Soon after the 1927 earthquake in Palestine, Jerusalem’s Sephardi congregation contacted their co-religionists in London to ask for help rebuilding homes and synagogues. In doing so, they relied upon long-standing relations in which European Jews had helped to support communities in the Holy Land. In this instance, controversy arose when funds raised by the Spanish & Portuguese congregation in London were merged with the larger relief effort channelled via the Board of Deputies to an ethnically mixed fundraising committee in Jerusalem. Not only was the London Sephardim’s money not used specifically for congregations in Jerusalem, much of it was used to help destitute Arab victims. This article places this internal conflict into the conte...