Friday, May 29, 2009

There they go again

In the middle ages, Christian Europe was a dangerous place for Jews.


In addition to blood libels, Crusades, forced conversions, and expulsions, the Church tried to co-opt Reason itself in the one-sided fight against the Jew. Philosophically, Augustine's slightly-less-malign anti-Semitism—Jews happen to be blind to the truth, obsessed with the body, materialistic, and legalistic—gave way to Aquinas' radically Franciscan understanding of Jews as purposefully evil—we purposefully reject the truth, we killed Jesus, and we purposefully misread the Law.


In some communities the Church required Jews to defend their Jewishness in mock trials or debates known as disputations. The most famous took place in Paris, Barcelona, and Tortosa, and their conclusions were forgone: the home team always won.


While browsing the Jewish Chronicle, I happened on Professor Geoffrey Alderman's weekly op-ed and, having assumed disputations were history, nearly tumbled from my barstool.


Remember that I'm a left-leaning, pro-two-state solution peacenik; that I'm all too aware of some of Zionism's mistaken excesses. But also know that like Alderman I'm always a Zionist and am horrified at repeated ahistorical attempts to tie back the existence of anti-Semitism to our existence and actions as Jews. This circular argument is as fallacious and dangerous in this late modern disputation as it was in its medieval predecessors.


Anyway, enough from me, read Alderman's It’s not Zionism that fuels hate for yourself.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Nu, did Rabbi Norman Lamm say kaddish too soon?

An impromptu post to address a fresh-brewed storm in a teacup.

(Full disclosure: theologically and socio-politically, I align most closely—but far from fully—with Conservative/Masorti Judaism.)

In Saying Kaddish Too Soon?, an op-ed for The Jewish Daily Forward, Professor Jonathan D. Sarna takes umbrage at this admittedly clumsy Rabbi Norman Lamm claim in a Jerusalem Post interview: progressive American Judaisms are in permanent decline. (A claim which, by the way, is unfortunately supported by some major studies.) Sarna largely avoids defending Conservative or Reform, and instead suggests the Yeshiva University chancellor might best tend to the challenges threatening his own American Orthodoxy, including a:
  • Loss of members
  • Lack of indigenous leadership
  • Exodus to Israel of its best and brightest
  • Pending right-left schism
  • Funding crisis

In his Jerusalem Post blog, Masorti Matters, Israel’s Conservative leader Rabbi Andrew Sacks reacts to Lamm in a tone more shrill than Sarna's—reflecting, perhaps, undue pressures on Israel's progressive Judaisms. Like Sarna, he demurs from defending Conservative and Reform based on facts. But whereas Sarna counter attacks under the cover of an elegant straw person, Sacks swings a clumsy ad hominem club, bludgeoning Lamm’s "archaic language."

Contra Sarna's rhetorical mischaracterization, there is not now, and there never has been, a monolithic American Jewish Orthodoxy, and the many orthodoxies are more vibrant and prepared for future challenges precisely because of their independence. Yes, they've been hit hard by financial crises, but so have all American Judaisms. Yes, they're struggling to find inspirational leaders, but progressive Judaisms aren't exactly producing legions of gedolim, or great ones. And yes, they are losing some members, but Reform's dry minhag, or tradition, hardly presents a come-hither alternative.

And contra Sacks misreading, I'm guardedly encouraged when Lamm suggests an inter-denominational dialog that avoids both "watering down" Orthodox positions and "demonizing" progressive ones. Further, I'm guardedly encouraged that he reaches out to the liberal-most periphery of modern Orthodoxy by admitting his opposition to women Orthodox rabbis is "social, not religious" and suggesting change will come. And furthermore, I'm encouraged by his stated—and, for Orthodoxy, quite radical—desire to welcome and make "comfortable" homosexuals who keep their orientation private.

