Alan Montefiore

Alan Montefiore Associations

Alan Montefiore was involved with, acted as chair, and associated with many organisations and charities, some of which are listed below:

Wiener Holocaust Library

The Wiener Holocaust Library is one of the world’s leading and most extensive archives on the Holocaust, the Nazi era and related themes. The Library’s unique collection of over one million items includes published and unpublished works, press cuttings, photographs and eyewitness testimony.

Forum for European Philosophy

The Forum for Philosophy (previously, the Forum for European Philosophy, 1996–2018), founded in 1996, is a  nonprofit philosophical organization whose purpose is to promote philosophy. The Forum is not aligned with any particular school of philosophical thought and its aim is to make philosophy accessible to the largest number of people. The organization hosts free weekly discussions in the London School of Economics, from which it produces regular podcasts. The Forum also publishes an essay series.

Balliol College, Oxford 

Balliol College is a constituent college of the University of Oxford, England. Founded in 1263 by nobleman John I de Balliol, it has a claim to be the oldest college in Oxford and the English-speaking world.

Royal Institute of Philosophy

The Royal Institute of Philosophy, is the UK’s largest independent charitable foundation devoted to sharing philosophical thinking as widely as possible. Addressing ourselves to fundamental questions across the whole breadth of philosophy, we aim to bring these questions to the curious of every age and background, and to empower them to address these questions for themselves.

Jan Hus Educational Foundation

The Jan Hus Educational Foundation was founded in May 1980 by a group of British philosophers at the University of Cambridge. The group operated an underground education network in Czechoslovakia, then under Communist Party rule, running seminars in philosophy, smuggling in books, and arranging for Western academics to give lectures.

From Wikipedia encyclopedia

Froebel Trust

Are a charity which funds practice development and research into education and learning in the early years of childhood from birth to eight years.

London Society for the Study of Religions

In the early 1900s, at a time when society was rapidly changing, a group of thinkers in London came together to reflect on the future of religion. In 1904, they formed the London Society for the Study of Religion, a small and private group focused on understanding religion rather than promoting any one belief system.

The Society included a diverse range of scholars, such as Friedrich von Hügel, Claude Montefiore, and Joseph Estlin Carpenter. Although they came from different religious and intellectual backgrounds, they shared a common interest in exploring religion in an open and thoughtful way.