From Continuity to Renewal
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From Continuity to Renewal
by Donna Berman
From New Menorah, Fall 1995
Reprinted With Permission.
``Jewish professionals'' have been in a collective panic since the 1990
National Jewish Population Survey indicated that modernity is taking a
toll on Jewish numbers, that there is a ``strengthening of assimilatory
trends...'' Responding to the results of this survey as if they
represented something new and shocking, Jewish leaders across the
country have catapulted themselves into full gear, creating committees
and programs focused on what have become the buzz words of the 1990's,
``Jewish continuity.'' My fear is that this work being done in the
guise of concern with Jewish continuity may itself, by drawing our
attention away from the real issues, contribute to the weakening of
our people.
If the number of people who are identifying themselves as Jews is
declining, it is not more meetings, committees, surveys which are
needed. While ``Jewish professional'' are keeping themselves occupied
with these activities bureaucratizing Jewish life even further, Jews
will continue to be voting with their feet as they search elsewhere
for meaningful encounter. Potentially then, when Jewish leaders
emerge from their chambers there could be no one left to enjoy the new
``programming'' they plan to set in motion.
The survey results have been used to reinforce the myth that the
problem is ``out there,'' that it's the fault of the community members
themselves because they are intermarrying, unaffiliated, too
influenced by secular values, uninterested in Jewish education, not
sufficiently committed. In reality, it is Jewish leaders who need to
take a long, hard look at themselves. Why aren't Jews feeling engaged
and embraced by their tradition, by their spiritual leaders? (Part of
the problem may be that rabbis, cantors, educators are too readily
considering themselves to be part of a ``professional staff,'' rather
than providers of spiritual leadership.)
In response to the survey, mainstream Jewish leaders have tended to
fall back into what has become our brand of default mode: a focus on
our history of victimization. We can't rely on reference to the
Holocaust or the precariousness of Israel's existence or the threat of
anti-Semitism here and abroad to fill the spiritual vacuum in which
many of our people are existing.
If we are truly serious about our concern for our Jewish future we
need to roll up our sleeves and start doing some difficult and
demanding work. We can begin by doing four things. First and
foremost, we must honestly confront the sexism inherent in our
tradition. We must recognize not only that sexism is morally
abhorrent, but that it is a major factor in the tenuousness of Jewish
survival. How can we expect to thrive after so many centuries of
Jewish misogyny? Women have been excluded from Jewish education
opportunities, from Jewish leadership roles, from the inner sanctum of
Jewish organization life and yet we expect women not only to make
Judaism an important part of their own lives, but to make Judaism an
important part of our children's lives as well.
This is not to say that many women haven't tried --- and tried valiantly
--- to do this. But we haven't given women either the proper tools or,
some might argue, sufficient reason to want to expend the energy to do
this. It is only recently that prayer books have been introduced that
recognize that God is not male and that not all people, that not all
Jews are men.
Most of the women who are now raising children grew up as invisible
members of their synagogues. Even if they were lucky enough to grow
up in a congregation which offered them the same opportunities as
their male counterparts, they still had to feel the alienation of
being seen as ``other'' in the prayer book, in the torah, in Rabbinic
literature. What we need are not excuses about why Judaism was so
sexist given the world-view of ancient cultures, or stories about how,
compared to other peoples, we were less sexist. What we need is an
honest acknowledgment of how much Judaism's androcentrism has hurt
women and therefore how much it has hurt the Jewish people.
Psychoanalytic theory has taught us that we must come to terms with
the past before we can move on to the future. It is not enough to
create an inclusive Judaism as of now. We need to do teshuvah
for past injustices that have been perpetuated in the name of
tradition. We need to do teshuvah for the belittling,
demeaning, damaging statements about women found throughout Jewish
literature. We need to do teshuvah for all the brilliant,
talented, wise women who died forbidden to offer their gifts to their
people. We need to set up public days of fasting and mourning for the
destruction of something far more important than a physical structure:
the destruction of the esteem, the psychological and often physical
well-being of so many Jewish women. This might be done in the context
of an ancient tradition which has sadly but not surprisingly been
forgotten --- an annual four day retreat in memory of Jepthah's
daughter, a woman killed by her father because of a vow he had made to
God. The story is found in the book of Judges, chapter 11. ( I am
indebted to Helen Albertson, Janice Zeltzer, and Bayla Lovens who so
beautifully exegeted this story at their Bat Mitzvah this past June.
They have inspired these reflections.)
