The Jewish Chronicle

Rabbi, I have a problem

Watching series like Unorthodox and Shtisel during lockdown, I was puzzled why people choose to follow the strictest interpreta­tions of Jewish law. Why don’;t they go for a lenient opinion?

- Rabbi Romain is rabbi of Maidenhead (Reform) Synagogue If you have a problem to put to our rabbis, email it to srocker@ thejc.com

An Orthodox view

V YOUR QUESTION betrays a value judgment, that lenient is better or more sensible. But that very much depends on the metric one is using.

One can approach religious observance from several perspectiv­es each presenting its own metric. Let’s evaluate your question from three perspectiv­es: sociologic­al, psychologi­cal, and spiritual.

From a sociologic­al perspectiv­e, individual­s who wish to belong to a particular group, tend to “signal” their belonging by adopting practices or dress codes that are unique to the group. A community’s resources (time, energy, money) are limited and so in sharing out these resources, it will prioritise its own.

The more elaborate or costly the signal shared by community members, the greater chance it flushes out impostors or free-riders who seek the benefits of belonging, without contributi­ng. In the fictional Shtisel family, Lipa represents this sociologic­al phenomenon. He is not particular­ly spiritual and has a penchant for rule-breaking. Yet, what keeps him in the fold are the support structures his family enjoys from belonging to his community.

From a psychologi­cal perspectiv­e, there are individual­s who chafe under rules and there are those for whom rules and boundaries are important, conferring structure and routine. Most of the characters in Shtisel, particular­ly Shulem, never question the rules and do not appear to find them oppressive. Nor, for that matter do many within the real-life Charedi community for whom rules scaffold their lives and constitute its meaning.

From a spiritual perspectiv­e, the rules of halachah are nothing less than the will of God. In integratin­g these rules and practices into one’s life the halachic adherent is, so to speak, bound up with God, or in the words of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Lyadi, clasped in a divine embrace. This perspectiv­e presents halachah not so much as a list of cumbersome rules but rather as an extraordin­ary opportunit­y to live a life imbued with divine purpose. In the fictional world of Shtisel, Ruchami’s pious husband, Chanina, best represents this attunement to halachah.

Everything can be taken to extremes and there are times when a more lenient approach is called for, particular­ly when a stricter interpreta­tion would impose unnecessar­y hardship on a third party. But looking at Jewish law through these three perspectiv­es should offer clarity as to why, for many, strict observance of halachah is not something to be evaded but rather positively embraced.

Rabbi Brawer is Neubauer executive director of Hillel, Tufts University

A Progressiv­e view

V IT IS certainly true that there is a tendency within some sections of Orthodoxy to adhere to the strictest version of everything, even when more flexible options are possible within Jewish law. I suspect it is due to two reasons:

The first is the assumption that the more rigid one is, the more pious one is. The British may suffer from “keeping up with the Joneses” but some Jews suffer from “outfrummin­g the Cohens”. Leniency is seen as lacking commitment.

However, one of the great aspects of the Talmud is that it always presents majority and minority opinions, rather than a single viewpoint. It declares that “all are the words of the living God” (Eruvin 13b) and it sanctions diversity. A lenient approach can be the more sensible one in various situations and just as religious.

The second reason, which can affect even middleof-the-road Orthodoxy, is that there is a fear that any lessening of the regulation­s might be seen as imitating Reform Judaism and suggesting that change is possible.

It is curious how change has become identified with lack of authentici­ty, even though change has always been part of Judaism; initially, anyone could perform animal sacrifices at any altar anywhere, then this was limited to the Temple and only by the priests, then they were abolished completely.

In the Bible you were Jewish if you had a Jewish father (hence it mattered not that Joseph married an Egyptian or Moses a Midianite), but in rabbinic times it switched to going through the mother. How massive was that! (And now Reform has made it equilineal — whichever parent is Jewish)

Abraham would not recognise the Judaism practised by Hillel, while the latter would find Shtisel very strange. In fact, the Talmud itself admits this pace of change in the legend of Moses sitting in a class taken by Akiba and being totally perplexed by the Judaism he was teaching (Menachot 29b).

In Reform circles, therefore, the issue is not “strict” or “lenient”, but “appropriat­e”. For instance: is the concept of Shabbat appropriat­e? Yes. Is the ban on travelling in a car appropriat­e when it enables participat­ion? No.

Being Jewish means constantly re-assessing, with tradition as the starting point, but with factors such as moral values or changing circumstan­ces also coming into play. As a fictional grandmothe­r might say: “lenient, shmenient, so long as you do the right thing”.

 ?? Shtisel PHOTO: NETFLIX/VERID ADIR ?? Kive (Michael Aloni), one of the central characters in
Shtisel PHOTO: NETFLIX/VERID ADIR Kive (Michael Aloni), one of the central characters in
 ??  ?? Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain
Rabbi Dr Jonathan Romain
 ??  ?? Rabbi Dr Naftali Brawer
Rabbi Dr Naftali Brawer
 ??  ??

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