Wed, Jan 07, 2009

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Jewcy Book Club

Welcome Authors
Rachel Kramer Bussel
&
Stephanie Klein
who are posting all week.
Coming up:
  • 01/12:
    Bob Morris
  • 01/12:
    Lily Koppel
  • 01/19:
    Peter Manseau
  • 02/09:
    Tania Grossinger

TAG:

Hasidism

Natalie Portman Plays Orthodox

Izzy Grinspan
 

This picture of Natalie Portman on set pretty much lends itself perfectly to a game of Spot the Inaccuracies. I'll go first: Shouldn't she be wearing a wig? From Jezebel.


 
FAITHHACKER

Hasids Busted For Fraud, Blame Game Begins

Are Informants Worse Than Fraudulent Rabbis?
Tamar Fox

If you’re not deeply invested with the goings on in smallish Hasidic sects, you may not have heard that the Grand Rabbi of the Boro Park clan of the Spinka Hasidic dynasty, 59-year-old Naftali Zvi Weisz, was arrested in December and charged with defrauding the government out of almost $35 million.
The Blame Game: Like Monopoly, but with less losingThe Blame Game: Like Monopoly, but with less losing


The Hasidic community freaked out in response to this arrest, but not because they’d been had by a rabbi who turned out to be an asshat. Instead, everyone was up in arms trying to figure out who had ratted the Rebbe out. The FBI leaked documents about the investigation on the internet, and an informant called only ‘RK’ was revealed to be the source of much of the damning information (the rest came from the work of Bureua’s Yiddish translation team—no lie). Eventually, Robert Kasirer, a Modern Orthodox businessman in LA was identified as the informant. According to the Forward, Kasirer provided state’s evidence against the Hasidic rebbe in exchange for a lighter sentence on previous fraud charges stemming from his health care business.

But who cares who the informant is, really? Thank God we got this fraud off the street, right? Not so much. Because being an informant, a moser, is among the biggest no-nos in the Hasidic community.



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Intermarriage is Inevitable

Why enforcing endogamy won’t work

[Last week, Ha’aretz Chief U.S. Correspondent Shmuel Rosner featured Jewcy editor in chief Tahl Raz as a guest on his site. Raz responded to Rosner's questions about the future of Judaism, Jewish peoplehood in America, and the frequency of debate about Israel in the U.S. He also answered questions from readers, like the ones below.]

Dear Tahl,

How can you call the objection to intermarriage an "anachronistic tribal obsession"? Don't you realize that if Jews keep marrying out, the Jewish peoplea small minority in America and the worldwill eventually disappear? Or maybe you just don't care?

Thank you for you thoughts,
Joel Goldstone, NY

 

Dear Tahl,

Judaism is already more divided than ever before. Do you think the dispute over the "anachronistic tribal obsession with endogamy" could eventually flower into a full-blown doctrinal schism like the one between Catholic and Orthodox Christianity, creating two Jewish religions with distinct ideas about who is a Jew? Or indeed, has it already happened? And since just about every respectable religion has had such schisms, does it matter?

Best wishes,
Gideon, Jerusalem

You know, Joel, I do care. It's an indelible part of who I am and how I was raised. In the dawn of my pubescence, my beloved Israeli mother let me know that if I ever brought home a "shiksa" she'd use a knife to relieve me of my testicles. True story. And I'm not married yet, so there's a part of me that still worries she was being serious.

I do feel the necessity, the urgency, you also so clearly feel about the continuity of our customs and beliefs. And I personally don't find opposition to intermarriage morally distasteful, just hopelessly ineffectual.

Maybe Judaism needs another good schism: The Baal Shem Tov, founder of HasidismMaybe Judaism needs another good schism: The Baal Shem Tov, founder of HasidismIn the marketplace of identities, as Eric Liu put it in Slate, I imagine you're a protectionist, Joel. You want to impose restrictive regulations, raise tariffs, and erect as many artificial barriers as needed to keep your little cottage industry of ethnic purity safe and unchanged. But it won't work. It's a bad strategy. In a free and open society, where we're pitted against the American assimilationist machine, intermarriage is inevitable.

So what strategy will work? I don't know. What's very clear is that change is hard. But it's reassuring that it can just as easily be an act of creation as destruction. Which brings me to Gideon's question.

Doctrinal schisms around intermarriage already divide the Jewish world. But such schisms have historically been rather beneficial. Hasidism exploded onto the 18th century Jewish religious scene, and while it caused innumerable headaches for the mainstream (a couple of false messiahs, for instance), it drew in a significantly large and disenfranchised group of Jews who might have otherwise chosen, say, yoga. Reform and Conservative Judaism, as well as Zionism, were an outgrown of schisms created around how the community should respond to the Enlightenment, emancipation, and increasing anti-Semitism. Discontinuity, as it turns out, can be quite healthy.

Tahl Raz


more »

FAITHHACKER

Lubavitcher Death Match

Laurel Snyder
The Rebbe: Magic or not?The Rebbe: Magic or not?Ooh! Look at this!

The guys at Chabad are fighting HARD over a Crown Heights Shul, formerly the synagogue of Menachem Mendel Schneerson, grand rebbe (and maybe the Messiah).

On one side of the dispute are the tight-lipped global leaders of Chabad, who own the buildings above the synagogue and oversee the flow of Chabad rabbis to almost every corner of the earth. On the other side is a group of leaders elected from the local Chabad community of Brooklyn’s Crown Heights, who say the movement’s global leaders are trying to publicly blur and deny what they describe as its doctrine about the late rebbe’s status as the messiah.

Which makes statistical sense… since it’s true that historically, claims to the throne have split the Jewish community, and made the followers of said claimants look like crackpots. Certainly the marketing directors at Chabad International don’t want that.

But:

A number of affidavits in the lawsuit assert that almost all Chabad leaders do privately believe that the rebbe was the messiah but have been afraid to talk about it publicly, for fear of scaring off the unaffiliated Jews who attend Chabad services around the world.

Hmmm…

Interesting, in light of my recent rants on pluralism. Usually I assume (incorrectly) that the Orthodox have it easier in the schism department. After all, they have such rigid guidelines to follow.

It’s nice to know we’re all just human.

Except Schneerson, of course.