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If you are interested in developing a professional training course, please contact us to discuss your idea.
If you are interested in developing a professional training course, please contact us to discuss your idea.
Contact usFunding is available for institutions to create training programmes that support staff working with Jewish heritage.
This may include setting up an intensive training or mentoring programme for one person to ensure they have the necessary skills for succession purposes.
We will also consider requests to enrol staff on a course run by another academic or professional institution for them to gain a qualification in a specific area.
We welcome applications from a variety of organisations including museums, universities, public, private and institutional libraries and archives, heritage organisations and cultural institutions as well as not-for profits and other professional organisations that have a significant Jewish collection.
The training programme must improve the professional skills of your staff in their work relating to Jewish materials.
We will consider requests for funding of up to £40,000 per year (maximum total of £120,000 over 3 years). We will fund up to 70% of the total project budget and applications requesting more than this amount will be rejected.
We welcome applications from any organisation based in Europe, EU and non-EU states alike, except for Ukraine, Russia and Belarus.
The organisation’s activities must be deemed charitable under UK charity law, and we will require proof of its charitable status. This includes organisations which are either not-for-profit or publicly funded e.g., state or private libraries, archives, museums, research institutes, universities, cultural centres or non-profit organisations. For more information, please consult the UK’s Charity Commission website and its list of Charitable Purposes.
If you are in the process of obtaining charitable status, please be aware that no payments will be made to your organisation until you have achieved this status. Additionally, if your organisation is awarded a grant but fails to secure charitable status within 3 months of having been notified of the award, the grant will be cancelled.
At least 30% of the cost of the project will need to come from other funding sources and we favour proposals that include co-funding from other organisations as well as clear evidence of financial commitments from your own institution (e.g. institutional reserves, money raised from ticket sales etc.)
A maximum of 15% of the total project budget can be attributed to In-kind contributions and allocated costs. Please ensure you identify these on your Project Budget Form under Project Income and use the Budget Explanation section to provide further details eg. breakdown of salaries, volunteer time etc.
In-kind contributions include any materials, goods, services or facilities that you would otherwise have to pay for but that are being provided free of charge or at a reduced rate. This may include:
Allocated costs include expenditure which must be paid for at some point by your organisation and do not qualify as in-kind contributions. This may include:
We do not fund retroactively and will not consider a request for funding for an activity that has already happened or is scheduled to happen while the application for funding is being considered.
We do not fund the following:
If you are interested in developing a professional training course, please contact us to discuss your idea.
Applications are accepted twice a year in our Spring and Autumn grant rounds which open in January and early-summer each year. You should submit your application by the submission deadline.
For Spring grant rounds, you will receive a final decision in late July. For Autumn grant rounds you will receive a final decision in early January.
If your application is approved, you will receive an official Grant Offer Letter together with an Award Agreement which you will need to e-sign and return with the necessary supporting documentation. See Manage my grant for information about grant requirements.
If you are asked to complete an application, you will be required to include the following documentation. If it is not included, your application cannot be considered.
Translations: For documents not originally written in English please include an English translation. This does not need to be an official or full translation, but it must be clear and accurate. Documents in a language other than English that are not accompanied by an English translation will not be processed.
Financial summaries: If financial documents are very long, please provide a translation summarising the main income and expenditure included in your financial statements and organisational budget. This document should be no longer than 10 pages.
Please upload your translated/summarised document against the same upload title you use for the original document. This means you may have two documents saved under each upload title.
You can find answers to the most frequently asked questions here.
If you are interested in developing a professional development training course, please contact us to discuss your idea: Rebecca Singer or Dr Brigitte Sion. For any technical support please contact info@rothschildfoundation.eu.
Please add the following emails to your contacts/safe senders list to ensure you receive all our communications regarding your application and grant notification: mailuk@grantapplication.com; mail@grantapplication.com; adobesign@adobesign.com; message@adobe.com.
Download a copy of the Application Guidance for this grant category
Download the budget form and upload it with your application
View a copy of the budget form to help you plan
We provide funding to a broad range of organisations and institutions across Europe working in the field of Jewish heritage, culture and education.
We plan and implement projects to create, curate and promote freely accessible online resources on Jewish heritage.