T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
609.1 | long on emotion, short on facts | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Wed Dec 21 1988 01:38 | 29 |
| Mr. Nollet's integration into the Jewish people cannot be questioned, as
he uses much of the same slippery reasoning that is used by so many who
were born Jewish.
> But what of the converts who are not ethnically, or biologically,
> Jewish? For them, they can only be Jewish by dint of religious
> practice.
Mr. Nollet may know more about halacha than I, but I believe that he is
dead wrong here. Someone who is not born Jewish can become Jewish only
by a valid conversion. While the definition of "valid conversion" may be
disputed, it is not simply the observance of some percentage of the mitzvot.
(And I doubt that any Jew observes none of the mitzvot, or that any observes
all of them.)
> And here is the rub: Non-Orthodox conversion simply does not
> RELIABLY ensure that a convert will function as a religious person.
True, but neither does Orthodox conversion. Nothing reliably ensures that
any Jew will "function as a religious person".
> At best, the religious level of such a person will be doubtful. And
> since the biological aspect is clearly non-Jewish, that means, with a
> considerable degree of likelihood, that the convert is not Jewish at
> all.
Again, I challenge Mr. Nollet's definition of "Jewish". I would very much
like to hear any halachic basis for the claim that the validity of a conversion
can be affected by the convert's later "religious level".
|
609.2 | he's defending his own action to himself | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101 | Wed Dec 21 1988 11:46 | 9 |
| It's often noted that a convert, to any cause including a religion,
tends to be the most zealous in his beliefs.
Likewise for Mr. Nollet, when he underwent an Orthodox conversion,
he adopted a particular view that is not shared by most non-converts.
Of course, his view has the property of reinforcing the validity
of his actions, so it is psychologically very consistent.
But that doesn't make it the only valid view.
|
609.3 | .0 is not a new view | RABBIT::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Wed Dec 21 1988 14:50 | 44 |
| > It's really very simple. We live in a world of credentials...
> If you don't have a license issued by the local
>constabulary, you cannot drive a taxi, no matter how able you are to
>do so.
I am licensed to drive in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and that
license is recognized in every other state in the U.S. and in most
other countries. It is also the case that people who qualify as
physicians and lawyers in one jurisdiction have (in many cases)
reciprocal recognition in others. The issue is not about having
credentials or not having credentials, but about reciprocal recognition
of credentials.
> Among the religions of the world, Judaism is...BOTH ethnic...
Religions are not ethnic. Judaism is more than a religion, it is
a culture. The religious component of that culture has been very
important in sustaining the ethnic group, but partly because it
has been responsive to changes in the needs and circumstances of
the group.
>...for "real" Jews don't accept us
I'm not sure exactly what Nollet means by "real." From the context
it suggests something that I don't like, but I'll hold off the flames.
> Israel
>doesn't need anybody, not even George Bush. Israel needs only one
>thing: the goodwill of the Almighty.
This is the kind of thinking that worries me most of all. It is the
kind of zealotry that led to the rebellion of 66 and the Hurban, and
the even more disastrous war of 135. In a slightly different form, it
produced followers for Shabtai Tsvi. One should never rely on miracles.
(I can't help but reflect on two schools of True Believers, one of whom
rejects the legitimacy of Medinat Yisrael because it was not created by
a miracle, and the other, which expects that it will be preserved by
one. Note: I used the term 'True Believers' and not Orthodox. I may
disagree with Orthodox Jews on many things, but I do not consider them
mishuga. The people I call 'True Believers' are ones I consider out of
touch with reality.)
Aaron
|
609.4 | He's entirely wrong, but... | YOUNG::YOUNG | | Wed Dec 21 1988 17:04 | 17 |
| As I read it, by this James Nollet's way of thinking I am a "real"
Jew.
And by my way of thinking he is also a "real" Jew. But I would
have considered him to be just as real a Jew had he only gone through
the non-orthodox conversion.
What he ascribes to me as to what I, as one of the group of "real"
Jews will accept is false. In fact, I think his basic premise is
completely wrong, and I disagree with him about the law or return
amendment.
But he's a Jew and I'm a Jew, and I'm not sure which of us is the
Shlemeel and which the Shlemazel.
