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The Flaw of Orthodox Kiruv (Outreach) on One Foot |
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by David Kelsey, June 26, 2009 |
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The flaw of Big Kiruv is ultimately the same one that has ravaged traditional Judaism for centuries. It is why we left in the first place. It is why today, most Jews are not Orthodox, and will never be Orthodox, despite Liberal Jewry's rapid attrition, and the high birthrate of the frum. A difference between the normative Orthodox "ex-Os" and the "baal teshuvahs" (newly ultra-Orthodox) is that the latter are not brought up with this nonsense and do not have the same familial restraints, so their fallout is naturally much higher as the truth fights its way to the surface despite every possible appeal and exhortation. And even with the BTs (baal teshuvahs) that stay, many of their children and grandchildren return to the secularism and Liberal Judaism of their ancestors for this very reason. Once you have seen the light, it's out there. There's no submerging it forever.
The fatal flaw of Big Kiruv on one foot is:
Kiruv recruits are told that they are learning how to serve God. But in the end, they are taught how to serve rabbis.
All else is commentary about this inherent structural flaw of traditional and fundamentalist Judaism.
Mikewind Dale - Michael Makovi
A few things I don't understand:
1) What does a page about the Shulhan Arukh have to do with "how to serve rabbis"? Check the first sentence of the Shulhan Arukh: "Be strong like the leopard, fast like the deer, and brave like the lion to do the will of your Father in Heaven". Unless G-d is a rabbi...
2) You say "this inherent structural flaw of traditional and fundamentalist Judaism", but what do "traditional" and "fundamentalist" Judaism have to do with each other? It is well-known in academic circles that Haredi Judaism has precious little of anything "traditional" about it.
Professor Marc Shapiro notes ("The Uses of Tradition", review essay, Tradition 28:2):
Note that the [Ultra-]Orthodox are contrasted with the Neo-Orthodox. In truth, the German Neo-Orthodox and the Sephardi traditionalists are far more authentic and legitimate than the Ultra-Orthodox. In reality, the Haredim are as revolutionary and non-traditional as Reform and Conservative.
Mikewind Dale - Michael Makovi
Professor Menachem Friedman has written on this topic. See the essays on his page, at http://www.biu.ac.il/SOC/so/mfriedman.html
In particular, see "The Lost Kiddush Cup" and "Haredim Confront the Modern City" and "Life Tradition and Book Tradition in the Development of Ultra-Orthodox Judaism". If anyone thought Haredim represented authentic Torah Judaism, these essays do well to disabuse one of this erroneous notion.
I am actually in the process of writing an essay of my own on this topic; stay tuned at www.jewishideas.org, where it will be - if at all ever - published.
Jeff Eyges
People keep saying this, but I don't know how accurate it is. I haven't seen figures (are there any?). I've been told, in fact, that Reform is actually the most rapidly growing denomination, as it recognizes patrilineal descent. Now, you can say that takes them beyond the boundaries of normative Judaism, and you may be right, but you and I have talked about this - I feel that the long-predicted schism between Orthodoxy and everything else has already taken place. We have two disctinct religions, now; we just don't want to acknowledge it.
David Kelsey
1) What does a page about the Shulhan Arukh have to do with "how to serve rabbis"? Check the first sentence of the Shulhan Arukh:
I'm worried about the rest of it, which codifies Jewish Law according to rabbinical interpretation.
2) You say "this inherent structural flaw of traditional and fundamentalist Judaism", but what do "traditional" and "fundamentalist" Judaism have to do with each other?
Both are committed to increasingly detailed rabbinical interpretation of Jewish Law. Sure, the ultra-Orthodox are muchmore stringent and go further beyond ritual in terms of legislation, but Kiruv remains heavily ultra-Orthodox, and even many Modern Orthodox groups work with and feed them, such as NCSY.
Jeff, I should have written secular and Liberal Jews.
Mikewind Dale - Michael Makovi
"Both are committed to increasingly detailed rabbinical interpretation of Jewish Law." -- Then the traditionalists are not really traditionalist. You cannot be fundamentalist AND traditionalist; it's a decision between mutually exclusive alternatives. If the traditionalists become stringent to the point of fundamentalism, then they cease to be traditionalist.
Professor Friedman, in fact, puts the matter bluntly: "In my opinion the Eastern European, Ashkenazi character of haredi Jewry remains questionable to this day."
Mikewind Dale - Michael Makovi
Kelsey: "I'm worried about the rest of it, which codifies Jewish Law according to rabbinical interpretation."
By that logic, American law is about how to serve congressmen and Supreme Court justices.
Rabbis are the legislators and judges of the duly constituted legal system. Is there anything noteworthy, innovative, or alarming about this, except when they abuse their power?
By the way, the Talmud says that if someone appoints an unworthy judge - such as Rabbi Sherman - it is as if he plants an idolatrous totem (asherah) on the Temple Mount.
