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‘I want to see our fences become fringes’

Where the secular Jews are

 
 
 

Of the “classical” Jewish secular organizations of the 20th century, today’s survivors include the Workmen’s Circle/Arbeter Ring (www.circle.org), which had more than 80,000 members in hundreds of branches across North America at its height in the 1930s. WC/AR now has close to 10,000 members and maintains a summer camp and an adult lodge (Kinder Ring and Circle Lodge) north of New York City, as well as a network of 10 shules (schools). Historically associated with the Jewish labor movement, it functioned for most of its century-plus life as a Yiddish cultural hub and a “fraternal organization” that bestowed life insurance, health care, and burial benefits upon its members. Today, under new leadership, WC/AR is consolidating its activities and redefining itself as a shule-centered organization. Its Boston group, with a sizable membership consisting mostly of baby-boomers (and the world’s largest Yiddish chorus), provides the likeliest paradigm for the organization’s future.

Whereas the Workmen’s Circle was socialist in orientation, its arch-rivals were communists: the Jewish People’s Fraternal Order of the IWO (International Workers Order), which ran Camp Kinderland and another network of Yiddish-oriented schools and adult clubs or branches. The JPFO and its parent organization were hounded out of existence by the New York State attorney general between 1947 and 1954. The surviving affiliates, along with some newcomers, formed the Congress of Secular Jewish Organizations (CSJO; www.csjo.org) in 1970. CSJO, with 28 affiliates in North America, convenes annually to rub shoulders and discuss issues of secular Jewish education.

Within both CSJO and the Workmen’s Circle are some remnants of the Sholem Aleichem Folk Institute, a third, non-partisan, secular Jewish educational and cultural network that held its own from 1918 until the 1970s. All of these classical secularist groups are marked by a dedication to Jewish social action and the Yiddish language, and they have more and more mixed it up with one another in various collaborations over the past decade. (From 2004-2009, the Workmen’s Circle took on responsibility for publishing Jewish Currents, the IWO-founded magazine that I now edit, until WC/AR’s financial woes forced it to restore the magazine to independence.)

A very different paradigm for secular Jewish organizing was launched in 1963 by Sherwin Wine, an atheist refugee from the Reform rabbinate, who created the Society for Humanistic Judaism (SHJ; www.shj.org). The SHJ uses the standard synagogue model — congregation, rabbinical leader, school — and the standard denominational model — congregational network, rabbinical training program, rabbinical association — and has attracted many synagogue-going Jews who could not bear the cognitive dissonance between God-praising liturgies and their own skepticism. SHJ has thirty affiliates in North America and others in Israel, Australia, Belgium, France, Italy, Mexico, Russia, Uruguay. The movement publishes the journal Humanistic Judaism. Neither the Yiddish language nor socialist politics is a foundational part of SHJ’s culture.

Secularism has a potent Zionist history as well, embodied by, among others, Hashomer Hatzair, the socialist Zionist youth movement that boasts 7,000 members worldwide. With 40 to 50 percent of Jews in Israel identifying as secular, however, Israeli secularists generally seem to feel little need to organize themselves in educational or activist groupings. (When Meretz MK Yossi Beilin tried to launch a Knesset caucus for secular Jews in 2007, only four legislators showed.) The Israeli education system provides Israeli secularists with the Jewish identity-building information that American secularists might seek in a shule, and the line between religious and secular Jewish practice in Israel can be fuzzy. According to a 2008 survey, for example, close to 40 percent of Israeli secular Jews keep kosher most or all of the time, and many if not most Israeli secularists “observe” the Sabbath with family get-togethers, as much of the public square shuts down.

In both North America and Israel, many younger secular Jews are seeking spirituality in ways that have challenged their elders to open their institutions to more and more experimentation with Judaism. High holiday and Sabbath observances are now common in communities that once limited their celebrations to the “historical” holidays of Passover and Chanukah. A secular yeshiva, the Bina Center for Jewish Identity and Hebrew Culture, opened in Tel Aviv in 2007. The secular-religious boundaries are, indeed, becoming porous — and hybrid identities are increasingly common among young Jews.

 

More on: ‘I want to see our fences become fringes’

 
 
 

A secular Jew argues for inclusiveness

Does Jewish secularism have a future? Will there be American Jews half a century from now who are nonbelievers, uninterested in prayer, but nevertheless affirmatively engaged with Jewish identity through culture, language, politics, and community life?

