T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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135.1 | Leibels | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Better living through A.I. | Tue Jun 03 1986 11:00 | 15 |
| An observation:
I have known Jews who attend Reform synagogues and keep kashrut.
I have also known Jews who belong to Orthodox synagogues, and don't
keep Shabbat. We can discuss the "theological differences" among
the labels, yet those differences are often negated in practice.
Labels often make a convenient rock to hide behind:
"I do foo because I'm a Bar." They also separate us unnecessarily.
Other thoughts: the "Orthodox" do -not- always interpret literally,
and a text may have -many- meanings (although one or two are usually
accepted as the "major opinions"). I wonder if your sources expressed
these views from a felt need to distinguish Orthodoxy from "others."
This doesn't express my opinion of your sources; some Orthodox leaders
do this partitioning as well.
|
135.2 | from a Reform view | DEREP::GOLDSTEIN | Distributed Systems Ideology | Tue Jun 03 1986 14:04 | 29 |
| My understanding (coming from a Reform perspective):
Orthodox interpret the Written Law (Torah) and Oral Law (Mishna)
as having equal importance, as the exact revealed word of God.
Talmud has force of law. Halacha, once accepted, can only be rescinded
by near-unanimity of the Orthodox rabbinate. This results in a
very large body of existing halachot.
Conservative start with the assumption that Written Law and Oral
Law are both important, but permit more interpretation of Talmud.
Halacha can be changed by majority of Conservative rabbinate. Changes
in worship practices, such as male and female seating rules, are
part of this.
Reform starts with the assumption that Oral Law should not have
been written down in the first place, and Halacha is historical
and a useful guide but not force of law. Torah can be interpreted
in historical context; while still the basis of law, some of its
literal dictates can be interpreted by their historical context
and not their literal meanings.
One can be observant or non-observant within any of the above.
Reform permits one to question kashrut, for instance, or at least
modify it -- many Reform will not eat pork or shrimp, but don't
worry about meat & milk, which is not from Torah. They are still
"observant". Some Orthodox do the same, but are not "observant"
in their own context.
fred
|
135.3 | don't "seethe a kid..." | HYDRA::FEINBERG | | Tue Jun 03 1986 14:57 | 11 |
| Just a "two-liner", before (I see it now...) the storm.
Re: .-1
Meat and milk not in the Torah?
Last time I looked, it was there in four distinct places. I assume
Torah didn't change since I looked last ... do you need the references?
/don feinberg
|
135.4 | Labels and Marriage | FORTY2::ELLIS | | Wed Jun 04 1986 06:18 | 30 |
| Re: 135.1
I tend to agree that the labels of "Orthodox", "Reform" and
"Conservative" do unnecessarily separate us. After all, a Jew is
a Jew is a Jew.
Just because a Jew goes to shul every Shabbat and keeps kashrut,
it does not necessarily mean that he is a better Jew than one who
is not so strict. My view is that one is as Jewish as one feels.
What really upsets me are the rules surrounding where you can get
married. I don't know what it's like in the US or Eretz, but here
in the UK, if the parents of one partner were married in an Orthodox
shul while the parent of the other were married in a Conservative
shul, then they themselves cannot marry in an Orthodox shul, hence
restricting THEIR children! This seems grossly unfair, as we're
all Jews, after all!
An illustration of my point is such :
2 friends of mine got married a few years ago, but because her family
couldn't find her grandparents' ketubah and her parents had married
in a Reform shul, then they weren't allowed to marry in an Orthodox
one. However, her brother married a little while after her, and HE
was allowed to marry in an Orthodox shul. My friends have finally
convinced the Authorites that they SHOULD have been allowed to marry
in an Orthodox shul, so they're getting married again in a few weeks
time.
It's a "happy ending", at least, but what a "guntza megilla"!!!
|
135.5 | The ketuba's the thing | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Better living through A.I. | Wed Jun 04 1986 10:16 | 13 |
| Re .4:
That's -weird-. It sounds like the concern is more over whether
both partners are actually Jewish than where the parents married.
Related note: the halacha requires the ketuba as evidence that
a marriage is in effect. This may be why many people hang the ketuba
on the living room wall. If the ketuba is lost, the couple may
not live together until a new ketuba is signed. No, you don't have
to hire another caterer.
--- "I may not play the game,
but I know the rules."
|
135.6 | c'mon now, this isn't a flame topic | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Distributed Systems Ideology | Thu Jun 05 1986 12:53 | 7 |
| re:.3
The idea is not to flame over just what Torah says. Without keeping
a copy in my office today, I recall it saying that you shouldn't
seethe a lamb in its mothers' milk. Which, I assure you, Reform
Jews won't do. We are more likely to eat chicken meat and cow's
udderances at the same meal. Anyway, that's just an example of
where Halacha goes beyond what Reform considers reasonable.
|
135.7 | "It's stupid to do that." | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Thu Jun 05 1986 15:19 | 70 |
| < Note 135.4 by FORTY2::ELLIS >
-< Labels and Marriage >-
"I tend to agree that the labels of "Orthodox", "Reform" and
"Conservative" do unnecessarily separate us. After all, a Jew is
a Jew is a Jew."
I strongly disagree with you Sue. To say that there is no
difference between Orthodox, Conservative, and Reform is naive.
Not only is there a difference, the gap is growing every day. Each
one of us has a level of observance that we feel comfortable with.
It is these differences in observance that make us different from
one another.
Yes, "..a Jew is a Jew is a Jew" and one Jew is not better than
another for being more observant. In the Torah it says that "all
Jews are responsible, one for another". There is a medrash that
says each Jew has a nashuma (soul), and within Adam arishna (the
original man (pardon my transliterations)) the nashuma of every
Jew was found. Each nashuma performed a different function but
they were all part of the same body. And just as a human body, if
one part was ailing the whole body suffered. Since we all are part
of the same body we are all responsible for one another.