Don’t expect me to endorse Lamm's positions. There is no good reason women and homosexuals should not be rabbis, just as there is no good reason homosexuals should remain closeted. But I do endorse the apparent leftward trajectory of his thinking and I insist that Sarna and Sacks’ overreactions to his claim do nothing to improve the tone of debate. In fact, they are juvenile and I expect better.

Sarna, for whom I have the greatest respect, misses the opportunity to enter a dialog that might help insure all Jewish denominations against the five shared and very real threats he identifies. And Sacks—who seems, by the way, to miss Lamm’s focus on American Judaisms—bites the hand Lamm extends both to progressive Judaisms and, perhaps more importantly, to key Orthodox liberals—such as the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale's Rabbi Avi Weiss—as they seek to extend the boundaries of halakhic Orthodoxy to include women rabbis and open homosexuals.

Perhaps I'm enjoying one of my rare cup-half-full days, but my take on all this is simple: when someone holds out a hand in friendship, grasp first, ask questions later. Because ours is not an age of miraculous signs and wonders, and because some days it’s difficult to see a future for Jews qua Jews, recognized leaders like Sarna and Sacks must take every chance to reach across communal lines rather than self-indulge in ill-advised polemics.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

American Jews and Israel

This is a challenging article, written in a challenging way, by a challenging academic.

Ira Chernus, professor of religious studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder, takes a more aggressive stance than I might, but we share at least this conclusion: for Israel's sake, America's Jews must break down the sky-blue wall of silence.

I would say enjoy, but you don't have to. Just read the article on AlterNet.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

The two-solution two-state solution

The Obama administration's attempts to encourage Israel to dismantle illegal outposts, advance peace talks with the Palestinians, and halt settlement growth in hopes of convincing Iran to suspend uranium enrichment are naive and potentially dangerous.

Consider these recent quotes from men with whom I often disagree:
  • Israeli former Prime Minister and current "Defense Minister Ehud Barak said Tuesday that the United States must be told that Iran's nuclear program and outpost activity in the West Bank are two unrelated issues." (Haaretz, May 26, 2009)
  • U.S. Secretary of State's special adviser on Iran Dennis "Ross writes that efforts to advance dialogue with Iran should not be connected to the renewal of talks between Israel and the Palestinians." (Haaretz, May 27, 2009)
My take as a self-styled chovev Shalom, or lover of peace, who supports Obama's understanding of a two-state solution? I have to side here with Barak and Ross. While the two issuesa just settlement between Israel and the Palestinians and Iran's nuclear ambitionsare not mutually exclusive in theory, we should delineate between them sharply in practice.

Yes, Israel must dismantle all illegal outposts immediately. Yes, Israel must commit fully and faithfully to peace talks with the Palestinians. And yes, Israel must suspend so-called-"natural" settlement growth during those talks. But none of these explains or justifies Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons, which is based in a different set of issues:
  • Desire for hegemony over the Middle East and beyond
  • Enmity toward the Arab world and its largely Sunni population
  • Fear of western ideas and ideals and their perceived corrosive powers
  • Hatred for Jews both as representatives of the West and qua Jews
The quest for peace with the Palestinians and the concomitant rejection of occupation has nothing to do with the frightened, hateful, and ahistorically maniacal ramblings of Iran's reactionary leaders. It has everything to do with our necessary alignment with normative Jewish ethics; with our necessary commitment to Hillel the Elder's formulation of the golden rule: "What is hateful to you, don't do to others." Pashut, simple.

It's possible to be pro-peace and anti-occupation, while being horrified by Iran's vile polemics. It's equally possible to reshape the map in a way that establishes a viable Palestine and returns much of the Golan to Syria, while ensuring a secure, livable future for Israel. But it's not possible to accept that Iran's nuclear program is solely or even largely a reaction to Israeli aggression, because that's a transparent lie aimed at hiding Iran's regional and global ambitions behind a straw golem.

Along with many other chovevi Zion, lovers of Zion, who are also chovevi Shalom, I am willing to pay a very high price for peacejust not the ultimate one.