David Kelsey
mikewinddale,
You cannot be fundamentalist AND traditionalist; it's a decision between mutually exclusive alternatives.
Wrong. You can be in between, and draw from both the traditional and fundamentalist worlds. Look at the Left-wing ulta-Orthodox (LWUO) and elements of the right-wing Modern Orthodox (RWMO). They even use fundamentalist terminology for the adherants: ben Tora, bas Torah. The exact phrasing of the hardline quiescent fundamentalists, even if they interpret it somewhat differently, to be sure. Never the less, just like the ultra-Orthodox, the focus is often on ever-increasing stringency on the Chukim (irrational laws).
By that logic, American law is about how to serve congressmen and Supreme Court justices.
Hardly. There are checks and balances. As there were once in Jewish life. There were the priests, there was the king, there were the rabbis, and there were prophets. Four seperate banches, and they didn't often see eye to eye. They weren't supposed to either. Now in the right-wing ultra-Orthodox world (RWUO), rebbes and Roshei Yeshivas have near absolute power. The reputation of the local synogogue Orthodox rabbi's authority is assiduously being undermined.
Mikewind Dale - Michael Makovi
Who says the Right-wing Modern Orthodox are traditionalist? Why should we arbitrarily say that being "Modern Orthodox" makes one traditionalist?
There are three groups that I'd say are truly traditional:
1) Left-wing American Modern Orthodoxy,
2) Authentic non-Ashkenazified Sephardism
3) German/British Neo-Orthodoxy, of the sort that has not yet assimilated into Lakewood/Gatehead.
Note that the first graduate of JTS became Britain's Orthodox Chief Rabbi. Rabbi Bernard Drachman, one of the foremost Hirschian Orthodox rabbis, became a teacher at JTS during during its early years. (Early on, JTS was more left-wing Modern Orthodox than it was Conservative. Sabato Morais and Henry Pereira Mendes, two Sephardic Orthodox rabbis, and Congregation Shearith Israel, a Sephardic Orthodox shul, were all three instrumental in JTS's founding. Mendes was not only acting president of JTS, but he helped found the OU at the same time. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shearith_Israel#Birthing_of_major_Jewish_institutions.)
Note the following paragraph, from "The Uses of Tradition" (book review) by Professor Marc Shapiro:
[N]ot having to face the threat of Reform, North African halakha was able to develop in different ways from what is found in Europe. This is particularly true with regard to Morocco. Here one finds many seemingly radical decisions by eminent figures (in particular R. Joseph Messas), such as are generally not found in Europe, at least not in the writings of mainstream halakhists. For example, not only did Moroccan rabbis generally have a lenient atttude towards conversion, but rulings were given that the hazzan need not repeat the shemoneh esreh, married women need not cover their hair, the law of eruvei hatzerot is no longer applicable, non-Jewish milk is permissible, wine handled by a Muslim can be consumed, Jews can be buried in the same cemetery as Gentiles (with a separation of four cubits), and flowers may be placed on the coffin. Morocco is also the only modern Diaspora country in which the Bet Din was still a moving force behind halakhic development. Takkanot were issued on a wide range of issues, and unlike what occurred when the Chief Rabbinate of Israel issued takkanot, there was no right wing opposition. In general, the Ashkenazic trends of separatism and extremism found no echo in North Africa, or among Sephardim in general, and incidentally, this is one of the reasons why the Sephardic Chief Rabbis in Israel have not had to confront a significant right wing challenge to their legitimacy from within their own communities.
Cf. http://www.jewishideas.org/articles/moroccan-rabbinic-conferences:
It is a truism that with the Emancipation and the rise of Reform and, later, Conservative Judaism, options for halakhic flexibility became much more limited. In the midst of a battle against the non-Orthodox movements, traditional Judaism retreated into a conservative mold both as a means of distinguishing itself from the non-Orthodox and out of a fear that in an era of halakhic crisis, any liberality in halakhic decision-making could encourage non-Orthodox trends. This latter sentiment was always on the minds of halakhists, even those who did not adopt lock, stock, and barrel R. Moses Sofer's famous bon mot, "Anything new is forbidden by the Torah." The above description is accurate, however, only with regard to the Ashkenazic world. The Sephardic world never had to contend with non-Orthodox religious movements, and thus it was able to develop in a much more natural-one might say organic-fashion. In particular, this was the case in Morocco, a community that had a very old halakhic tradition and whose scholars produced numerous works of responsa.
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So I'd point to the Moroccans as an example of true authentic traditional Orthodoxy. Similarly, I'd point to the German and British Neo-Orthodox, as well as to the various other kinds of Sephardim - Rabbi Benzion Uziel, for example, of the Ladino Turkish/Balkan Sephardic tradition, reads almost just like Rav Hirsch, in terms of his philosophy of how Orthodoxy confronts modernity.
rabeee
David Kelsey wrote: "As there were once in Jewish life. There were the priests, there was the king, there were the rabbis, and there were prophets. Four seperate banches, and they didn't often see eye to eye."