$ SET FLAME ON
In spite of this I find that there is a great deal of animosity
between the various camps. What pisses me off is when one Jew
calls another Jew stupid because of their practices. A Jew is not
stupid for keeping the shabbos. That means no travel, no carrying,
no turning lights on or off, etc. A Jew is not stupid for wearing
a kipa and tzitzis. A Jew is not stupid for putting on tifilin
every morning.
And most of all a Jew is not stupid for keeping strictly kosher.
How many times have I heard that it's ridiculous to have separate
dishes, pots, and silverware for meat and dairy. Near the
beginning if Viyikra the laws of kashruth are given. Immediately
after, the reason for keeping kosher is given. "I am the L-rd your
G-d who has brought you out of the land of Egypt, I am holy, make
yourself holy." It is a mitzvah to keep kosher, we are commanded
to keep the laws of kashruth. Also, HaShem references the great
miracle. This is to show the importance of this mitzvah.
$ SET FLAME OFF
Sue continues "What really upsets me are the rules surrounding
where you can get married." Kidushin (marriage) is just as its
name implies, a state of holiness. To give you an idea of its
relative importance, there is a whole volume of the Talmud devoted
to Kidushin.
About two years ago I remarried. Let me ask you something? As an
Orthodox Jew could I have successfully married a woman who didn't
keep a kosher house?... observe the shabbos? ...keep the laws of
family purity? (These are the only mitzvahs a woman is required to
keep.) I don't think so. The marriage probably wouldn't have
lasted more than a year.
BTW Sue, I'm not upset with you. It's just that some of the topics
you talked about pressed some of my hot buttons".
Fred
"Do not do to others what you would not want them to do to
you" - Rabbi Hillel
"It's not easy being green" - Kirmet the Frog
|
135.8 | And you thought women got away scot-free?? | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Better living through A.I. | Thu Jun 05 1986 16:23 | 21 |
| "keep a kosher house?... observe the shabbos? ...keep the laws of
family purity? (These are the only mitzvahs a woman is required to
keep.) I don't think so."
I don't either, Fred. These are the mitzvot which are ENTRUSTED
to women. Women are, in fact, required to keep ALL mitzvot, except
for seven -positive- mitzvot which are performed only at fixed times:
1. reciting the Shema
2. tzitzit
3. tefillin
4. hearing the shofar
5. sleeping & eating in the sukkah
6. shaking the lulav
7. [escapes me at the moment]
Women are permitted to perform these anyway, though some authorities
restrict women wearing tzitzit and tefillin. Nevertheless, Rashi's
daughters (granddaughters?) wore tefillin. Other authorities hold
that women, as a group, have accepted responsibility for shofar
and lulav, and are thus obligated in these mitzvot.
|
135.9 | Let me re-iterate... | FORTY2::ELLIS | | Fri Jun 06 1986 07:43 | 21 |
| Fred,
I am not saying that there is no difference between Orthodox, Reform
and Conservative, I'm saying that these labels are creating a gap
between Jews that I feel should not be there. We have enough trouble
with anti-semitism and people like Hitler, without stabbing each
other in the back because of an "I'm Orthodox and you're not" attitude.
No, a Jew is not "stupid", simply because (s)he obvserves every
law, but (s)he is also not "stupid" if (s)he doesn't; everyone has
their own standards.
If two people love each other enough to want to marry, then they
should respect each other enough to respect each other's ideals
of Judaism and come to some compromise. Marriage is what you make
it, not what people (or religion, for that matter) say it should
be.
BTW, I didn't quite understand what point you were trying to make
in quoting the good Rabbi Hillel????
Susan.
|
135.10 | excuse me for dropping in | TAV02::LEVI | | Fri Jun 06 1986 09:55 | 8 |
| [A bit off the topic...but in response to the last question].
the quote attributed to Hillel (in the negative form) was given
(i am guessing) to contrast the quote (in the positive) by Jesus
200 years later. (didn't someone post Jesus's version here?)
The wording is different and it appears (from a logic view) that the
the meaning is the same. However, they are light years apart.
|
135.11 | And then they stoned him ! | CARLIN::MAHLER | Michael | Fri Jun 06 1986 10:10 | 8 |
|
I believe Jesus said,
"Let he who is without sin,
cast the first stone."
|
135.12 | Thou shall not throw rocks | ALPHA::BLOOMBERG | Neil R. Bloomberg 226-7080 | Fri Jun 06 1986 13:58 | 14 |
|
SET FLAME OFF
excuse me for dropping in. But,
What do Hassidic and Reconstruction Reformist Jews believe?
Also, this may seem like a dumb question, but Do you have to
believe in G-d to be Jewish??
Now I shall hide under table.
Neil
|
135.13 | Conservidoxiform? | HYDRA::FEINBERG | | Fri Jun 06 1986 15:05 | 85 |
| I only have a few moments to type now. I hope I can make some
sense.
Set flame / on
There's an old aphorism, which unfortunately has too much truth
in it. [for those of you "uninitiated", many Hebrew prayers
begin with "Blessed are you, L-rd our G-d, King of the Universe
....", which starts, in Hebrew, "boruch atah HaShem, ...", HaShem
(lit. "the name", being one of the Names of G-d you can write down.
It's pronounced "adonai".]
Orthodox: "Boruch atah HaShem...."
Conservative: "Boruch atah Idunno ..."
Reform: "Boruch atah Idontcare ..."
Reconstructionist: "To whom it may concern ..."
(When I get some time, I'd like to respond here somewhat seriously
and at some length.)
However, the point raised in .-1 (and above) is really at the heart
of the issue.
GRAMPS::LISS, a few replies ago, makes an argument about the neshoma.
