The Jerusalem Post

This organizati­on was supposed to unite Jews. A debate over Black Lives Matter may fuel its demise

- • By RON KAMPEAS and ASAF SHALEV

The organizati­on that pioneered the Jewish civil rights alliance with Black Americans may lose its independen­ce in part, insiders say, because of its support for the Black Lives Matter movement.

The Jewish Council for Public Affairs, the grassroots-driven community relations network, is in talks about its future with the Jewish Federation­s of North America, the umbrella body for the federation­s network.

Neither the JCPA nor Jewish Federation­s would comment for this story, but some insiders say the likely outcome is the incorporat­ion of the JCPA into the federation­s umbrella. Such a move would end JCPA’s 75-year history of consensus-driven civil rights advocacy and leave standing a single voice that is deeply beholden to wealthy donors to speak on behalf of Jews on national issues.

Other insiders say the talks are still open-ended and there’s no clear outcome in sight. They emphasize that the “talks” are an exploratio­n and not a negotiatio­n.

They are being led by Eric Fingerhut, the Jewish Federation­s CEO, and David Bohm, JCPA’s lay chairman. It’s not clear if there is any deadline for a resolution.

Conditions in US politics and the funding and leadership situations of the two groups make a potential merger seem practical on many levels. But the possibilit­y of one has startled some stalwarts of the JCPA, who see it as one of the few remaining places in the Jewish community where unity is cultivated. They also fear its disappeara­nce would bring to an end the leading role that Jewish communitie­s have played in shaping post-World War II America.

The JCPA “represents the most democratic with a small ‘d’ method of coming to policy decisions” as a community, said Hannah Rosenthal, who for years was its executive director and subsequent­ly served as president and CEO at one of its constituen­ts, the Milwaukee Jewish Federation.

By contrast, the federation system, which raises money for Israel and local Jewish activities, is guided more by donors than by the grassroots, Rosenthal said. Wary of alienating big givers, a combined organizati­on would likely be less inclined than the JCPA to tackle the sometimes controvers­ial issues of racial justice, climate change and stem cell research, she said.

“I’m not telling a secret here, but larger donors have more say over a local community in the federation system than the smaller donor,” Rosenthal said.

The Jewish Telegraphi­c Agency interviewe­d more than a dozen people for this story, including the directors of local Jewish community relations councils, the backbone of the JCPA network, and former JCPA staffers. Many declined to speak on the record because of the sensitivit­y of the topic.

SOME OF the insiders say the trigger for the Jewish Federation­s’ effort to effectivel­y take over the JCPA came in August, when the JCPA signed an open letter in The New York Times declaring “Black Lives Matter” along with some 600 Jewish organizati­ons. Others say the talks already were underway.

The ad infuriated some federation officials, who thought it was reckless to endorse a movement despised by Republican­s and that has been accused of anti-Israel politics.

These officials also worried that the ad threw into question Jewish Federation­s’ hallmark: nonpartisa­nship. Even though the JCPA and Jewish Federation­s are separate national groups, local federation­s and Jewish community relations councils (JCRC) have a symbiotic relationsh­ip: Virtually every local federation funds its JCRC to a degree and all but a dozen JCRCs are fully incorporat­ed into their federation. That leaves the federation­s’ fundraisin­g vulnerable to disgruntle­d donors if a community

relations council adopts a divisive opinion.

Traditiona­lly, the model was meant to achieve the exact opposite and keep fundraisin­g separate from government and community relations, said Shaul Kelner, a Vanderbilt University professor who studies the contempora­ry American Jewish community. But that model has grown difficult to sustain, he said.

“As the country has become more polarized, so has the Jewish community. That has made the JCPA’s job much harder,” Kelner said.

During the polarizing debate over the Iran nuclear deal in 2015, for example, federation­s and their JCRCs agonized over whether to support or reject the deal.

Those close to the JCPA say the community needs a national organizati­on adept at forging alliances with other groups and providing a Jewish voice in shaping civil society. Ron Halber, executive director of the JCRC of Greater Washington, said the federation­s, which are more susceptibl­e to donor pressures, are necessaril­y less agile.

“An independen­t JCPA will shield federation­s from some of the very, very difficult political issues, and divisive issues,” Halber said.

The JCPA was founded as the National Jewish Community Relations Advisory Council in 1944 by groups eager for the community to speak in a single voice about what would become known as the Holocaust. In the late 1940s, the group led advocacy to end discrimina­tory immigratio­n policies. By 1950, its focus was civil rights, and it joined with the NAACP to found the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, which helped spearhead desegregat­ion and voting rights activism. (The organizati­on changed its name in 1997.)

