether your family came from Eastern Europe, from the Middle East, from North Africa, or has been in Britain for centuries — you carry a history of diaspora, survival, community, and the question of what being Jewish means when the context keeps changing. This workbook gives your family a structured space to name what The British Jewish Family Accord means in your specific household, what you are choosing to carry forward, and what each generation gets to contribute. The output is not a history lesson. It is a signed family document your household owns.
You can opt into 30-, 60-, and 90-day check-ins from your account. We recommend you do — the point is to see what changed.
Sample questions
- What does your family hold from Jewish history — and what does it mean to hold it in Britain, now?
- What does being British Jewish mean in your specific household — and is that a definition your family has chosen together?
- What from your family's history do you most want to carry forward — and what do you want the next generation to understand about why?
Research basis
Cross (1971, 1991) Nigrescence Model adapted for Jewish identity / Helms (1990) racial identity statuses / Berry (1997) acculturation strategies / Crenshaw (1989, 1991) intersectionality / Brah (1996) Cartographies of Diaspora applied to Jewish diaspora / Hall (1990) Cultural Identity and Diaspora / Endelman (2002) The Jews of Britain 1656 to 2000 / cultural frameworks of Ashkenazi, Sephardi, and Mizrahi identity diversity within British Jewish community / Jacobson (1998) The Finkler Question applied to Jewish identity / Gitelman (2009) on Jewish ethnicity and peoplehood / British Jewish intergenerational identity (Graham & Boyd, 2010) / Holocaust memory in British Jewish family identity (Hass, 1990).
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Every format asks the same questions and produces the same document.
Print Paperbackpersonalize
A real book and a pen. Write in the margins. The most permanent version of you on a page.
$22.99
eBook + journal
The full guide on any screen, with a companion journal to write your answers by hand.
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Audiobook
We read every question and every scenario aloud. For the commute, the walk, the dishes.
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Hardcoverpersonalize
The keepsake edition — sewn, ribboned, made to sit on a shelf and be returned to.
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Digital Fill + membership+membership
Answer on screen. Your responses save as you go and assemble into your finished document.
$12.99
Hands-Free Interactive + membership+membership
Listen to each question and speak your answer. We capture it. You never touch a keyboard.
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The Hardcover Everything Package
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The Premium Hardcover Everything Package
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Choose your pace.
The Essential path takes you to your finished document by the questions that matter most. The Full-depth path walks every question, every scenario, every angle. Both produce the same signed document — one just goes deeper on the way there.
Essential path
Shorter sessions. The questions that go directly to the document.
Full depth
Every question. Every scenario, every angle.
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