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The Brisket King |
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| or: The Perils of Dualism | ||
by Andrew Gow , October 6, 2008 |
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If I had a brisket for every
time I have heard “I’m interested in spirituality, not religion”,
I’d be … um, The Brisket King, I guess.
Brisket and all the other trappings
of eastern-European-dominated North American Jewry were presented to
us, and consequently seemed, along with Yiddish words, Yiddish accents,
east-coast Jewish-American accents, kvelling, big bar mitzvah celebrations,
and certain kinds of interior décor and display, as vulgar, sectarian,
‘not-us’. ‘Us’ was upper-middle-class, assimilated-but-separate,
polyglot, British-Canadian—underlain by conventions rooted in the
Anglo-American Jewish, German-Jewish and even Sephardi sensibilities
of our ancestors: the strongly visible and prestigious elements of my
mother’s (partly) illustrious ancestry. Disdain for certain elements
of Jewish culture has led, in many contexts, to disdain for Judaism,
as much among Jews as among non-Jews. Many North American Jews today also have trouble distinguishing between Judaism and its current North American cultural avatars:
- Etiolated, Christianized Reform Judaism, with its college-educated congregations, organs, pastor-rabbis and ‘temples’ empty on Saturdays, the most important service of the week deliberately displaced to make room for secular, private activities;
- Largely suburban, middle-brow Conservatism, with its lavish low-rise shuls set in immense parking lots, its showy, hugely expensive b’nei mitzvah celebrations (Reform is guilty here too, of course), its dowdy, ‘participatory’ 1960s liturgy—in which the Saturday morning service might well be the only one of the week—and the well-meaning embrace of ‘traditional’ Judaism without much concern for actual observance outside of the synagogue;
- And increasingly know-nothing, pietistic, right-wing Orthodoxy, in which crude ‘creationism’ (a Baptist or at best chassidishe literalism which you could hardly have found in an Orthodox shul twenty years ago) is making serious inroads into much more sophisticated traditional Jewish ideas about how to understand Bereishis; and in which a domineering rabbinism is once more in the ascendant.
These three mainstream movements
are in serious trouble—not merely demographically and generationally,
but also ontologically, in terms of their self-understanding. Renewal
and Reconstructionism seem to be making gains—for the same reasons
as the main denominations are in trouble, probably. All three mainstream
movements are entangled in struggles of self-definition and self-legitimation
vis-à-vis the others, and all seem to be on the defensive rather than
actively articulating a living and viable Judaism.
No wonder many secularly educated Jews are quick to dismiss ‘religion’ and embrace ‘spirituality’, as though religion were just a disposable husk and ‘spirituality’ its valuable, essential core. We go shopping, literally, for new ‘spiritual’ experiences, as though one could isolate and purchase ‘spirituality’ via retreats, healing sessions, etc. – as a commodity. New Age, Wicca and Buddhism are major alternative destinations for disaffected middle-class Jews, followed by Christianity—though ‘secularism’ is admittedly the default destination for the vast majority, with assimilation coming close behind, probably in the generation following those who see themselves only as ‘secular’ or ‘cultural’ Jews. But for many Jews with some sort of religious itch, a synagogue is the last place they would go looking.