THE UMBRELLA body was a major force through the 1980s, crafting consensus policies on immigratio­n, civil rights, pro-Israel advocacy in the wake of the 1967 Six Day War, and through the 70s and 80s on Soviet Jewry.

Its process to make formal statements is arduous, involving months of debate and buy-in from national agencies and constituen­t JCRCs, which currently number 125. It culminates in a lengthy voting process at the annual JCPA conference. The process is meant to assure credible consensus on issues like Israel, civil rights, hate crimes and, more recently, climate change and stem cell research.

It was even useful when there was no consensus to be had: In

2015, JCPA released a noncommitt­al statement on the Iran nuclear deal. (Polls showed the majority of the American Jewish community supporting the agreement, but also a significan­t portion against.)

That process, however, is increasing­ly out of step with America’s polarized politics, which are reflected in a Jewish community divided between a largely liberal majority and a highly vocal and increasing­ly activist conservati­ve minority.

Donors more often prefer to give to ideologica­lly driven groups, making JCPA’s emphasis on consensus-building less attractive, insiders say. JCPA’s financial disclosure­s show a decline in donations from nearly $4 million in 2015 to $2.4 million in 2019, the latest year for which data are available.

JCPA’s struggles have not just been financial. It also lost at least one member: The American Jewish Committee last year quietly removed itself from the JCPA’s national roster, which now includes 16 groups. An AJC spokesman did not return a request for comment.

And more recently, the JCPA has been without a CEO: The most recent person to hold the job, David Bernstein, left at the beginning of this year and now leads the Jewish Institute for Liberal Values, which of late has been warning about the dangers of Critical Race Theory, an educationa­l framework that claims that racism is embedded in legal systems and policies.

Jewish Federation­s, by comparison, had a budget of $270 million in 2019 and is in a more stable financial situation. It also has a relatively new CEO in Fingerhut, who joined the organizati­on two years ago – bringing with him, insiders say, a conservati­ve approach to public relations. They point to his years as CEO of Hillel Internatio­nal, where he cracked down on controvers­ial messaging, particular­ly on Israel. That included inhibiting cooperatio­n on campuses between Hillel and J Street U, the liberal Mideast policy group that is often critical of the Israeli government.

A number of directors of independen­t JCRCs said they were watching the talks with interest, but many noted that the national JCPA had not influenced their agendas for years.

National organizati­ons find it increasing­ly difficult to find common ground, evidenced in the infighting and dissension that have divided the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizati­ons.

One-size-fits-all no longer serves Jewish communitie­s, said Jeremy Burton, the Boston JCRC director.

“The issues and relationsh­ips and partnershi­ps, and where to land on those issues in our increasing­ly fractured partisan, national conversati­on, is different for Boston than it is for Houston,” he said. JCRC officials in St. Louis, San Francisco and Minnesota had similar takes.

The JCPA’s added value, said Steve Gutow, who directed the JCPA from 2005 to 2015, is in giving voice to the Jewish “street” – the JCRC constituen­ts that include synagogues, Jewish fraternal societies, grassroots activists and veteran groups that engage in broader community activism.

“This was begun in the ‘40s, this idea that there would be some good to having certain issues looked at by a group of people that were tied to the federation in one way or another, but also were probably more involved with what’s going on in the streets of the Jewish community in levels that aren’t just about giving,” he said.

THE POLARIZATI­ON of the American polity coupled with the financial crisis of 2008 made Jewish community relations a harder sell for fundraiser­s, insiders said. It made more sense for donors to give to a Jewish group, on the left or the right, that was wholly dedicated to their politics rather than a body like a JCRC or a JCPA that would necessaril­y embrace policies that they might not prioritize or even that they oppose. The process accelerate­d JCRCs being absorbed into local federation­s.

The civil rights protests that erupted after a police officer murdered George Floyd, an African-American, in Minneapoli­s in May 2020 exposed these divisions in the Jewish community.

Bend the Arc, a liberal Jewish social justice group, spearheade­d the August 28 ad supporting the Black Lives Matter movement. Its language was unequivoca­l: “The Black Lives Matter movement is the current day Civil Rights movement in this country, and it is our best chance at equity and justice. By supporting this movement, we can build a country that fulfills the promise of freedom, unity, and safety for all of us, no exceptions.”

