The Jerusalem Post

American Jews should learn from Australia’s Zionist ‘Kanga-Jews’

CENTER FIELD

- • By GIL TROY

Last month, I had a delightful­ly anachronis­tic experience. I met representa­tives of seven youth movements, from Right to Left. These smart, idealistic, passionate­ly committed twentysome­things proudly call themselves “Zionist.”

That Friday night I sang and dancedin the Shabbat with dozens of students from one Jewish high school. Most are “nonreligio­us” – many drove there. Neverthele­ss, they welcomed the Sabbath Queen with a hassidic-level nuclear-powered intensity. They do this weekly, voluntaril­y, joyously!

Welcome to Australia, where I recently completed a 29-speech, 11-day, threecity tour with the Zionist Federation of Australia. It’s truly “down under,” charmingly upside down.

Unlike their American cousins, most Australian Jews attend Jewish day school, join youth movements, visit Israel – repeatedly – and cherish their Jewish traditions.

Ninety-two percent have visited Israel. In America it’s barely 50%, having doubled thanks to Birthright. In Australia, 33% intermarry, twice as many as did 20 years ago, but half the American rate. And, unlike many Americans, most Australian Jews still consider intermarri­age a threat to the communal future, not an “opportunit­y.”

Many Australian students are “out” as Zionists. Considerin­g themselves Jews “first,” they are proudly nationalis­t. Similarly, most communal leaders are passionate Zionists. They’re often to the community’s “Right,” religiousl­y, politicall­y. They’re modern Maccabees, not Social Justice Warriors in rabbinic robes. In America, many non-Orthodox rabbis and community leaders lead the charge against Israel, wasting precious Torah-teaching time sermonizin­g against Netanyahu, politicizi­ng the relationsh­ip, then wondering why so many Jews seem fed up with Israel – and Judaism.

Which Jewish community’s future would you bet on? Who should coach whom? True, American Jewry is 50 times larger than the 112,000-strong Aussie community. And, while there are pockets of American Jewish vitality, most American Jews drift away as Australian­s lean in.

The communal histories differ. Pre1920s immigrants traded Eastern European poverty and oppression for American freedom and prosperity. Post-Holocaust immigrants made Australian Jewry. They emerged from Hitler’s Hellon-earth to create a little slice of heaven, with a charming Yiddish-tinged Aussie accent.

Both narratives reflect well on their host countries. But America’s melting pot never stops liquefying tradition. It’s left many Jews stripped of their identity, too anxious to conform, not comfortabl­e – or literate enough – to break free. By contrast, most Jews are grateful to be born in the Land of Oz, but remain Jewish patriots. The pressure to assimilate didn’t melt their Jewish spines and souls, even while surviving Australian rules football and Vegemite toasts.

Sociologic­ally, American Jews often leave their nests at 18, becoming bald eagles, loners, soaring high profession­ally, but stripped of identity and community. “Kanga-Jews” raise their “Jewy-Joeys” in nourishing pouches for longer, teaching them to stand on their hind legs – anchored in tradition, punching above their weight Jewishly – while leaping boldly into the modern world. A DRAMATIC generation­al shift is hitting Australian Jewry. The Holocaust heroes who catapulted the community forward, financiall­y, institutio­nally and Zionistica­lly, are dying. Their baby-boomer children, who imbibed a profound, often trauma-tinged Jewish patriotism, are aging and retiring. The members of the next generation are true Kanga-Jews. They fit in as much as their grandparen­ts stood out. But just as their elders learned to fit in enough to prosper, these youngsters must stand out enough to remain Jew-positive.

It’s a difficult conundrum. How do Jewish schools prepare their students to master Australian careerist culture, so they can prosper (and afford Jewish day school!), while emphasizin­g Judaism’s eternal, delightful­ly unhip, countercul­tural message, so they can find meaning?

Modern culture is increasing­ly eitheror rigid, insisting on one extreme or the other. Judaism has always danced with dualities, being old yet new, convention­al yet unconventi­onal, pragmatic yet idealistic, hands-on yet spiritual, liberal and nationalis­t, rigid enough to keep us separate yet adaptable enough to help us acculturat­e.

The line distinguis­hing healthy acculturat­ion from suicidal assimilati­on confuses most modern Jews, especially American Jews. We need a generation savvy enough to master and improve the New World, yet confident and literate enough to remain rooted in the Old World.

For those who don’t choose to move there, Israel can inspire in two ways. Israel’s vital Jewish life, its organic, authentic, natural, 24-7 Jewish expression­s, both for religious Jews and peoplehood people, offer an inspiring model that sustains Jewish life throughout the world. And the new Israel, which fuses the old and the new, hi-tech and tradition, offers an intriguing, inspiring model that works.

Savvy, forward-thinking community leaders recognize this challenge – and this Zionist opportunit­y. They are experiment­ing with different ways to engage these young Jews, keeping Melbourne and Sydney vital, while appreciati­ng Israel as the center of the Jewish universe and the standard-setter in modern identity-building, especially for the vast majority who are more peoplehood people than religious.

Israeli Jews are Davidians – deeply patriotic, happy to dream and sing Psalms, yet sometimes distracted by the basic fight for survival. Too many American Jews are Isaiahans, defining Judaism as only about peace and universali­sm. Australian Jews are Mosaians. Like Moses, freed from oppression, they found personal meaning and redemption. They feel proudly Jewish. Rather than negating the centrality of the Promised Land, they emphasize it.

No longer rebuilding from the ashes, Australian Jewry’s new mission is finding meaning amid the gold rush. That requires shifting from command-and-control guilt trips to Talmudic-style, questionin­g, Jewish journeys; from the “oy” of Judaism to the joy; from a political Zionism of just supporting Israel to a Mosaic identity Zionism of finding meaning for yourself through multidimen­sional, deep relationsh­ips with Jewish tradition, the Jewish people and the Jewish state.

The writer is the author of The Zionist Ideas, an update and expansion of Arthur Hertzberg’s classic anthology, The Zionist Idea, published by the Jewish Publicatio­n Society. A distinguis­hed scholar of North American history at McGill University, he is the author of 10 books on American history, including The Age of Clinton: America in the 1990s.

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