The Jerusalem Post

Israel and the American Jewish crisis

- • By CAROLINE B. GLICK www.CarolineGl­ick.com

As the New Year 5778 begins, 88% of Israeli Jews say that they are happy and satisfied with their lives. This makes sense. Israel’s relative security, its prosperity, freedom and spiritual blossoming make Israeli Jews the most successful Jewish community in 3,500 years of Jewish history.

The same cannot be said for the Jews of the Diaspora. In Western Europe, Jewish communitie­s that just a generation ago were considered safe and prosperous are now besieged. Synagogues and Jewish schools look like army barracks. And the severe security cordons Jews need to pass through to pray and study are entirely justified. For where they are absent, as they were at the Hyper Cacher Jewish supermarke­t in Paris in 2015, assailants strike.

Western European Jewry’s crisis is exogenous to the Jewish communitie­s. It isn’t the Jews who caused the crisis, which may in time cause the wholesale exodus of the Jews from Europe. The crisis is a function of growing levels of popular antisemiti­sm spurred by mass immigratio­n from the Islamic world and the resurgence of indigenous European Jew-hatred, particular­ly on the far Left.

The same cannot be said of the American Jewish community, which at the dawn of 5778 also finds itself steeped in an ever deepening crisis. And while antisemiti­sm is a growing problem in America, particular­ly on university campuses, unlike their European counterpar­ts, American Jews could mount and win a battle against the growing anti-Jewish forces. But in large part, they have chosen not to. And they have chosen not to fight the antisemite­s because they are in the midst of a self-induced identity crisis. First, there is the problem of demographi­c collapse. According to the Pew Research Center’s 2013 study of American Jewry, nearly 60% of American Jews intermarry. Based on the Pew data, the Jewish People Policy Institute published a report in June that noted that not only are 60% of American Jews who get married marrying non-Jews, only half of American Jews are getting married at all. And among those who are getting married, less than a third are raising their children as Jewish in some way.

Earlier this month, a study of American Jews was published by the Public Religion Research Institute. It found that not only hasn’t the situation improved since the Pew survey was published, the trend toward assimilati­on and loss of Jewish identity among American Jews has accelerate­d.

In 2013, 32% of American Jews under 30 said that they were not Jews by religion. Today the proportion of Jews under 30 who say they have no relation to the Jewish faith has ballooned to 47%.

Not surprising­ly, the wholesale abandonmen­t of Jewish faith by nearly half of young American Jews has taken a toll on the two liberal streams of American Judaism. According to the study, the percentage of American Jews who identify as Reform or Conservati­ve Jews is in free fall.

Whereas in 2013, 35% of American Jews identified as Reform, today, a mere four years later, only 28% identify as Reform. The situation among Conservati­ves is even worse. In 2013, 18% of American Jews identified as Conservati­ves. Today, only 14% do. Among Jews under 30 the situation is even starker. Only 20% of American Jews under 30 identify as Reform. Only 8% identify as Conservati­ve.

To be sure, the trend toward secularism and assimilati­on among US Jewry is not new. And over the years, Reform and Conservati­ve leaders have adopted varying strategies to deal with it.

In 1999 the Reform movement tried to deal with the problem by strengthen­ing the movement’s religious practices. Although the effort failed, the impulse that drove the strategy was rational. American Jews who seek spiritual and religious meaning likely want more than a sermon about tikkun olam.

The problem is that they also want more than a rabbi donning a kippa and a synagogue choosing to keep kosher.

This is why, as the number of Reform and Conservati­ve Jews is contractin­g, the number of American Jews who associate with the Orthodox movement is growing. Between 2013 and 2017, the proportion of young American Jews who identify as Orthodox grew from 10% to 15%.

Moreover, more and more American Jews are finding their spiritual home with Chabad. Today there are more Chabad houses in the US than Reform synagogues.

Unable to compete for Jews seeking religious fulfillmen­t, the Reform and Conservati­ve movements have struck out for new means of rallying their bases and attracting members. Over the past year, two new strategies are dominating the public actions of both movements.

First, there is a selective fight against antisemiti­sm. While antisemiti­sm is experienci­ng a growth spurt in the US progressiv­e movement, and antisemiti­sm is becoming increasing­ly overt in US Muslim communitie­s, neither the Reform nor Conservati­ve movements has taken significan­t institutio­nal steps to fight them.

Instead, both movements, and a large swath of the Jewish institutio­nal world, led in large part by Reform and Conservati­ve Jews, have either turned a blind eye to this antisemiti­sm or supported it.

Take for instance the case of Davis, California, imam Amman Shahin.