It's true; a Jewish neshoma is a Jewish neshoma is a Jewish neshoma.
Great! So we're all Jews, and are all entitled to the respect of
fellow Jews. I agree wholeheartedly. Also, as has been pointed
out, there are so few of us that fighting among ourselves might
be pretty counterproductive. Granted.
However, I have a sense that the biggest difference between the
"movements" (I use that guardedly; I don't consider Orthodoxy any
kind of "movement") is in their attitude towards HaShem.
To oversimplify: The general Orthodox position is that the Torah
is of HaShem -- written and "al pi", Oral. So I don't personally
mess with the halacha, i. e., kashrus, shomer Shabbas, taharas
hamishpocha, etc. These are from HaShem. Who am I to mess with
them?
The basic problem I see is that if you unilaterally decide that
some halachos don't apply, there's then no end to the process.
That is: you don't want to be Shomer Shabbos? ok. You don't want
to keep Kosher? ok. And so on. So who decides where to stop in
the "613"???? You? Or HaShem? Who gave you the right?
There's no way to know, unless you've got a pipeline to HaShem that
I don't know about.
The issue at its "nut", I think, relates to the above: Did the
Torah come from HaShem? Ask yourself.
One of the usual counterarguments to the above is
that people are giving up unimportant mitzvot. Nonsense! Either
it's HaShem's mitzvah, or it's not. I personally do not understand
HaShem's overall scheme of things for the universe; I cannot judge
which are the "important" or "unimportant" mitzvot. Again: I
believe that the Torah came from HaShem.
Let me point out that I grew up in a "Conservative" synagogue.
I tried giving it all up for some years. And I "came back" to an
Orthodox shul, not out of ignorance, but from reading the texts,
and seriously learning something. This is something we gave *great* lip
service to in "Conservative-land", but never did anything about.
My personal reason (though for many years I didn't understand this)
that I stayed in Conservative
congregations for those many years was IGNORANCE, all the while believing
that I knew a lot about Judaism.
As a trial baloon, I would conceptually propose an alternative
definition of Orthodox, Conservative,
etc.: Instead of classifying by the mechitsa, or the seating of women,
let's decide on the basis of the number of hours a week that people
spend learning Tanach, Gemara, etc. Let's propose something like:
"Orthodox: 10 hours or more" "Conservative: 1 to 10" "Reform:
0 to 1". Is this too harsh?
I hope I can get some time to get back to this to elucidate further
in the near future.
/don feinberg
|
135.14 | Feel good? DO something about it!! | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Better living through A.I. | Mon Jun 09 1986 12:00 | 16 |
| If I haven't said it before, I'll say it now:
The halacha, Jewish law, knows -nothing- of Reform, Conserative,
Orthodox, Gastronomic, or Heartfelt. A person is judged by what
he -does- galaxies more than what he feels or calls himself.
Who is a better Jew? The one who -acts- like a Jew should.
And that applies "across the board."
I'll backtrack a moment: It's an absolute joy to awaken in the
morning and be glad I'm Jewish. I awaken every weekday and go to
work. What about the mornings I get angry at my job, or feel like
bicycling the morning away? No diff: the essential is that I -do-
go to the office and do my work. Of course, a poor attitude will
show up in the quality of my work. But what counts is the physical
result. "Ein hadibur, eileh hama'aseh."
(Not the word, but the act [that counts].)
|
135.15 | | ALPHA::BLOOMBERG | Neil R. Bloomberg 226-7080 | Mon Jun 09 1986 13:35 | 14 |
|
RE .13
Don,
The part about a Jew is a Jew is a Jew, is not really true. I have
heard from many Jewish people that you can lose your state of
Jewishness and no longer be consider a Jew. For example, I heard
that in the Late 1970's the rabbinic councel ruled that if a Jew
believes in Jesus, he is no longer a Jew. i have also heard there
are other things as well that have the same affect.
neil
|
135.16 | What Rabbinic councel? | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Mon Jun 09 1986 13:56 | 11 |
| re .15
Neil, I think you may have things in the wrong order. Someone who
believes in Jesus may not become a Jew. A Jew who gives up his
faith, for any reason, is an apostate Jew. An apostate Jew may
"return" at any time to be accepted back into the community.
According to Jewish law I couldn't (G-d forbid) give up my Judaism
if I wanted to.
Fred
|
135.17 | ditto... | HYDRA::FEINBERG | | Mon Jun 09 1986 17:46 | 8 |
| re: .15
Neil,
Ditto: *What* Rabbinic council? And by what binding authority?
/don feinberg
|
135.18 | Reply to .13 | DARTH::SCHORR | | Mon Jun 09 1986 18:03 | 17 |
| Re .13
Your statements are typical of Orthodoxy (religious or otherwise).
i (We) are the keepers of the word and you must follow it exacvtly
as I (we) tell you. What you fail to understand is that which you
practice are laws and traditions based upon interpertations of Torah.
As holy and wise as they were they interpted the word based upon
the times and lives that they lived in. What Conservatisim states
is that the interpetation of Torah continues and that wise and holy
mem exist today and they can and do interpert Torah in light of
the world today while "CONSERVING" the spirit and meaning of the
Torah. I see nowhere in the Torah that the proper Shabbat atire
for a Jew should be based upon the costume of a 17th century Polish
nobelman but there are those who believe that it should. The question
becomes do you freeze your interpertation of Torah or does it continue.
If you believe the former then you follow Orthodoxy, if the latter
then Conservatism.
|
135.19 | OK Warren, You Made My day! | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Tue Jun 10 1986 14:07 | 41 |
| < Note 135.18 by DARTH::SCHORR >
-< Reply to .13 >-
"Your statements are typical of Orthodoxy (religious or
otherwise). i (We) are the keepers of the word and you must follow
it exacvtly as I (we) tell you."
