Primarily through the Rachel Charitable Trust, Noé is a
philanthropist and benefactor to various charities in the UK and Israel and a trustee and patron to a number of education and welfare institutions. Noé was a member of the UK government's Holocaust Commission and a member of the
Jewish Leadership Council's Commission on Jewish Schools and chairman of its Schools Strategy Implementation Group (SSIG). He is an active participant in education strategy and planning projects, with a particular and keen interest in Special Needs Education in both the UK and Israel. Noé was instrumental in securing SEN as a specialism under the schools funding programme and has committed his time and energy to SEN within the Jewish Community and to over 50 SEN schools outside of the Jewish Community. While the Rachel Charitable Trust lists some beneficiaries in its accounts, it charges £25 for a full list of the organisations it supports, an unorthodox arrangement among UK foundations. In 1998, Noé became a trustee of
Kisharon, a London-based charity founded in 1976 which provides innovative support to children with complex learning disabilities, their families, teachers and other professionals. In June 2021, Noé stood down from this position following the opening of the Wohl Campus, Kisharon Noé School in Hendon. Noé established the Kemach Foundation in 2007, based on the belief that for the Haredi community to become part of Israeli economic society and for Israeli society to accept the Haredi community, they have to integrate into the workforce. It has become the premier agency for higher education and employment for the Haredi community throughout Israel, supporting 29,000 Haredi men and women as of January 2018. Noé's philanthropic approach is based on education, training and collaboration, aiming to create employment opportunities, encourage tolerance and build sustainable communities. Noé was a speaker at the Accelerate Conference in New York in December 2015. His speech is here. In January 2016, Noé was reappointed vice-president and Treasurer of the
Jewish Leadership Council (JLC) In April 2017, he was named at number 64 on the Sunday Times Giving list ranking the top 100 charitable contributors in the UK, having donated around £7.8m during the previous year, details [http://nuk-rich-list-ui-2017-uk-prod.eu-west-1.elasticbeanstalk.com/richlist/view/table480/1/-/-/leo%20noe#profile-0 here • As Treasurer of Jewish Leadership Council, oversaw 8-fold increase in individual donations in 2016 compared to 2015. • Rachel Charitable Trust, benefactor to various charities within the UK and Israel. • Special Educational Needs (SEN) in both the UK and Israel. • Pledged £750,000 in 2005 to special-needs education in the UK. • Kemach Foundation: "...to help
Haredi students sustain themselves in dignity. Behind Kemach stands philanthropist Leo Noé, owner of British company Reit Asset Management." ==Political activity==