Last week President Bush described Israel as a "a light unto the nations that preserves the legacy of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob." It must have been confusing for an American president speaking to the Israeli Knesset and delivering, arguably, the most pro-Jewish and pro-Israel speech ever given by a leader of the free world, to realize that almost noone in his audience agreed with him. The Arab MK’s presumably didn’t. And the Jews? They are mostly comprised today, in Israel especially, of secularists and Jewish exclusivists, those who believe that Israel should most resemble every other nation and those who believe that Jews should live mostly insular lives around other Jews. As for those who actually agree with President Bush that Israel and the Jews have a universal message of inspiration for mankind, well, that seems to have died with the ancient Jewish prophets who spoke of the Jews as "a light to nations," something that the Jews have only ever achieved by having their contributions to mankind co-opted by other religions and nations.
As Israel celebrates its 60th birthday, the condition of world Jewry remains challenging. For all its miraculous achievements, Israel is still a country facing a mortal threat from enemies like Iran who are sworn to its destruction. And for all the economic prosperity that Jews have created throughout the world and for all the money that has been sent in the way of Jewish outreach, it has not translated into a global Jewish renaissance. Assimilation continues to undermine a tiny people who have a low birthrate and a huge intermarriage rate.
Why is this happening? Because President Bush's vision is not our vision. We do not believe in a larger Jewish role in the world. In essence, painful as it may sound, our community stands primarily for self-preservation, survival, and little else. You hear it all the time, both in terms of speeches about Israel that always reflect on its struggle just to make it to its seventieth birthday, and you hear it in all the outreach programs who speak of keeping uninterested and uneducated Jews in the fold. What you almost never hear is that the Jews have be strong not for their own survival, but to enrich the world with their message.
Exactly what is that message? Noone seems to know. What makes us Jews unique? Try this out. Ask any of your Jewish friends, from the most assimilated to the most committed, what are the core values that the Jews represent? I almost guarantee that they won't be able to tell you. They'll offer some platitudes about education, charity, family, and community. But once you point out that everyone today accepts and promotes these values as well, they'll be stumped.
This point was brought home to me by two incidents that occurred this week on my travels. I was in my old home of Oxford to debate a leading Christian thinker on whether Judaism can embrace a man as G-d. Just before the debate, I bumped into an American Hassidic Rabbi who was visiting the University for the day. He politely asked if I would mind if he came to my lecture to heckle me. Why would you do that? I asked, do you believe in Jesus? Of course not, he said. I want to come to heckle your oft-quoted message that Jews have to spread their light to the world. Our mission is to be good Jews, and just by living our lives we become an example to the world.
Oh really? Try parenting that way. Don't teach your kids not to run into the street in front of a car. Simply stop at the curb and try to model a good example. Any takers?
The second incident came a few days later as I walked the streets of Rome with a close Jewish friend who leans toward Yoga and Buddhism. Around me were all the symbols of the Christian faith which claims to have superseded Judaism millennia ago in disseminating monotheism and the Bible. And walking by my side was yet another well-educated and successful Jew who turned to India and the East for his spiritual needs. Where did Judaism fit in? Was there anything still for us to contribute? Why were we still here? Was there not some redemptive role that would make sense of our long history of suffering?
Now is the time for the Jewish community to finally find its place among the nations and begin to disseminate its unique values to the world. This urgent necessity cannot wait. It should begin by summoning the world’s leading Jewish thinkers, activists, and philanthropists to discuss and lock down the core Jewish values that our community represents: what we’re good at, what we specialize in, what we have carried with us through history, and what the world most requires. At the same conference, a program of implementation should be decided upon, with the necessary funding procured. One idea would be the establishment of a Jewish Institute whose sole purpose it would be to award scholarships to gifted communicators who can be schooled in these unique values and, after spending two years at the institution, given grants to write books, develop curriculums, TV shows, internet sites, and public service announcements that would make an impact on the wider culture. Another idea would be institutionalizing within the culture uniquely Jewish traditions that would immediately make the world a better place. The Sabbath is the most powerful example. We are arguably the only community that has an answer to the material clutter and the endless noise of the technological age. For 24 hours, every seven days, we rise above material acquisition and shut down all the noise. We don’t buy objects, we don’t watch TV, and we turn our IPods off. We instead listen to our children and create a warmer community. A final idea would be the cultivation of uniquely Jewish holy men and wise women that could be marketed as global lights, just as the Dalai Lama does for millions of non-Buddhists. We already have one, Elie Wiesel, whom President Bush quoted in his speech. But we need a lot more.
The same friend with whom I walked the streets of Rome sat down with me on Shabbos afternoon to study Ethics of our Fathers. He told me he was impressed with the quality and depth of the life-advice given by the ancient sages. A marketing expert, he then asked, "Since this is such good stuff, why don't we share these teachings with the whole world?" I had no good answer.
Rabbi Shmuley Condemns Murder of Chabad Rabbi
The horrific attack on the Chabad House of Mumbai and the monstrous slaughter of its devoted Rabbi and wife, Gavriel and Rivka Holtzberg, gives the lie to the media's description of these murderers as 'religious Muslim extremists.'...
For a Confederation of Noachides
As we begin a new year, I believe that what the world Jewish community is most lacking is size, and the foremost challenge confronting it is the need for greater numbers. The number of Jews in the world has fallen below a critical mass, and the paucity of our number leads to its own tragic consequences...
Imperfect People and High Office
Last week I spent time at the Christian Broadcasting Network headquarters in Virginia with Pat Robertson, who, amid some understandable disagreements on important issues, is not only a friend but, I believe, one of the best friends Israel has in the entire United States...
My friend Michael Steinhardt, the renowned philanthropist, was recently quoted as saying that he had blown $125 million on Jewish education over the past decade, and his efforts had barely turned the tide of assimilation. I sat in his office to discuss his exasperation with the state of Jewish outreach and came away largely agreeing with his diagnosis...
In a recent column I argued for the need to bring Judaism to the mainstream world. Judaism has nearly always been relegated to a backseat role. This is bizarre, given that every great monotheistic faith derives its core principles and, indeed, its monotheistic raison d'etre from Judaism. In effect, this makes Judaism the light of the world...
Rabbi Shmuley Boteach came with a list; Michael Steinhardt came with a list; and Noah Feldman, perhaps the most controversial figure of the evening, joked that he had no list at all...
I waited my whole life to turn 40 because of the Talmud's promise of wisdom. I was tired of being a flawed man of promise, an imperfect composite of seriousness and some silliness, insight and ignorance. I wanted to live life in the illuminated spaces, immunized against folly and resistant to error. I waited for wisdom to cover me like a shield, to finally provide me with as much guidance in my own life as I tried to provide others in theirs...
Last Thursday night I received an urgent call from one of my closest friends informing me that he would be picking me up in an hour to take me and another of our dearest friends, Mark, who was getting married a few nights later, to the Lubavitcher Rebbe's gravesite to pray. The story would have been unexceptional if the caller had not been a Christian, an African-American who is one of America's most electrifying young politicians...
Jewish education is the secret to Jewish continuity. Agreed. But is that enough?
Hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent on Jewish schools to immunize youth against assimilation. But I remember all too well how, as rabbi at Oxford University for 11 years, scores of religious Jewish students arrived with yarmulkes that were taken off after a few weeks of immersion in a non-Jewish environment because they felt uncomfortable being different...
Five Finalists in Bronfman Visiting Chair in Jewish Communal Innovation Contest
WALTHAM, Mass. -- The competition for Brandeis University's new Charles R. Bronfman Visiting Chair in Jewish Communal Innovation has narrowed to five finalists, who will present their proposals for changing the way Jews think about themselves and their community at a symposium on campus February 24. The winner will be awarded two years to develop his or her ideas into a book...
Is the American President the Sole Believer in a Jewish Mission?
Last week President Bush described Israel as "a light unto the nations that preserves the legacy of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob". It must have been confusing for an American president speaking to the Israeli Knesset and delivering, arguably, the most pro-Jewish and pro-Israel speech ever given by a leader of the free world, to realize that almost noone in his audience agreed with him...