These four days could be dedicated to mourning the death of Jepthah's
daughter and all that she symbolizes as an abused woman. It could
also be a time set aside for bonding among women, for creating new
rituals and experimenting with new worship, while a mourning ritual
(which might involve going to the mikvah) could simultaneously be
observed by Jewish men.
It must not be forgotten that implicit in the concept of
teshuvah is not only atonement but change. Once atonement is made
(which, by the way, would be cathartic both for men and women) then we
need to make fundamental changes. Here are a few examples of the
kinds of things that would need to be done:
- The use of inclusive language should be made a basic
tenet of Judaism. We cannot tolerate sexist language either. It is
immoral.
- A commitment must be made to develop rituals which celebrate the
stages of a woman's life (menarche, menopause, miscarriage, etc.) And
which are fully accepted into the canon of Jewish life cycle events.
- The Torah must be looked at critically, not adhered to blindly, and
assessed in terms of its role in perpetuating the eclipse of Jewish
women and other marginalized people. How can it be considered a tree
of life if it continues to promote oppression?
The second thing we must do as part of our quest to ensure a Jewish
future is to confront the paradox, indeed hypocrisy, inherent in the
expression of deep concern over decreasing Jewish numbers even as much
of the Jewish community continues to reject members of our own people.
Logic tells us that we need to embrace gays and lesbians, the
intermarried, Jews by choice and create a safe and completely
accepting place for all people in our synagogues. We who have lived
through the Holocaust, who know how it feels to be oppressed must not
opress others. This, after all, is at the heart of Jewish belief.
Why should these people continue making an effort to be a part of a
community when they are made to feel uncomfortable and unwanted?
The third step we must take is to address how our synagogues
in general and our worship services in particular can better serve our
people. Our community doesn't need to be force-fed, it needs to be
nourished. There are still far too many synagogues which stubbornly
adhere to a linear form of worship: straight rows of pews, instead of
circles of sharing; words taken straight from prayer books which are
usually sexist and irrelevant to the lives of most people; sermons
that take the straight and narrow route, dwelling on the
p'shat, the simplest meaning of a text, rather than grappling
struggling with, opening up a text so that it can have meaning to a
contemporary Jew, rather than straying form the text entirely when
there are burring issues in the community, in the world, in the souls
of individual members which need to be addressed.
For too long the synagogue has ignored the real situations people
face: alcoholism drug addiction, child and spousal abuse, illness,
infertility, etc. We need to have regular services of healing so that
those whose lives have been scarred by abuse can feel cleansed and
loved and supported. We need to have regular services of healing so
that those who feel alone in illness can feel that they are part of a
caring community and that the energy found in their house of worship
can be harnessed to aid them in their recovery process. We need to
have synagogue-based bereavement groups, support groups for gays and
lesbians and their families, for the intermarried, for single parents,
etc.
Mordecai Kaplan envisioned the synagogue as a community center and in
his day that meant installing a pool and basketball hoops. What I am
suggesting is merely a variation on Kaplan's theme. In the 1990's
being a community center means that the synagogue must be a place
where people can be real, where they can share their pain and their
anguish as well as their joy and achievement.
The fourth thing we need to do is to assess the state of
Jewish theology. Is it relevant to the lives of modern Jews? We
cannot afford to merely rehash what theologians have said in the past.
WE need to continue Arthur Waskow's work of developing a Jewish
environmental ethic, a Jewish sexual ethic, a Jewish work ethic, etc.
As he teaches us, our theology cannot afford to be merely intellectual
exercise or historical analysis, but living, breathing proof that
Judaism can offer guidelines for real life problems and concerns. We
will need to reconfigure Jewish theology as we acknowledge its,
heretofore, deep, patriarchal roots. Such a theological project is a
vast undertaking, but it is also exciting and undoubtedly life-giving
to us as a people, as we explore new territory together.
Those who see the National Jewish population survey as a message of
potential doom for the Jewish people fail to recognize the historical
continuity of the very issue of Jewish continuity. Throughout our
history, Jewish survival has been threatened, often enough by external
forces of annihilation, but at other times by our own reluctance to
change and grow. In the past, the Jewish community and its leaders
have consistently found ways to rise to the challenges presented and
to respond meaningfully to the demands of the new era they were
facing. It may turn out in the end that this survey, if truly taken
seriously as an opportunity for communal self-reflection and, then,
rectifying action, may actually be a harbinger not of our demise, but
of a blossoming of our community which will enable us to enter the
twenty-first century stronger and wiser than ever before.
Rabbi Donna Berman is rabbi emerita at Port Washington
Jewish Center in Port Washington, NY, and is a doctoral student in
theology at Drew University.
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