It’s a marginal irony that Madonna and many other non-Jews have turned to our mystical tradition, Kabbalah, for similar reasons. As the entire generation of flower-children learned to their dismay, ‘spiritual’ practice without religion of any kind generally (though perhaps not always) runs into the sand. New Age Jews have given up what they see as a stale and ‘unspiritual’ religion for crystals, chakras and energy vortices (all bound to things and places); Wiccans, many of them of Jewish descent, buy into anti-Judaic understandings of Judaism as part of a patriarchal conspiracy against the Mother Goddess, thus replicating Christian narratives of Jewish obsolescence, but also transposing narratives of survival and victimhood from real survivors and real victims (Jews as well as others, including those tried as witches) to imaginary ones (supposedly pagan [female] ‘witches’). Jewish followers of the Buddha replace the Talmudic and later Sages with an Oriental one because they cannot or will not read (or understand) the Jewish Sages’ writings. And quietism, while attractive in so many ways to privileged people of tender sensibilities, has never been a Jewish virtue. Many secular Jews yearn, ironically, for ‘spirituality’ while acting like the people who defined spirituality out of the world: (post-) Christian, (post-) Enlightenment westerners—the educated, secular but ‘Christonormative’ majority whom secular Jews emulate. But why should Voltaire and his children (legitimate and illegitimate) be allowed to disqualify and dismiss something they were radically unprepared to understand? Our ancestors did not agree with early Christians when they dismissed Judaism; they did not yield to the Crusaders or the medieval mobs or the Cossacks or even the Nazis; and we should not yield to secular Enlightenment critiques that are, after all, implicitly dualist in their attack on (some) religions as ‘formalist’, ‘obscurantist’ or ‘merely ritual’. Such attacks are dualist because theistic Enlightenment universalism, just like the Christianity in which it paradoxically has its deepest roots, presupposes a human spirit separate and in some sense separable from the body.
Disaffected Jews’ yearning
for spirituality, it seems to me, derives ultimately not from problems
in Judaism itself but from a (generally unconscious) participation in
a Christian and Christonormative critique of Judaism as non-spiritual,
as merely ‘fleshly’ or carnal. The carnal is, or course, bad by
comparison to ‘the spiritual’ on the conventional ladder on western
values (and those of some oriental religions too). Paul’s subordination
of flesh to ‘spirit’ requires separation, and produces alienation.
Consider this: if there is no real distinction between ‘flesh’ and
spirit’, but rather an indissoluble union, as much of the Jewish tradition
posits (along with certain others), when we look merely for ‘spirituality’,
we are trapped by a badly posed question. The dualism that sees spirit
and flesh as separate is, however, fundamental to Christianity.
It was one of the basic differences
that caused Jesus-following Jews to split with their Temple-faithful
brethren in first-century Judea. For Paul, the spirit could be willing
but the flesh weak: a very unlikely dichotomy in traditional Judaism,
in which thinking about transgression is not at all the same as transgressing.
The yetzer hara (‘evil inclination’) is dangerous, but cannot
do damage unless enacted by the body: because they are inextricably
bound together. When our ruach (breath) leaves, our body dies,
the Psalmist sings (Ps. 146). The body returns to its earth, and our
plans all collapse. As for the nefesh (‘life-force’), we
know that it resides in the blood and it too ‘departs’ upon death.
Of the neshamah, the individual soul, we know very little. Traditional
Judaism looks forward not to a ‘spiritual’ afterlife in some kind
of ethereal Heaven, but to the bodily resurrection of the dead when
meshiach comes: our bodies will be made perfect, revivified with
our ruach, nefesh and neshamah—a lovely tale,
an antidote to dualism, a human future (of sorts).
Traditional Jewish learning has all but collapsed in suburban North America —Aramaic is not easy to read, especially for people with only rudimentary prayerbook Hebrew (or no Hebrew). Other kinds of education are more accessible, have more prestige and acceptance among non-Jews, and promise more immediate, practical rewards. Spirit-flesh dualism is no longer merely a Christian doctrine, but a commonly accepted part of western (theistic) ideas about how body and soul might relate: as separable entities. Many Jews, even many regular synagogue-goers, get their ideas about the relationship of body to soul, flesh to ‘spirit’, from the surrounding culture, not from the main sources of Jewish tradition, TaNaKh and its learned discussion by the great rabbis and sages. If we imagine body and soul as separable (except in death, which leads to we-know-not-what), we are caught in a trap not of our own devising: we are caught looking for something Judaism does not provide or cater to, at least not in isolation: ‘spirituality’. Rather, Judaism provides integrated whole-body exercise of the ‘spiritual’ *capacity*. Kavanah (roughly, devotion, but that’s a weak word for it; focused intention is as good) does not happen merely in the head. It is attained by disciplined, regular, learned activities that require body and mind to act together. Laying tefillin might look just plain weird: but what does yoga look like from outside the studio? In fact, they are very similar. Crystals might focus energy, but so too might the fringes of a tallis, or the carefully made scriptural amulets that are tefillin boxes. Some oriental religions recommend using a mantra for meditation; Judaism recommends the unending recitation of the text of the Torah, starting with the core Jewish mantra, the Sh’ma, as a point of intense focus evening and morning, every day, forever.