The late, great Irving Howe was doubtful about it. As the author of “World of Our Fathers” (1976), Howe detailed the effusion of vibrant Jewish culture that resulted when Jews became secular, or “worldly,” in the 19th and 20th centuries — yet he believed that the secular movement was “reaching its end,” with its “messianic impulse” perhaps nearing “a point of exhaustion.” Therefore, he concluded, with a sage wink at the Apocrypha (and James Agee), “Now let us praise obscure men.”

 
 
 
 
 
 
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Five months in Kenya

Changing lives for the better — including her own

When you step off a 15-hour plane ride and face the stark realization that you will be without running water, a flushing toilet, electricity, a refrigerator, a microwave, or air conditioning for the next five months, that is when you know you have stepped out of your comfort zone. When you realize that you are unexpectedly the only white person in the village in which you will be living, let alone the only Jew (my coworker thought we were extinct), that is when you know your comfort zone is worlds away.

This is how I spent much of the last half-year, and I loved it. You might think I am crazy, and I will not disagree with you. However, when you throw yourself into a culture half-a-world away from your own, forcing you to challenge your own beliefs, you live in constant fascination at how the world operates so smoothly — after you learn to shower properly with a bucket, milk a cow, slaughter a chicken, and cook over a wood-burning fire, that is.

 

Focus on European Jewry

Belgium: One nation, divided

Few Jewish couples define their marriage as “mixed” just because bride and groom were born and raised 30 miles apart in the same country.

Linda and Bernard Levy, however, live in Belgium, a country whose long experiment in fusing two distinct cultures recently has been showing signs of breakdown. With the Dutch-speaking Flemish half of the country increasingly at odds with the French-speaking part, Belgium’s corresponding Jewish communities are finding themselves at loggerheads, as well.

Linda was born in Antwerp, the capital of Flanders in the self-governing Flemish region. She rarely uses Flemish (similar to Dutch), the language of her youth, since she married Bernard, a Francophone from Brussels. They live just outside Brussels with their three children.

 

Mohammed Hameeduddin: Emphasizing commonality is key

As a long-time resident who is completing his first two-year term as mayor of Teaneck and was decisively re-elected to his third council term on Tuesday, Mohammed Hameeduddin has come to understand and revel in the commonalities between his Muslim community and the Jewish community which he serves, and which helped elect him.

Being on the campaign trail — such as it was, in the run-up to this past Tuesday’s municipal’s elections — highlighted one aspect of that commonality.

“The Jewish people of Teaneck are very similar to the Muslim community, because when you walk in, the first thing everybody makes sure to ask is ‘Did you eat?’ That’s the first question every grandmother asks. It’s very similar if you walk into a Muslim household from south Asia,” says Hameeduddin, whose parents came to America from India in the late 1960s.

 

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Shirah still going strong at 18

Community chorus looks to the future

As Shirah, the Community Chorus at the Kaplen JCC on the Palisades, prepares to celebrate its 18th year with a gala concert on June 10, founding director and conductor Matthew Lazar says he is proud of what the group represents.

“Shirah is a community,” said Lazar, known to his friends as Mati.

“It’s a group of people who care about each other, making music together, and expressing their Jewish identity together. Whatever differences there might be, when we make music together, we are one entity and one people.”

 

Shirah still going strong at 18

Matthew “Mati” Lazar’s passion for Jewish music will be showcased June 1-2 when he visits Teaneck’s Congregaton Beth Sholom as scholar-in-residence.

Adina Avery-Grossman, a member of the congregation who sits on the board of the Zamir Choral Foundation, knows Lazar well.

“My high school-age daughter sang for three years with HaZamir,” she explained, talking about the teenager’s participation in the international Jewish high school choir founded by Lazar.

The Bergen County chapter meets at Beth Sholom.

“It was a spectacular experience for my daughter, choral music of the highest standards.”

 

The ultimate Top Ten list

Myths and misperceptions surround ‘the Ten’

Last week, a U.S. district court judge sitting in Roanoke, Va., made an extraordinary suggestion about the document commonly referred to as “The Ten Commandments.” He suggested it be cut to six. He appointed another judge to oversee negotiations to accomplish that goal.

The case involves Narrows High School in Narrows, Va., a part of the Giles County school district, which is the actual defendant in the case. After Narrows High put up a display of “The Ten Commandments,” the American Civil Liberties Union objected and brought the case to the U.S. District Court in Roanoke. It cited the separation clause of the First Amendment, as well as a number of federal court decisions, as its reasons.

 
 
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