It's unfortunate that you bear a grudge against Orthodox Jews.
When I look at your reply I see nothing but hate and distrust for
any Jews that differ from you. Daily, usually in the evening, I
remind myself of the mitzvah to love my fellow Jew. As I quoted
from the Torah in my earlier note "All Jews are responsible, one
for another". I may strongly disagree with your feelings toward
Judaism but I will never turn my back on you.
" What you fail to understand is that..." Silence everyone!
The Rabbi is about to tell us what we MUST do.
"I see nowhere in the Torah that the proper Shabbat atire
for a Jew should be based upon the costume of a 17th century Polish
nobelman but there are those who believe that it should."
I find this remark inexcusably bigoted. Are you saying IT'S STUPID
to ware a long black coat? Maybe IT'S STUPID to ware a black
hat on Shabbos. Are people who say "gut shabbos" instead of
shabot shalom" ignorant? It all depends on your perspective.
I actually know someone who thinks IT'S STUPID to wear a yarlmulka
to shul.
And lastly, please don't try to describe Orthodox Judaism in
your feeble terms.
Have an ordinary day,
Fred
BTW - You could have come up with a better stereotype of an
Orthodox Jew. How about "Orthodox women are bald under their
shetel". 8^)
(I'll never tell)
|
135.20 | reply to .18 | HYDRA::FEINBERG | | Tue Jun 10 1986 18:53 | 150 |
|
> Re .13
>
> Your statements are typical of Orthodoxy (religious or otherwise).
> i (We) are the keepers of the word and you must follow it exacvtly
> as I (we) tell you.
This is a very difficult reply for me. I am commanded to, and I will
love my fellows. Yet, I have a lot of difficulty with the Conservative
movement. As I left that movement, I feel a sense of loss in the
last few years, in that that I believe that I've
discovered something exceedingly valuable and beautiful that because
of doctrinary differences I am unable to show many others. And
this beauty is under attack at a level to which it's very
existence is threatened.
First, Orthodoxy is a branch of Judaism, not a disease! If you want to brand me,
well, brand me. It seems to me that the above gives a prime accusatory
example.
Well, yes, "the word" is kept....HaShem's word, the words of
the sages, the words of Rashi, the Rambam, Tosefot, and many others. I
am (or we are?) NOT telling you WHAT it is. Rather, I would
strongly urge that one study and read those words for oneself.
Let me ask: WOULD Judaism even BE today if the words weren't kept and
learned??
> What you fail to understand is that which you
> practice are laws and traditions based upon interpertations of Torah.
Sorry. I don't think that I fail to understand this at all. I DO
behave upon interpretations of Torah...but see below.
> As holy and wise as they were they interpted the word based upon
> the times and lives that they lived in.
<<As a point of halacha, we hold the Oral Torah to have been revealed
at the same time as the written Torah. The written Torah can almost
be thought of as a set of "class notes" to the Oral Torah. If you reject
that, we should discuss it. But it should be the subject of another reply.>>
> What Conservatisim states
> is that the interpetation of Torah continues and that wise and holy
> mem exist today and they can and do interpert Torah in light of
> the world today while "CONSERVING" the spirit and meaning of the
> Torah.
You're right. That's what Conservatism *states*.
BUT: I have real reservations about the real *practice*, the movement's
history, and where Conservatism has come in its 73 years of existence. I spent
a total of about 35 years in several Conservative congrgations.
I have some experience with the Conservative movement.
I fail to understand, in the end, what in fact is "conserved" today. What
is it? A *rememberence* that somehow that we're Jews,
all the while acting like assimilated Jews?? This is, to me, a
key point: are we "social" Jews or religious Jews?
I ask, in all honesty: isn't Jewish life observance of Torah? Isn't that what,
at the heart of it, sets Yehudim apart from Hagoyim (no prejudice intended)?
I think that the "spirit" of the halacha, reduced to 25 words or less, is that
HaShem wants people to behave in certain ways. I hope we can agree
on that. Otherwise, we should have a different conversation...
We're talking about how to interpret those wants, and how we should
react to them as people. *That's* what Rabbinic interpretation is
about. And there is, on the other hand, what people actually *do* with
those interpretations.
What Rabbi Shechter and Co. wanted to do in the early days of the Conservative
movement is understandable. However, I personally think that he made a
big mistake, as I pointed out in my last reply: where do you draw the
line? Where's the "fence" around the Torah? Who decides? When does
one stop drawing lines? And when one stops drawing lines, is there
anything left? For example, let me quote from the preamble of the
United Synagogue movement's Constitution:
"[objectives]...are to assert an establish loyalty to the Torah and
its historical expositions; to further the observance of the Sabbath
and dietary laws; to preserve in the Service the reference to
Israel's past ... to foster Jewish religious life in the home
as expressed in traditional observances ..." [1913]
In practice, I fail to see the *existence* of many individual "Conservative"
Jews (as defined by the R. A. and U. S. A. -- never mind Dr. Shechter!).
What do I mean by that?
Jews traditionally have a practice of study and learning. The Conservative
movement endorses that. In practice: how often does a
Gemara get opened in a Conservative
synagogue? So, maybe the Conservative Rabbi has some "new
ideas". But how about individuals studying the 3000 years of thought that
went before the last 73 years of the Conservative movement?
Ask most Conservative Jews about the content of Torah.
My experience is that most can't tell you anything about the Sedrah
of the week at all, and don't care.
So: what information does the typical Conservative Jew have to make up
his mind whether to follow the Conservative Movement or not?
So: What did we conserve?
Example: In my experience, many Conservative Jews have
Passover seders. They would (and I used to, also!) have them on treif
dishes. They would (and I did) skip half
or more of the Hagaddah. Most of the people in attendance couldn't
even read (or mouth) the Hagaddah, let alone understand it.