Paul
|
609.5 | | HJUXB::ADLER | Ed Adler @UNX / UNXA::ADLER | Wed Dec 21 1988 18:24 | 7 |
| By Nollet's reasoning:
A person who attended Harvard Law (or choose your own) for his JD and
passed the Bar exam would be an attorney. If, on the other hand, he
had attended Podunk Law and passed the Bar, he wouldn't.
/Ed
|
609.6 | So what? | ASANA::CHERSON | Get me back to the icon box! | Thu Dec 22 1988 11:18 | 8 |
| re: .0
The person who commented on certain convert's level of zealousness hit the nail right on
the head. I've spent forty years on this earth as a "biological" Jew, in Israel and other
countries and I would say to Mr. Nollet big deal, so you're going to tell the rest of us
how we should live?
David
|
609.7 | Conversion: a test of sincerity | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Thu Dec 22 1988 12:16 | 34 |
| The problem with requiring the "halachic" approach to conversion
is that, like many other halachic cases, it gets so hung up in detail
and ritual that the underlying purpose is lost, or described as
something known only to the Almighty. But conversion is one case
where I'm NOT going to say, "We don't know why it's so. G-d said
so, and that's it." Halachic conversion is largely rabbinical in
nature; the details are not found in Written Torah.
Judaism has a very different concept of conversion from the more
catholic (small c) religions of the world. Specifically, Judaism,
as a national/cultural religion, does not LOOK FOR converts; we
begrudge them. If you want to convert, you must be sincere and
must earn it. That's very different from some missionary religions
who would go into villages with guns and order people into churches
where they would be forced to take a mikveh dunk (baptism), at which
point they'd be "converted".
Now it's true that halachic conversion does a good job of discouraging
the uncommitted, and that's laudatory. And it's true that some
non-Orthodox rabbis, and I'm led to believe (historically) Sephardic
rabbis, allowed conversion for the convenience of marriage, even
if the person wasn't _otherwise_ committed. That opens up a rathole
too. But it's quite possible to have a non-halachic conversion
process that is sincere, and does the job of weeding out those who
really want to join the Jewish People from those who want an easy
membership. To my manner of thinking, that's what should count.
Of course, the non-Orthodox rabbinate also seems to take that position,
as did Ben-Gurion.
If you're REALLY crazy enough to want to be Jewish, and you really
demonstrate it (by study, etc.), then I, for one, won't question
whether the rabbi who "gave you the final exam" happened to turn
on an electric light on Friday evening. Which would, I understand,
invalidate a conversion per halacha.
|
609.8 | how far back can you prove your yichus? | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Thu Dec 22 1988 12:25 | 26 |
| Here's the rathole I alluded to in .7.
What if your mother's mother's mother's mother, back in Galicia or
Germany or wherever, were a convert? And she was converted by a Reform
rabbi? Now you didn't know your great-grandmother, who never set foot
in the country you now live in, and you've lived you life like any
other member of the Jewish community.
Under the hard-core "who is a Jew" rules being suggested by some,
and at least a common view among the Orthodox, you're a goy, no
better than, say, Karol Wotyla or Yasser Arafat. And you might
not even know it, but if someone were to find records showing what
synagogue she were converted at, you're OUT!
I find this rather revolting. It may be halachically correct, but
in my personal definition of "who is a Jew", I allow a "grandmother
clause". Incidentally, if there's any truth to the Khazar mythos,
then a large percentage of Ashkenazic Jews are descended from a
group whose mass conversion may not have had proper halachic
supervision. Maybe Schneerson's great**30 grandmother was a Khazar.
Who can prove otherwise? Hey, I'm willing to give him credit, but
he doesn't seem to be so flexible. Does he want to adopt the Mormon
policy of tracing geneology? (They do it for a different reason.)
Some of these "absolutes" don't work, and are selectively applied
as a power-play.
|
609.9 | What is the change? | GVRIEL::SCHOELLER | Who's on first? | Thu Dec 22 1988 12:50 | 21 |
| Shalom,
I read through R. Yellin's article in a recent issue of the Jewish Advocate.
He made similar statements to those Fred makes in .8. The validity of those
statements was not clear to me. As I understood it, the suggested change to
the law of return is to change "converted" to "converted according to halacha".
If such is the case, then most non-halachic converts and their children would
still be allowed do to the clauses covering spouses, children and grandchildren
of Jews (since the chances are that one of these would probably apply).
Am I misunderstanding this?
L'hit,
Gavriel
Disclaimer:
I do not agree with the proposed change to the Law of Return. No matter
what the effect on the legal status of non-halachic converts, it tends
to alienate a substantial segment of the U.S. Jewish community. This
question is aimed at understanding the possible situation should the law
be changed.
|
609.10 | exit | MEMORY::RIEGELHAUPT | NORB | Thu Dec 22 1988 13:22 | 4 |
| re .8
Schneerman doesn't have to worry. You only have to prove your
jewishness ten generations back.
|
609.11 | recursive functions | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Thu Dec 22 1988 13:25 | 10 |
| A non-Jewish offspring of Jew is admitted under the Law of the
Return, but as a non-Jew. That includes the child of a Jewish father.
Or of a Jewish mother whose conversion was non-Halachic.
If a Halachic test, however, is made, then the definition of "child
of a Jewish mother" can be extrapolated back any number of generations,
since if your grand**10 mother wasn't Jewish, then you're not, unless
you or someone closer in your matrilieage was converted "according
to Halacha", since any non-Halachic conversion produces non-Jewish
offspring.
|
609.12 | maybe ten generations, maybe forever? | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Thu Dec 22 1988 13:28 | 11 |
| re:.10
The phrase, "to the tenth generation" sometimes is interpreted to mean
"forever". (This was a topic a couple of months ago on the Usenet,
since mamzerus goes "to the tenth generation".) Now I'm sure
Schneerson himself, being a dynast, can go back ten (literal)
generations, but hardly any Jew _but_ a Hasidic rebbe can!
(George Bush, on the other hand, has had his geneology traced back
most of a millenium, showing him as a fifteenth cousin, or so, to
the English Royal Family, not to mention half the "WASPs" in the US!.)
|
609.13 | Whose halacha is it, anyway? | ULTRA::OFSEVIT | David Ofsevit | Thu Dec 22 1988 14:47 | 11 |
| This business of recognizing only conversions "according to
halacha" breaks under its own weight. In a world where there are
multiple overlapping kashrut certifications, and many observant people
won't eat Hebrew National or (U) (where's the compose character for a U
inside an O? :-)) because they don't trust the authorities running
those certifications, how are we any more likely to get consensus on
what constitutes a halachically valid conversion? In other words, if
you and I can't agree on what makes a hot dog kosher, how are we going
to agree on what makes a conversion valid?
David
|
609.14 | Like most double standards, this is very cruel | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Dec 22 1988 16:44 | 26 |
| re .13
David is right, and that is the sad thing about the whole question.
According to (the same) halacha, once a person has converted to
Judaism, no one is supposed to mention the subject again (and,
considering how difficult it is to do so, no on ought to, either - it
is also true that the first three rabbis/teachers a prospective convert
asks are supposed to refuse to teach, on the theory that this weeds out
the non-committed!). However, since no one seems to agree on simpler
matters (e.g., hotdogs), the matter is never, ever laid to rest - no
one ever FAILS to mention that the individual is a convert! Talk about
ways to make a person feel alienated... The convert is made to work
very hard, probably alienate his/her relatives, abide by halachic rules
that most (American) Jews have never even studied, but still is not
welcome in the Jewish community, and is a subject of behind-the back
conversation forever (and all her children, for at least ten
generations, too, if the convert is a woman). Sigh.
Of course, by the same token, once you are satisfied that a person's
mother is Jewish (presumably because she is not a convert, or all of
you would never be satisfied at the same time), it does not matter
what, if any at all, of the halacha the person follows, or even knows
about - a real double standard!
Of course, with a "national unity" government forming in Israel, this
issue will hopefully be dropped!
|
609.15 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Sun Dec 25 1988 09:37 | 6 |
| re .12
> Now I'm sure
> Schneerson himself, being a dynast, can go back ten (literal)
> generations, but hardly any Jew _but_ a Hasidic rebbe can!