That system does not exist since at least of the time of Hasmoneans (c. 140 BCE) when the priests took over the office of the King. But I am sure you can find supporters for your idea, who would advocate going back to the "original" religion of Israel where people were worshiping God and not the rabbis.
Just do not forget - in that pre-rabbinic system the Shabbat violators and male homosexulas were supposed to be stoned (and not in a good way).
Herbert Kaine
In 100 years, Orthodoxy will be alive and well. No one will know who David Kelsey was
Jeff Eyges
It won't take that long. Within two generations, the Hareidi world will have self-destructed -
and, unfortunately, it will have taken Modern Orthodoxy with it.
Naamah
I don't think it's fair or accurate to say that there are two separate religions - i.e. Orthodoxy and all other brands of Judaism. While it is true that the majority of Reform and Conservative Jews are not halakhically committed themselves, at least the Conservative movement has affirmed the binding nature of halakhah (whether or not you agree with some of their halakhic decisions). There are quite a few non-Orthodox Jews who practice in a way that is comparable to that practiced by Modern Orthodox Jews.
Naamah
Sorry, that comment was in reference to Jeffy Eyges' response to "Liberal Jewry's rapid attrition."
Mikewind Dale - Michael Makovi
Historically, we can certainly distinguish between Reform and Conservative on the basis which you make, viz. formal acceptance of halakhah per se.
Indeed, whereas Reform began with such incidents as Geiger decrying milah as barbarism, Montefiore calling for Jews to accept Jesus and the Gospels, and Friedlander calling for Jews to convert, Conservative began rather differently.
The relationship between the German Neo-Orthodox authorities (especiallys Rabbis Hirsch and Hildesheimer) and the Breslau seminary of Frankel (the precursor of JTS) is complex, to say the least. To put it mildly, the Neo-Orthodox saw the Positive-Historical school as nothing but heretical. I'd have more to say, if I were granted about ten pages to make my point.
But when we look at JTS in America, we find something interesting: two of the most prominent founding members were Rabbis Sabato Morais and Henry Pereira Mendes of Congregation Shearith Israel, the traditional Sephardi shul in NYC. The same Rabbi Mendes, however, not only helped found JTS, but also the OU as well! See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shearith_Israel#Birthing_of_major_Jewish_institutions
Additionally, Rabbi Dr. J. H. Hertz, the late Orthodox Chief Rabbi of Britain, was JTS's first graduate. Rabbi Dr. Bernard Drachman, a prominent Hirschian Orthodox rabbi, taught at JTS during its earlier years. (Rabbi Drachman was sent to Germany by his American Reform congregation in order to become a rabbi, but he came back as Orthodox.)
And for several decades, JTS was practically Orthodox. Between the RA and the Talmudic staff at JTS, the latter were decidedly traditionalist even as the former were far more liberal and agitated for revolutions in halakhah. As long as JTS had the veto in Conservative halakhah (in the CJL - Committee on Jewish Law), Conservative was practically Orthodox. But once halakhah was transferred (in 1948) to a new committee(Committee on Jewish Law and Standards - CJLS), where JTS no longer had exclusive power, Conservative became what it is today. Now that the RA and the more liberal factions of Conservative had an equal say in halakhah (and even a lone minority voice was granted equal legitimacy with the majority opinion), Conservative ceased to be Orthodox.
(I am relying on "Factors of Traditionalism In Conservative Jewish Law", a doctoral planning by Evan Hoffman.)
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Today, Conservative halakhah, however, would be so far from any Orthodox conception of halakhah, that it's difficult to compare the two. One cannot overstate how egregious, from an Orthodox perspective, the permission to drive a car on Shabbat is. Additionally, one sees very little emphasis on lay-observance in Conservative. Of course, there are many individual observant Jews in Conservative! (I was participating in an Orthodox summer travel camp in Israel, and the rabbi said that a few years prior, they had met a Conservative summer travel camp in Israel, in which all the campers had tzitzit and the like, and appeared more frum than the Orthodox campers.)
So I'd be very reticent to grant very much legitimacy at all to Conservative as a movement. I'd treat Conservative (and Reform) the way that Rabbi Yehiel Weinberg - the greatest German Orthodox rabbi of the pre-Holocaust generation - did: "To Reform as an institution, nothing; to Reform as individuals, everything."
It might bear mentioning that personally, I'd associate with YCT (Yeshivat Chovevei Torah), R' Marc Angel and R' Avi Weiss, etc., all of whom desire to promote an Orthodoxy that is similar to what Conservative was originally meant to be. (R' Angel is the rav of Shearith Israel, which is an Orthodox shul, but which originally helped found JTS and the OU, as I mentioned.)
(I am also generally enamoured with German Neo-Orthodoxy and Turkish/Balkan Sephardism, with a love which cannot be overstated.)