Again: What did we "conserve"?? Is that kind of a seder worth it? Is this
what one wants for Judaism? Isn't it kind of dishonest? I felt that
when I was a kid, doing it!
Example: "Everyone except tha Rabbi" drives to
the synagogue on Shabbat (and in a lot of cases, the Rabbi does also).
Yeah, I know. I know --- RA policy permits "driving to and from the
Synagogue". BUT: I personally do not know *one single* conservative
lay person who abides by that policy. They go to the bank on the
way to the synagogue, and stop off at the bagel shop on the way
home. Again, what was conserved???? One drives to the shul,
prays (maybe?!?) about ..."mikadesh haShabbat" and then drives
away? What "spirit" has one conserved except to make one stop on one's
favorite shopping day?
> I see nowhere in the Torah that the proper Shabbat atire
> for a Jew should be based upon the costume of a 17th century Polish
> nobelman but there are those who believe that it should. The question
> becomes do you freeze your interpertation of Torah or does it continue.
> If you believe the former then you follow Orthodoxy, if the latter
> then Conservatism.
Gimme a break! I didn't say that or imply that. I don't dress that
way, and I believe that I'm properly attired for Shabbat.
Why does it matter to you if a Jew wears the costume of a
17th century nobleman, or (more likely) the costume of a 17th century
Jewish peasant from the shtetl? They're Jews also! Observant ones,
by the way. I don't agree with them. I do not wear a black coat.
(And the "black coats", for example, the Lubavitchers, I have found
to be the *most accepting* group of Jews!).
No! I DON'T freeze my interpretation of Torah. I read widely. I learn.
I am developing and changing. I have loud arguments about halacha with
many people. My development continues. But I still say "boruch
atta HaShem...".
/don feinberg
|
135.21 | Clarification of .18 | DARTH::SCHORR | | Wed Jun 11 1986 17:06 | 22 |
| Re .19 & .20
Before I have a formal chance to reply to .19 & .20 I think a couple
of my statements were misunderstood so I would like to clear them
up. I will reply to the points of discussion as soon as I get a
chance.
I. I have nothing against Orthodox Jews or any Jews. Whai I do
object to is anyone telling another that they have the "truth",
"light", etc. and that only those who believe as they do are true
to the faith. In this respect a Reform Jew can be as guilty as
an Orthdox Jew. What one accepts for oneself is fine it when one
looks at another and thinks less of him for degrades what he does
because he or she doesn't follow what that person believes to be
the truth.
II. My statement regarding 17th century clothing refers to the
Shabbat atire of certain Chasidic groups. What I was reffering
to is the fact that much of what we do is based upon tradition that
has somehow become law often by ignorance of the law is but it is
blindly followed.
|
135.22 | A word from the original Aphikorus | NONODE::CHERSON | Imagination tires before nature | Wed Jun 11 1986 17:27 | 57 |
| I don't know why I am entering this debate, after reading Don
Feinberg's "thesis" .13 I said to myself that it not worth replying
to, but after .20 I can't resist.
First of all, if he had spent 35 years in the Conservative movement
then he must have been in a fog all that time. Personally, I don't
care for any of the three movements, I find something objectionable
in each one. but one positive characteristic is it's flexibility(I
can hear the "Orthos" now!), what I mean by that is that one can
be as religious as one likes or you can take the opposite route.
Yes, you can keep kosher, observe Shabbat and still remain
Conservative, or you can join a "California Conservative" kehila
and go out to the Dodger game after synogogue, if you so desire.
I happen to believe that religion is a personal process, and that
it is strictly up to the individual how he/she interprets it. In
other words as Billie Holiday succintly put it, ain't nobody's business
but my own.
Some things that I did glean off this discussion which I take exception
to is:
o Because Mitzvah #--- commands me to love you as another Jew,
then I will, even though your dishes are Trayf;you desecrate
the Shabbat;your family is not interested in the Seder;you're
all ignorant of every word in the Torah, etc.,etc. Gee, thanks
guys!
What makes you think that every soul in the Orthodox movement can
quote scriptures right off the top of their heads? I can't claim
to having expert knowledge in Torah, but at least I'm aware of the
weekly Parashah, and I'm not even religious(in the traditional sense
that is).
o The remark made by DARTH::SCHORR re: being Orthodox and dressing
up in 17th century clothes. I think that this remark was a
little off-base and unfair. Most Orthodox are not Chassidim,
and even many Chassidim do not dress in this fashion.
I've stopped going to synogogue, and have decided to spend Saturday
a.m. reading the weekly Torah portion, I find it much more satisfying,
after all as the saying goes "Limuday Torah neged kulam". Besides,
I'm not convinced that prayer moves spiritual forces in the universe
good deeds seem to go farther in affecting good/bad karma.
The best course for myself is to remain an Aphikorus, I mean the
primary translation of Aphikorus, i.e. one who questions. The meaning
of this word has been twisted to translate to heretic, but the real
Hebrew translation for heretic is the word Kaffir(also the same
word in Arabic). In fact I intend to impart this advice onto my
daughter, be an Aphikorusit, question everything, don't accept anything
as the "gospel", search for yourself what is true or what you perceive
as the truth.
David
|
135.23 | | ALPHA::BLOOMBERG | Neil R. Bloomberg 226-7080 | Thu Jun 12 1986 09:22 | 12 |
|
re .16,17
The counsel i was refering to was the Counsel of Conservative Rabbis
that met in NY in the late 1970's to come up with this rulling.
