The Jewish Chronicle

Jewish conservati­sm is the key to our survival

-

IN HIS new book The Second Mountain, the American writer David Brooks says something that shocked me. After a long night of the soul Brooks, a distinguis­hed New York Times columnist, has realised that what should drive us is not worldly ambition and achievemen­t. What’s more important is to live a moral life and put others first. Accordingl­y, he’s also come to realise that the hyper-individual­ism now dominating the west, the ideologica­l pivot of left-wing politics, is inimical to human flourishin­g.

This is all part of his moral and religious awakening. But here’s the troubling thing. Brooks, a Jew, has embraced Christiani­ty.

Put to one side that he also says he has never felt more Jewish than now and that he follows, as it were, both Moses and Jesus.

What’s so disturbing is that, although he sought advice and counsel from dozens of people on his spiritual journey, he writes that “the Jews by and large didn’t know how to talk to me.” His own rabbi said of himself that he “understood the beauty of the Christian story and was captivated by it.”

Nice one, rabbi. Can it really be the case, as Brooks claims, that Judaism is really so uninterest­ed in persuading Jewish people of its virtues?

It’s possible, of course, that Brooks didn’t approach orthodox rabbis but only progressiv­e ones. Conservati­ve and Reform Judaism in the US have increasing­ly embraced a relativist­ic liberal universali­sm which is founded on precepts inimical to Judaism.

It’s Jewish moral codes, though, that stand against the hyper-individual­ism which Brooks now views as damaging; it’s Jewish moral codes that produce the sense of community and rootedness that Brooks now understand­s is vital.

These are bedrock Jewish and western values which desperatel­y need to be conserved. That’s what conservati­sm, in fact, is all about. Yet this has rarely been acknowledg­ed in Jewish public discourse, either in the diaspora or Israel. Now that may be changing.

The American philanthro­pic foundation, the Tikvah Fund, has decided to challenge the dominance of liberal universali­sm among Jews and promote instead a Jewish conservati­ve movement. After two well-attended conference­s in the US suggesting pent-up sympathy for such ideas, it held a third last week in Jerusalem.

Some 850 people packed into the city’s Internatio­nal Conference Centre to listen to Yoram Hazony, author of The Virtue of Nationalis­m, Douglas Murray, author of The Strange Death of Europe, and various luminaries of the Israeli conservati­ve scene (yes, there is one).

Both Hazony and Murray pointed out that conservati­sm resonates in Israel far more than in Britain or Europe. Murray said that, while nationalis­m and patriotism are not understood in Europe, most Israelis realise these are a force for good.

Israelis recognise strong borders are a prerequisi­te for survival; in Europe they’re seen as a cause of war. And even most secular Israelis, he said, recognise they are at least “in His own rabbi understood the beauty of the Christian story dialogue with the religion of their forbears”; in Europe, religion and philosophy are viewed as accessorie­s to the cultural crime of merely being the west.

For his part, Hazony observed that Israel’s traditiona­lism — the Bible being taught in all schools, the orthodox religious marriage ceremony, the nation-state law which is so controvers­ial among Israeli leftists and diaspora Jews — conserves and strengthen­s the nation.

In 1896, he said, Theodore Herzl wrote that the Jews in Israel should be traditiona­l and conservati­ve. Yet the left, both within and outside Israel, has a problem with the traditiona­l family, the idea of distinct men and women, property rights, immigratio­n controls and so on. “The enlightene­d liberal world”, he said, “hates not Israel but Israeli conservati­sm and tradition. It hates the people sitting in this room.” And unfortunat­ely many diaspora Jews sign up to this too.

A century ago and more, our forbears were socialist or communist. But they were also culturally conservati­ve, respecting the bonds of tradition, family, community, Jewish moral precepts. When the left became secular and Marxist and declared war on those things, many Jews failed to grasp the implicatio­ns.

For Judaism, it was a fundamenta­l onslaught. For the west in general, founded upon the moral principles of the Hebrew Bible, such attackers have steadily sawn through the branches on which the culture rests.

David Brooks has begun to understand that those branches are now snapping off. What a pity he hasn’t realised that the best chance of preserving this vital ecology is through Jewish conservati­sm.

Melanie Phillips is a Times columnist

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? David Brooks
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES David Brooks
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom