Reform Judaism in transition
Aiming for Reform's youth
Tell-a-Friend ||
PrintSessions at the five-day biennial conference of the Union of Reform Judaism covered everything from “Yoga Shalom: The Embodiment of Prayer” to “Is America Abandoning Church-State Separation? Implications for the Jewish Community.”
The conference was a mix of old and new, reflecting some of the changes made by the movement over the last generation, and some it has not made. The weekday prayer services consisted of participatory singing, guitar playing and even storytelling and meditation — part of a revolution in Reform prayer led by the late singer-songwriter Debbie Friedman. The Shabbat morning service, however, was more formal and operatic, sending some congregants — mostly young people, but also gray-haired ones — out of the room and into the hallways to chat and fiddle with their mobile phones.
During his 16-year-tenure, outgoing URJ president Rabbi Eric Yoffie sought to make Torah a renewed focus of the movement, pushing for more Jewish study, Shabbat observance, the adoption of some kind of Jewish dietary ethos, and the practice of mitzvot. To some degree, the push has taken hold, although not always in step with traditional Jewish practice.
The communal Friday night dinner was kosher style, not kosher; there was a single challah at each table rather than the traditional two; and Shabbat candles were lit after evening services, more than three hours after sunset.
At services, instead of the traditional “Maariv” blessing on Friday night, the congregation chanted a piece of prose written by Anne Frank. On Saturday, aliyot went to groups rather than individuals, and the selection from the weekly Torah portion amounted to just 11 verses — excluding the passage from the weekly portion that President Barack Obama had cited the day before in the d’var Torah he used to open his speech. (See page 20.)
“We’re not a halachic movement and we don’t profess to be,” Yoffie told JTA. “We now have a Reform Judaism that is in a certain sense more traditional. We’re also more radical. We live with the contradiction.”
The question for the Reform movement is not how close or far it can get from halachah, or Jewish law, but whether it can interest the 80 percent of Reform Jews who stay away from the synagogue for two or three decades after their becoming b’nai- and b’not mitzvah.
Incoming URJ President Rabbi Richard Jacobs says that if young people are not going to come to the synagogue, the movement will just have to bring the synagogue to them. How that is to be done is not exactly clear. Jacobs, whose own temple hired a rabbinic intern to work outside the synagogue to engage people in Jewish life, is starting by launching a campaign for youth engagement, and going on a listening tour to learn about innovative and successful models.
“If we don’t start thinking differently about youth, it’s certainly not a bright and rosy future,” Jacobs told JTA.
Other challenges the Reform movement faces include the economic downturn that has left some synagogues unable to make ends meet, to the URJ itself, which is six months away from completing an 18-month assessment to decide the movement’s future.
JTA Wire Service
More on: Reform Judaism in transition
Thunderous welcome for Obama
In an impassioned speech to URJ, president defends his record
President Barack Obama delivered an impassioned speech to the 6,700 people gathered at a suburban Maryland hotel last Friday for the Union for Reform Judaism biennial convention.
“Even though it is a few hours early,” the president began, “I’d like to wish all of you Shabbat shalom,” Obama began. “I want to give a shout-out, NFTY I understand is in the house,” he went on, earning a raucous cheer from the National Federation of Temple Youth.
Throwing in a joke about his daughter Malia being in the midst of bar mitzvah season, he borrowed from her resulting Jewish knowledge to begin with a Torah portion, and based the rest of his speech on Joseph’s words, “Hineni,” or “Here I am.”
The words were taken from the Saturday, Dec. 17, Torah portion. “It never hurts to begin a speech by discussing the Torah portion,” Obama said.
10 reasons why Reform biennial drew a record crowd
WASHINGTON — With President Barack Obama headlining the program, approximately 6,700 people attended the 71st Union for Reform Judaism (URJ) biennial, making it the largest ever gathering of Reform Jews and possibly the largest gathering in recent years of any Jewish organization in the United States. So many people attended, in fact, that registration had to be closed for the first time in the event’s history.
Why was this convention different from all the others?
No doubt, Obama was a huge draw, but there were plenty of other reasons to come to Washington, whether attendees were aware of that in advance notwithstanding. Here are 10 of those reasons — some of which might surprise you.
The right in sight at Reform biennial
Voices from both sides of political spectrum featured
WASHINGTON — At the opening plenary of the Union for Reform Judaism biennial, Rabbi Eric Yoffie asked for the help of nearly 6,000 attendees “in one particular area.”
Of the speakers to follow him in Washington, from Dec. 14-18, Yoffie said: “None of these individuals is without controversy, they each have their supporters and their critics in the broader community, in the synagogue world, and in this room.”
“I hope and trust that we can all agree on this — each and every speaker is a guest in our home,” the outgoing URJ president continued. “We should try to treat our speakers and our other guests as we would [treat] guests in our own living room.”
Local synagogues ready to plan the future
Local leaders of Reform congregations returned from the movement’s biennial convention in a Washington suburb floating on clouds, energized, and determined to meet the challenge — set by the movement’s leadership — of more than doubling synagogue participation by high school seniors by the end of this decade.
“We all came back so charged up,” said Rabbi Elyse Frishman, of Barnert Temple in Franklin Lakes. “It was a fantastic renewal opportunity.”
With more than 6,000 attendees, the biennial was the largest ever, the first to be sold out, and one of the largest indoor gatherings of American Jews ever.
“It was amazing,” said Irene Bolton, director of lifelong learning at Temple Beth Or in Washington Township.
Tell-a-Friend ||
Print




