If it is all important, i can look up my sources and find out the
exact date and location and all the details. The ruling was published
information.
nb
|
135.24 | Difference of opinion | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Thu Jun 12 1986 13:15 | 22 |
| re .21
Warren, perhaps I misunderstood your point. However, one thing
remains. I think you are wrong! That's OK because you think
I'm wrong. And the Reform think both of us are wrong.
These differences of opinion make for interesting debates. After
so many secular discussions, I'm glad to see some religious topics
in this conference. I would enjoy discussing whether or not the
word of Ha'Shem is open to interpretation. A discussion is good,
just as long as we don't forget that we are debating another Jew.
I noticed in todays news that in Israel a shul was burnt down
over a difference of opinion. It is inexcusable when one Jew
raises a hand against another Jew.
I'll e-mail the article to anyone who wants to see it. (I will
resist the temptation of posting it here under the heading
"Anti-clerical bullies".) 8-)
Fred
|
135.25 | A threat to Am Yisrael | NONODE::CHERSON | Imagination tires before nature | Thu Jun 12 1986 13:53 | 15 |
| re:.24
Concerning the burning of the synogogue, I agree that it was stupid
and deplorable. The very thought that the "cultural war" has been
raised to this level makes me sick. Not so ironically it was the
synogogue of the Rabbi who had been leading the "terrorist raids"
on the bus shelters.
Fred, as deplorable an action such as burning a synogogue(an action
only worthy of a Nazi), the rise of "Jewish Khomeiniism" equals
it and must be stopped or democracy will cease to exist in Eretz.
If it was up to the ultra-orthodox you wouldn't be able to glance
at a Playboy.
David
|
135.26 | An Opinion | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Thu Jun 12 1986 14:23 | 6 |
| Re .25
Your entitled to your opinion.
Fred
|
135.27 | | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Better living through A.I. | Thu Jun 12 1986 14:45 | 18 |
| If it were up to the -feminists- you wouldn't be able to glance
at a Playboy. Case: the MIT Coop Lobby Shop, a small grocery, was
"persuaded" to not carry certain "adult magazines" (I use the term
loosely) a few years ago. Certain groups on campus did not like
the contents.
My point? It seems like the "ultra-Orthodox," whomsoever they be,
are held responsible for all bondage, and the "secularists" are
the libertarian heroes of the press. In fact, many of the latter
are -also- trying to coerce the rest of society to act in accordance
with their views. Witness the socialist kibbutzim which secularized
European and Sefardic immigrants in the early days of the state.
Let's PLEASE stop looking for convenient generalizations with which
to tag people. On that note, I make my exit. Shavuot begins in
a few hours (DEC Daylight Time). Chag Sameach, and Farewell.
--- S.
|
135.28 | KNOW the facts! | NONODE::CHERSON | Imagination tires before nature | Thu Jun 12 1986 15:43 | 33 |
| re:-1
Too bad this all has to start before Shavuot. As a former
kibbutz(which kept kosher, and did not have public functions on
the Shabbat)member, I can tell you with all confidence that you
don't know what you are talking about.
The kibbutz movement had nothing to do with "secularizing" anybody,
the Europeans who settled on kibbutz were secular to begin with,
and I think the same can be said for the Sephardim. If the kibbutzim
"secularized" society then how do you account for the religious
kibbutzim, or were you ignorant of their existence?
I've stated this before in a previous note, and I'll state it again
- in Israel you are not dealing with a group of kindly old Chassidic
sages, rather that there is a group of people who, for their own
selfish purposes are out to undermine Israeli society and democracy.
I am not condemning all of the Orthodox movement, but only those
that have manipulated the system for their own political gain.
I think that you are all too used to leaders such as the Bostoner
Rebbe(a good person, I used to work for him once) or Rav Soleveitchik,
Orthodoxy in Israel has a much different face.
By the way, the total population of the combined kibbutzim amounts
to (maximum)3% of the population of the country. Secularism is
a movement(if one can describe it as such)that cuts across all societal
lines. Don't go off making remarks like you did before knowing
the facts.
Hag Sameach,
David
|
135.29 | Civil Rights or else... | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Thu Jun 12 1986 16:48 | 24 |
| re .28
Here is a short quote from the end of the article I referenced
earlier.
"Yossi Sarid of the anti-clerical Civil Rights Movement was
expelled from the Knesset hall after a shouting match in which he
called ultra-Orthodox legislator Menachem Porush a ``thug'' and
``Cossack.'' Porush announced last week he planned to spray-paint
a bus shelter across from his home."
Now I ask you, does this Yossi Sarid have both his oars in the
water? And this Civil Rights Movement doesn't sound too friendly
either.
:-) We will see that you can worship as you please, even if we
have to burn your shul to do it. (-:
Chag Sameach
Fred
(A_Thug_and_a_Cossack)
|
135.30 | The wrong perspective | NONODE::CHERSON | Imagination tires before nature | Thu Jun 12 1986 18:46 | 34 |
| re: -1
Fred, I think the problem is that you are still seeing the issue
from an American perspective. In this case Yossi Sarid happens
to be 100% correct in describing Menachem Porash as a "thug and
a Cossack"(maybe I would have used different terms).
You can not shove your personal(not you personally, so take it easy)
perception of morality down people's throats. That is certainly
no way to gain converts, or at least make your position more amenable
to others.
The Civil Rights movement developed out of opposition to the
manipulation of some in the Orthodox estabilishment in Israel.
Things that we take for granted such as women's rights here in the
Galut, are prevented by these same people. So the only alternative
was to form another party. Yossi Sarid was a former member of the
Labor party, and from what I recall he is a fairly competent and
respected politician. In fact I was unaware that he had switched
parties.
By the way, angry shouting matches and name-calling are de rigeur
for the Knesset, nothing unusual at all. Your probably too used
to the nice Robert's Rules of Order that is followed in the U.S.
Congress.
