We should be closer to Israel — Reform rabbi
ONE OF the most senior rabbis in the Reform movement is calling on its members to show greater support for Israel.
Rabbi Steven Katz, of Edgware and Hendon Reform Synagogue, voiced his concern about the detachment of Reform Jews from Israel in a Rosh Hashanah sermon earlier this week.
And he plans to devote his Kol Nidre address on Tuesday evening to advocating a “closer embrace” of the Jewish state.
Rabbi Katz, who is due to retire in January after more than 40 years in the pulpit, told the JC: “It is wellknown that Reform Jews are more detached from, more disparaging, about Israel than either Masorti or Orthodox.”
In his sermon earlier this week, he explained he had asked whether it was “detachment from Judaism that was the cause of detachment from Israel” or the other way round.
His greatest worry was that detachment from Israel was indicative of detachment from Judaism as a whole.
Reviewing events over his rabbinic career in his sermon, he said the “greatest achievements” of Reform Rabbi Steven Katz: detachment from Israel is detachment from Judaism
Judaism had come from its egalitarianism.
Rabbi Katz, who gave his first High Holy Day sermon in 1970, had been in the same rabbinic class as Rabbi Jackie Tabick, ordained as the first female British rabbi in 1975.
Its acceptance of women leaders had influenced Masorti, Orthodoxy and “even the church,” he said.
The Reform movement also deserved “great credit for opening minds and doors to the gay community,” he said.