Since I became observant ten
years ago, I have cooked and eaten brisket—hardly surprising, given
the limited selection of kosher meat available where I live. And lo
and behold, brisket actually is good. But I no longer see any kind of
reason to think of brisket as Jewish—not unless it’s kosher. If
it’s merely ‘kosher-style’, it’s also just ‘Jewish-style’.
Kung-pao chicken can be kosher and brisket can be treyf. Eating ‘kosher-style’
is, of course, one way to ‘be Jewish,’ or at least to identify with
(some) Jewish people— but it’s a way that gives in to the idea that
‘spirit’ (ruach) and flesh *can* be separate. Kosher food
is simultaneously ‘spiritual’ and ‘fleshly’ food. Kosher meat
has been handled in a way that acknowledges that the life-force of the
animal and its flesh together are important and deserve to be treated
with due respect and (fully ‘spiritual’) ritual. Just as the brisket—or
for that matter, the coq au vin—is most *meaningfully Jewish*
when it is kosher, so too is the Jewish body most truly Jewish when
it is caught up with ruach in kavanah, when we practice
the mind-body-soul ‘unitarianism’ or monism that the Sh’ma implicitly
recommends.
No-one is going to find ‘spirituality’ in Judaism because it does not exist as a separate function of Judaism, neither in practice nor in theory. But people who know where to look might discover the ways in which Judaism is ‘spiritual’, or they might find something Jewish that we might very approximately call ‘spirituality’. They will discover along the way that English words designed to express Christian concepts don’t necessarily represent Jewish ones very well—and words like kavanah or ruach will start to seem more necessary and more obvious.
Images: Sleepwalking, Hosannas, and Weep tapestries by Niradhara Lynne Marie.
Anonymous
Yashir koach, Rebbe Gow!
Jacob
Anonymous
You're canadian.
conservative apikoris
First off, this business of "I'm spirutual, not religious" is as common amongst Gentiles as it is amongst "non-observant" Jews. I think that it's primarily a polite way for the person to say that they don't find the mythos or institutional life of a particular religious community compelling enough to put up with the inconvenience of the community's demands. Mr Gow's essay provides no compelling counterargument, and is little more than beating on the strawman of outdated stereotypes of Reform and Conservative Judaism. I speak from a 10-year attempt to move towards Jewish observance, which I've recently gave up on, because I found little or nothing compellling about it, and I found a lot that eventually repulsed me. Oh, I still observe a lot of Jewish traditions, but I decide which traditions I find worth observing, rather than rely on a rabbi.
Mr. Gow's initial criticism of brisket was my first clue that his essay was little more than intercultural (Brit-Canadian upper-middle class Jewish vs. USA first-generation to go to college Jewish) snobbery. Snobbery that's rediculous because we're all probably part of the same socioeconomic stratum and ethnic origins, anyway. It's aslo sadly out of date, as a similar big divide between the "German" and "Russian" Jews in the States was erased at least 50 years ago. In any event, I never observed it grown up in the 1960s except for tales my parents told. In other words, his family's disdain for USA Jewish culture was based on superficialties that even then were in the process of being erased.
Next, the criticisms of the "mainstream" Jewish movements, especially Reform and Conservative, are based on fantasies that are no longer current. What is it about Conservative Judaism that makes it "middle brow?" Since when are Reform Jews "college educated," whereas Conservative Jews aren't? And, really, even Orthodox shuls have "pastor rabbis," as I know from personal experience, when one such person ministered to my mother-in-law after the passing of my father-in-law.Even the empty seats in the congregations may not mean as much as many people think. At one point, my children went to a Reform day school, and I got to soend some weekeday time at the congregation. The place was hopping with all sorts of Jewish activities. So Reform Jews don't like services? They apparently do their Judiasm in other ways.