Before I went to live in Israel I had this childhood image of Jewish
clerics, you know comforting, always there with the right advice,
etc. Now recently when my mother-in-law asked me if I thought Rabbis
were corrupt as a class, I replied "no, only 50% of them are".
Still Hag Sameach,
David
|
135.31 | Ein brera | SHIRE::GREG | Your friendly contact in Geneva | Fri Jun 13 1986 03:55 | 13 |
| It had to happen. There was really no choice. How long could 80%
or so of a population be subject to the blackmail of the religious
parties. How much more money had to be poured into the religous
coffers if not they would bring down a government? No El Al flights
on sabbath, no movie theaters, no sports. Although burning a shul
ain't kosher neither is burning a bus stop or imposing your whim
on the vast majority of the population.
Fred I suggest you go and live in Israel and apply the "US Bill
of Rights" to a council of wise Elders and come back to talk with
us about it.
Perhaps this would be the right time for the electoral system to
be finally remade. Thirty political parties in the last natioanl
elections for 4.5 million people?
|
135.32 | | DARTH::SCHORR | | Fri Jun 13 1986 10:37 | 4 |
| Who knows what the United States would be like if we had a Parlimentary
form of Government?
|
135.33 | The "Not Yet" Approach | LOGIC::DESMARAIS | Anything you can do, I can do Meta | Fri Jun 13 1986 14:31 | 80 |
| The following is excerpted from a book by Rabbi Joseph Telushkin
(citation on request). I think it's a particularly nice way to
look at the differences between us -- a way to see them as just
steps in the same direction. Comments?
/Joyce ("Not_there_yet_but_working_on_it")
When Franz Rosenzweig, one of the leading Jewish thinkers of the
twentieth century, was once asked if he put on tefillin, he
answered, "Not yet." At that point in his life, Rosenzweig did
not feel spiritually ready or comfortable with the idea of
putting on tefillin -- but he did not believe his unreadiness
should, or would, be permanent. By answering "not yet" rather
than "no," Rosenzweig made known his intention to continue to
grow spiritually. Though he was not yet ready, he foresaw the
day when wearing tefillin would be a natural expression of his
Jewish growth.
In order to elevate themselves to the task of perfecting the
world, the Jewish people must begin to answer questions about
their personal observance with Rosenzweig's "not yet." "Do you
follow the Jewish command to give ten percent of your earnings to
tzedaka?" "Not yet, but I am giving more of my income each
year." "Do you observe the Shabbat in your household in full
compliance with Judaism's command to make the Shabbat day holy?"
"Not yet fully, but we have started to recite the Kiddush and the
Birkat Hamazon at our Shabbat meals. We have also been able to
liberate our family from reliance upon the television, and we
will soon be starting a Shabbat discussion group with our
friends." "Have you done all that you can for Soviet Jewry?"
"Not yet, but the whole family recently participated in a Soviet
Jewry demonstration, and we are beginning to correspond with a
Russian Jewish family awaiting a visa." "Do you observe the laws
of Kashrut?" "Not yet entirely, but we no longer eat pork or
shellfish."
The profundity of the "not yet" answer is that it is applicable
to the Jew who has tried to observe Judaism for many years as
well as to the Jew who has just begun to incorporate Judaism into
his or her life. "Do you follow the laws of tzedaka?" "Not yet
fully. Though I give ten percent of my income to tzedaka, I do
not give enough time to good causes." "Do you observe the
Shabbat in your household according to Jewish law?" "Not yet
fully. True, I and my family do not violate any of the Shabbat
laws, but too often I sleep away most of the day. So I am
starting a chavruta (learning with a friend) every week after
synagogue to make sure that I keep up with my Jewish studies."
"Have you done all that you should for Soviet Jewry?" "I have
not yet done enough. True, for years I and my family have gone to
demonstrations and written letters, but now we have become active
in the Student Struggle for Soviet Jews and the National
Conference on Soviet Jewry." "Do you observe the laws of
Kashrut?" "We do observe Kashrut, but not yet in all its moral
ramifications. So we are lending support to groups which protest
and fight inhumane forms of hunting. Also, since there is in our
community a large university where very few of the Jewish
students keep kosher, either because they do not know the reasons
for keeping Kashrut or because it is too expensive, some friends
and I have made it known to the Hillel rabbi and to local Jewish
student groups that we have an open home where students are
invited for a Shabbat or weekday meal."
If Jews, individually and communally, were to start answering
"not yet," it would remind us that in the search for G-d and
goodness all of us are "not yet" there and that we therefore need
each other's help. To paraphrase Jakob Petuchowski, Professor of
Jewish theology at Hebrew Union College, this approach to Judaism
will generate unity among all Jews whose pattern of religious
observance derives from a desire to hear G-d's commandments. The
"not yet" approach has inspired one traditional rabbi to write:
"When someone who eats in a non-kosher restaurant orders beef
instead of pork because he keeps kosher, I can no longer laugh at
him. His choice was occasioned by a sort of low-level, yet very
genuine concern not to eat of non-kosher beasts. ... When he
refuses butter on it and milk with his coffee because of 'seethe
not the kid in its mother's milk,' I respect him still further.
And if he orders a scalebearing fish instead of meat, I see him
struggling honestly to do G-d's will."
|
135.34 | thank you... | HYDRA::FEINBERG | | Mon Jun 16 1986 11:47 | 7 |
| re: .-1
thank you. I think that quote comes from "Eight (or "Nine", depending
on the edition!) Questions People Ask about Judaism". It's a nice
one.
/don feinberg
|
135.35 | | LOGIC::DESMARAIS | Anything you can do I can do Meta | Mon Jun 16 1986 15:52 | 3 |
| Right you are, Don. That's a book that never seems to wear thin.