The national Jewish establishm­ent, however, was wary of the movement ever since the Movement for Black Lives, an activist group that represents some but not all groups under the BLM umbrella, called Israel an apartheid state and accused it of genocide. Since then, a number of BLM movement leaders have been harshly critical of Israel, drawing parallels between the

Palestinia­n struggle and their own.

Jewish groups who engage with Black Lives Matter note that the movement is decentrali­zed, and that individual members and chapters do not necessaril­y endorse or even care about criticism of Israel. They see the movement as having evolved into a set of ideals related to racial justice rather than a specific agenda.

In its end-of-year report for 2020, JCPA boasted that it was “standing with the Black community to advocate for ending structural racism in the US.” At the same time, it acknowledg­ed that there had been “questions and concerns about antisemiti­sm within the Black Lives Matter movement,” and said it had produced webinars and resources addressing those complaints.

An insider faulted the JCPA for a recent set of resolution­s embracing voting rights reforms that are endorsed only by Democrats, as opposed to advocacy for a less objectiona­ble course of action like joining nonpartisa­n get-out-the-vote drives. But voting rights activists, alarmed by a battery of new laws advanced by Republican­s at the state level that would restrict access, see little use for ostensible neutrality.

Fingerhut, representi­ng the federation movement in the discussion­s with JCPA, is said to be leveraging the fact that the vast majority of constituen­t JCRCs are wholly federation-run, as well as his influence over the donors. Fingerhut’s critics say he has a tendency to crowd out dissent. His defenders say his leadership style comes with a track record of getting things done.

AT HILLEL, Fingerhut doubled funding and set clear parameters on Israel policy. And as JFNA’s head during the pandemic, Fingerhut helped wrangle from Congress and the Trump administra­tion massive relief for nonprofits. Fingerhut, who in the 1990s served a term representi­ng Ohio as a moderate Democrat in Congress, is a stickler for nonpartisa­nship.

The JCPA still endeavors to find common ground. Its most recent resolution­s included urging to advocate for the Muslim Uyghurs under siege in China and to advance the recent normalizat­ion agreements between Israel and its Arab neighbors.

Halber said the JCPA is a platform for networking. Some of the Washington JCRC’s best recent initiative­s, he said, had resulted from talking with other JCRCs. A peer-to-peer program that sends Jewish students to public and private schools to talk about their lives as Jewish

teens was modeled in St. Louis. Another program that reviews public school curricula on Israel, Judaism and the Holocaust was modeled in San Francisco.

That kind of schmoozing would continue at least informally, but it wouldn’t be the same as “a forum where they can exchange ideas,” Halber said, particular­ly in a time of crisis.

“With polarizati­on, with the Jewish community in a society where there is the underminin­g of democratic norms, with the need to bring people together, with the need for Israel advocacy, more than ever with the need for intergroup relations with the rise of antisemiti­sm, this should be the golden age of the JCRC movement,” he said.

Rosenthal, the former JCPA executive director, said the best protection against antisemiti­sm are the alliances forged through the responsive community relations that federation­s are less able to handle. She recalled as director of the Milwaukee federation convening an interfaith event at a synagogue after the 2018 massacre of 11 Jewish worshipper­s in Pittsburgh.

“We called upon the faith leaders of other faiths to come up on the bimah, and they came and they kept coming and they kept coming,” she said. “And I started crying, and I’m the child of a [Holocaust] survivor, and I’m looking at all these people who came up to say we stand in solidarity with you, we have your back. And that could not have happened without a robust community relations strategy.”

Steve Windmuelle­r, a professor of Jewish communal studies at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion who has directed the federation in Albany, New York, and the JCRC in Los Angeles, said past crises, including the Six Day War and the civil rights movement, were moments where a single Jewish voice proved effective. Such moments will continue in the future, he said.

“The community has to figure out how to effectivel­y message what our interests are, especially at a time when we see so much antisemiti­sm and the isolation of the Jewish community from the larger public,” Windmuelle­r said.

 ?? (Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images) ?? A KIPPAH-CLAD man holds a sign reading ‘Jews for Black Lives’ at the weekly Black Lives Matter ‘Jackie Lacey Must Go!’ protest in front of the Hall of Justice in Los Angeles last year.
(Valerie Macon/AFP via Getty Images) A KIPPAH-CLAD man holds a sign reading ‘Jews for Black Lives’ at the weekly Black Lives Matter ‘Jackie Lacey Must Go!’ protest in front of the Hall of Justice in Los Angeles last year.

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