But the point of the essay isn't whether one fraction of the Jewish world is gaining at the expense of another, it is that growing numbers of Jews are abandoning all Jewish practice. This, too is not confined to the Jews. The American Religious Identification Survey found that "No Relgion/Secular/etc." is one of the fastest growing religious affiliations in the USA.
http://www.gc.cuny.edu/faculty/research_briefs/aris.pd
And, of course, secularism is dominant in most of the rest of the Western World. This is upsetting to the author, presumably becuase he believes in the value of traditional Jewish observance, yet Jews are running away from such observance as fast as possible.
To explain this, Mr. Gow presents a discussion of philosophical abstractions comparing the supposed "Christian" duality between "flesh" and "spirit," whereas "authentic" Judaism has no such duality. And the real culprit is the participation of the Jews in this alien culture. In other word, Mr. Gow is just another apologist for the ghetto.
This misreading of reality is similar to that of the pompous pulpit rabbis of my youth, who spent an inordinate amount of effort trying to make a case that Judaism was the 180-degree opposite of Christianity.That's simply not true, modern Judaism and Christianity come from the same roots and shere more concepts than many would like to admit. I once had a Protestant minister explain to me the Christian process of repentance, a descrition that could have come straight from the works of the Rambam.And Judaism also grew from the soil of paganism and adopted more than just pagan rituals. Since when were pagans not interested in morality and repentance, and so forth? Besides, historical analysis, the main contribution of the Conservative movement to Judaism, shows that Jewish practices and beliefs have evolved over time and have defnitely adopted concepts from the wider culture. What's the Talmud, after all, other than an attempt by the Sages to graft Greek methodology to Judaism? So dualities between the flesh and spirit are by now as Jewish ans anything else we practice.
As to why western Jews have fled screming from ghetto culture, I think they had more practical reasons than being seduced by "alien" phlosophy. It's far more reasonable to suggest that Jews fled the ghetto to improve their material life and escape from the oppresive social control exerted within the Jewish community.
Further, I'm not so impressed with traditional Jewish practice as a route to "spirituality." For one thing, the traditional communities are insular and suspcious of "outsiders." The exceptions are the Orthodox kiruv types, who essentially operate with the same methods as the non-Jewish cults. For another, it takes a lot of talent, education, and skill to derive any spiritual benefit from Jewish religious practices. They have an overly intellectualized basis, and if you don't have the talent and the time to develop it, you're essentially disenfranchised. But as a member of the community you're still expected to do all of the inconvienient practices, even if they have no meaning for you and give you no benefit.
There's even more to it than that. The religious texts themselves, which are the basis of this overly intellectualized excuse for "spirituality," are poorly written and full of contradictions. Unless one is brainwashed by a teacher to ignore certain parts of the Torah and emphasize others, learning Torah simply means that you can see its flaws more clearly.Thus, Torah study itself provides no spiritual benefit, except that of the cultish kind.
As to the assertion that the props of Jewish practice, such as kosher meat, have some sort of intrinisc holiness is foolish. The Agriprocessors scandal has shown that. A kosher brisket to me implies the possibility of exploitation of workers, animal cruelty and environmental destruction, and, what's worse, acceptance of exploitation of workers, animal cruelty and environmental desctruction by rabbis and Sages who should know better.
But for all that, I don't believe in the duality between the material and the spritual. I happen to believe from the evidence that everything is material, and the "spiritual" is nothing more than a shorthand for practices and concepts that make us feel better. Such "spiritual" practices might have benefit, but that's because they modify the physical basis of our neurophysiology.
http://cj-heretic.blogspot.com/2005/09/apikoris-guide-to-spirituality.ht...
You can do that just as well chasing after the Buddha as you can by laying tefillin or eating kosher brisket. Paul of Tarsus figured that out 2000 years ago. He didn't become sucessful by preaching abstract philosophy, his sucess was from teaching that everyone could derive the spiritual benefits of Judaism withhout all of the inconvenient Jewish practices.And it was a sucess, after all, one to which the Jewish world should pay more attention. And the lesson isn't that Jews should run and adopt the Christian theology about Jesus, but rather that much less committment and effort is required to observe the Torah that traditional Judaism admits. After all, as the torah itself says, "this is not so difficult that you can't do it, it is not in heaven."