Joyce
|
135.36 | A sobering "Who is a Jew?" story. | BAGELS::SREBNICK | David Srebnick, NCSS, LKG1-3/B19 | Thu Jun 19 1986 20:38 | 45 |
| I have an interesting story that deals with the issue of
Orthodox/consrevative/reform/who is a Jew anyway, lest we become
too judgemental...
This story was told in the Yeshivahs of Eretz Yisrael by Reb Yakov
Radintchkover. It is a selection from the book "Unlocked Doors" by
Danny Siegel, (c) 1983, Town House Press, Spring Valley, NY. I
paraphrase the story for copyright reasons (except for it's conclusion,
a direct quote).
A common, everyday Jew died and subsequently appeared before the
Heavenly Court, sometime after the flames of Nazi Germany had been
extinguished.
He approached the bench, and all was silent but for the footsteps
of Selig.
G-d asked Selig: Did you study the Torah?
Selig answered: Nayn, I did not study Your Torah.
G-d asked: Did you davvin [pray] every day?
Selig answered: Nayn, I did not davvin.
G-d roared: Did you keep my Holy Shabbos?
Selig answered, as expected: Nayn.
The Judge yelled: Get out of here, go to Gehennom!! Be gone, Selig.
Selig turned to leave, but paused as he got to the door. He turned
and said: Before I leave, I have a question for you, Hashem.
G-d, always curious, sat and listened.
[and here's the quote]
"'Tatenyu, bei Hitler bin ich a yid -- bei dir, nayn? -- Father,
for Hitler I was a Jew, and for You I am not?'
'Astounded and drained, G-d sat in silence, that divine silence
of confusion and mystery, as Selig waited for his answer. For as
long as it takes for G-d to come to His senses, He sat in silence,
then whispered, 'Halachah K'Hitler -- Hitler was right.'"
|
135.37 | | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Fri Jun 20 1986 10:25 | 5 |
|
It is entries like the previous that help me to never having to
write protect a note from subsequent entries.
Mordechai
|
135.38 | Oh, no. I hope you didn't take that personally! | BAGELS::SREBNICK | David Srebnick, NCSS, LKG1-3/B19 | Sun Jun 22 1986 23:30 | 56 |
| re .36 and .37
I didn't mean for people to take my story personally. I hope no
one did.
What I hoped to accomplish is to put this note on a different track.
Let's not:
- argue about who's right (no one knows for sure)
- judge the various movements based on the level of observance
or education of their constituency
Let's instead use this note as a way to educate each other about
our differences. Let's ask questions and have them answered.
In that light, I'd like to respond to two previous questions. The first
is a "who is a Jew" question back a few responses. It concerned the
"once a Jew, always a Jew" issue in the light of conversion out of the
Jewish faith.
Shortly after the "Law of Return*" was enacted, Brother Daniel
attempted to become a citizen of Israel under this law. Brother
Daniel was a Jew by birth who converted out of the faith in order
to escape the Nazi persecution. He lived as a monk (in a monastery
and everything) until the end of WW-II.
It was the decision of whatever legal entity ruled upon this (forgive
my ignorance) that Brother Daniel was not a Jew under this law.
As I understand it, there are a few things that Jews are not allowed
to do, even under pain of death. One of those is to renounce G-d
publicly. Brother Daniel's conversion was considered a public
renunciation of G-d.
(Anyone who could shed more light on this -- it would be appreciated.)
* A law in Israel which basically states that any Jew can be granted
immediate citizenship in Israel upon moving there, if s/he so desires.
Another question was asked about Reconstructionist beliefs. From
the same work that I quoted in 135.0, I bring you this about
Reconstructionism:
- Human beings wrote the texts of Tradition
- They are not divine, rather they reflect the thinking
of the people who wrote them; they are no better or worse
than any others. We are not the chosen people.
- Jewish Law should be observed because it is the custom (mihnag)
of our People. Laws are changed when they become offensive,
or are no longer used. [I'm not sure what the author meant
by this]
- If we ever organize ourselves such that there is a real
community (as in medieval Europe), then it would make
sense to decide upon the various issues in Jewish law
as a community. Until then, individuals make these decisions
(which is as it should be in the area of ritual). It would
be more desirable to decide moral principals as a community,
and that is and end to which we should work.
|
135.39 | Reconstructionism - a historical note | 11761::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Thu Nov 13 1986 18:45 | 30 |
| Reconstructionism was a movement that started at the Jewish Theological
Seminary (Conservative). R. Mordecai Kaplan, a teacher at the Seminary,
suggested that a close examination of Jewish history would show that:
1. Judaism has always been more than a religion. It is a culture
in which religion has an important, but not always dominant place.
(This is detailed in what is probably his best known work, Judaism
as a Civilization.) Thus, one cannot analyze Judaism only in terms of
its belief structures, or just by its historical artifacts for these
show only part of the story.
2. Judaism has undergone some very major changes in the course
several thousand years. As the people shifted from a nomadic to
an agricultural life beliefs and practices shifted, but continuity
was retained by transforming, rather than abandoning, tradition.
The centralization of the cult at Jerusalem, the effects of the
Babylonian exile, the conquest by Greece, all produced significant
changes in Judaism, according to Kaplan. The best documented of
these "reconstructions" was the development of Rabbinic Judaism
(because we know quite a bit about what preceded it). Kaplan
suggested that we are in the midst of another "reconstruction"
(See his Greater Judaism in the Making).
Kaplan taught for many years at the Seminary, initially attracting
a large following. Later, the Seminary administration shifted support toward
more traditional forms of interpretation and a number of Kaplan supporters
decided to leave the Conservative Movement and found a new seminary dedicated
to the approach he had initiated. It should be noted that Kaplan resisted
this for many years on the grounds that fragmentation hurts the Jewish people;
we should find ways of discussing our differences within a common framework.
|