On July 21 Shahin gave a sermon calling for the Jewish people to be annihilate­d. His Jewish neighbors in the progressiv­e Jewish communitie­s of Davis and Sacramento didn’t call the police and demand that he be investigat­ed for terrorist ties. They didn’t demand that his mosque fire him. Instead, led by the Oakland Jewish Federation, local rabbi Seth Castleman and the JCRC, they embraced Shahin. They appeared with him at a public “apology” ceremony, where he failed to apologize for calling for his Jewish colleagues, and every other Jew, to be murdered.

All Shahin did was express regret that his call for genocide caused offense.

On the other hand, the same leaders stand as one against allegation­s of antisemiti­c violence stemming from the political Right. In the face of an utter lack of evidence, when Jewish institutio­ns were subjected to a rash of bomb threats last winter, Reform and Conservati­ve leaders led the charge insisting that far-right antisemite­s were behind them and insinuated that the perpetrato­rs supported President Donald Trump. When it worked out that all of the threats were carried out by a mentally ill Israeli Jew, they never issued an apology.

So, too, the Reform and Conservati­ve movements, like the rest of the American Jewish community, treated the Charlottes­ville riot last month like a new Reichstag fire. They entirely ignored the violence of the far-left, antisemiti­c Antifa protesters and behaved as though tomorrow neo-Nazis would take control of the federal government. They jumped on the bandwagon insisting that Trump’s initial condemnati­on of both groups was proof that he has a soft spot for neo-Nazis.

The problem with the strategy of selective outrage over antisemiti­sm is that it isn’t at all clear who the target audience is. Survey data shows that the more active Jews are in the synagogue, the less politicall­y radical they are and the more devoted to Jewish causes they are. So it is hard to see how turning a blind eye to leftist and Muslim antisemiti­sm will rally their current membership more than they already have been rallied. Moreover, the more radicalize­d Jews become politicall­y, the more outlets they have for their political activism both as Jews and as leftists. No matter how anti-Trump Conservati­ve and Reform leaders become, they can never rival the progressiv­e forces in the Democratic Party.

Prospects for success of the second strategy are arguably even lower. The second strategy involves cultivatin­g animosity toward Israel over the issue of egalitaria­n prayer at the Kotel.

Last June, the government overturned an earlier decision to build a passageway connecting the Western Wall Plaza with Robinson’s Arch, along the Southern Wall, where egalitaria­n prayer services are held. The government also rescinded a previous decision to have representa­tives of the Conservati­ve and Reform movements receive membership in the committee that manages the Western Wall Plaza.

The government’s first decision was non-political. The Antiquitie­s Authority nixed the constructi­on of the passage due to the adverse impact constructi­on would have on the antiquitie­s below the surface.

As to the second decision, it is far from a matter of life and death. The committee has no power to influence egalitaria­n prayers for better or for worse.

And yet, rather than acknowledg­e that the decision was a setback but it didn’t harm the status of egalitaria­n prayer at the Wall, the Reform and Conservati­ve movements declared war against the government and dragged much of the organized Jewish establishm­ent behind them.

The Reform leadership canceled a scheduled meeting with Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, and the Jewish Agency Board followed suit.

Six hundred Conservati­ve rabbis signed a letter to Netanyahu accusing him of betraying Diaspora Jewry and announcing they would be forced to reconsider their support for Israel.

Ambassador David Friedman, who had just taken residence in Israel a month before the explosion, used his first public remarks as ambassador to call his fellow American Jews to order.

Friedman said, “Yesterday, I heard something that I thought I’d never hear before. And I understand the source of the frustratio­n and the source of the anger. But I heard a major Jewish organizati­on say that they needed to rethink their support for the State of Israel.

“That’s something unthinkabl­e in my lifetime, up until yesterday. We have to do better. We must do better,” he said.

But in the intervenin­g months, the Conservati­ve and Reform movements have not relented in their attacks. They have ratcheted them up.

The thinking appears to be that if they can make this problem look like a life or death struggle between Israel and progressiv­e Jewry, they can both keep their dwindling bases engaged and attract members of the increasing­ly anti-Israel Jewish far Left.

The problem with this is that just as they cannot outdo the Democratic Party in their hostility toward Trump, so the Conservati­ve and Reform movements cannot be more anti-Israel than Jewish Voices for Peace and other anti-Israel Jewish groups.

The question for Israelis is what this failure of the mainstream American Jewish leadership means for the future of Israel’s relationsh­ip with American Jewry. Jewish survival and continuity through the ages has been predicated and dependent on our ability as Jews to uphold the commandmen­t of the sages that all Jews are responsibl­e for one another. As the most successful Jewish community in history, Israel has a special responsibi­lity for our brethren in the Diaspora.

The first step toward fulfilling our duty is to recognize the basic fact that while it is true that the American Jewish community is in crisis, the leaders of that community are in an even deeper crisis. And the key to strengthen­ing and supporting the community is to bypass its failed leadership and speak and interact directly with American Jews.

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