I believe many Sefardim can trace their ancestry back several centuries.
|
609.16 | Religious leaders never did like historical facts. | DECALP::SHRAGER | Nous avons chang� tout cel� | Sun Dec 25 1988 10:09 | 28 |
| > ...catholic (small c) religions of the world. Specifically, Judaism,
> as a national/cultural religion, does not LOOK FOR converts; we
> begrudge them. If you want to convert, you must be sincere and
> must earn it. That's very different from some missionary religions
> who would go into villages with guns and order people into churches
> where they would be forced to take a mikveh dunk (baptism), at which
> point they'd be "converted".
I always _love_ this statement! While what you say is correct today, and
I might add a recent development; the historical (as opposed to religious, and
hence most distorted) facts are *quite* different.
JUDAISM was, at one time, the largest "missionary" bunch in the middle east.
In fact, the techniques were similar; namely win the war, forced conversions,
and, in some cases, subsequent beheading. Pretty standard methods to ensure
the survival of the fittest nation.
$ Set Terminal/flame=on (no relation to .7, just general)
I really get sick of this "we're better than them" mentality.
$ Set Terminal/flame=off
Paraphrasing Mahatma Ganhdi:
"I'm a Christian, Hindu, Jew, Moslem, Buddist; and so the hell are all of you!"
-A Non-Religio-Racist Jew
|
609.17 | a small point, but... | VAXWRK::ZAITCHIK | VAXworkers of the World Unite! | Mon Dec 26 1988 15:28 | 10 |
| About all the above cuteness concerning
ancestors, Khazars, R. Schneerson, etc.:
Even if my great-great-...-great grandmother were not Jewish I would
still be as long as my MOTHER is. And she will be if HER mother was.
So you can tolerate quite a bit of non-Jewish ancestry-- on your
father's side, on your mother's father's side, etc... just not on
the direct matrilineal line!
-Zaitch
|
609.18 | cool it | SETH::CHERSON | same as it ever was | Tue Dec 27 1988 09:03 | 8 |
| re: .16
Chill off a bit. This is yet another misinterpretation of conversion
to Judaism. Just because converts have to "work" at their conversions
does not imply a general air of superiority. And while I'm at it
show us some proof of forced conversions, beheadings, etc.
David
|
609.19 | one case | VAXWRK::ZAITCHIK | VAXworkers of the World Unite! | Tue Dec 27 1988 11:37 | 20 |
| re .-1:
> And while I'm at it
> show us some proof of forced conversions, beheadings, etc
As far as I know it was only in the times of the early Hasmoneans that
there were forced conversions to Judaism, and then only of the Edumeans,
erstwhile enemies of the Jews for hundreds of years.
(By the way, the famous King Herod was an Edumean and revenged
himself cruelly upon many of the people who rejected him as an Edumean
and hence unfit to rule as king.)
(But bear in mind that waking up on the wrong side of the bed was reason
enough for Herod to chop off a few hundred heads before breakfast, and
that Herod's opponents had any number of reasons to reject his right
to rule, quite apart from the issue of conversion.)
Of course there is in halachik theory the "forced conversion" of those
Canaanites who wanted neither to flee nor to fight Joshua's army, at
least according to some rabbinical opinions (I THINK the Rambam's, but
I would have to check it out again.)
Whether there is historical evidence that this ever happened is another matter.
|
609.20 | Nesinites? | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Dec 27 1988 12:51 | 12 |
| re .19:
>Of course there is in halachik theory the "forced conversion" of those
>Canaanites who wanted neither to flee nor to fight Joshua's army
Are you referring to the Nesinites? According to the Artscroll Mishna
Yevamos, "The Nesinites were descendants of the Hivite inhabitants of the
city of Gibeon in Eretz Yisrael at the time of Joshua's conquest of the
land. They deceived Joshua into allowing them to convert to Judaism.
Having sworn to accept them, Joshua did not repudiate their conversion
but instead relegated them to wood choppers and water carriers (Joshua,
chapter 9)." The Nesinites were forbidden to marry into the Jewish
community.
|
609.21 | We've done it | RABBIT::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Tue Dec 27 1988 14:24 | 18 |
| RE: .16, .18
There was a period during the reign of the Hasmonean dynasty that
the Idumeans (Edomites) were forced to convert to Judaism, as were
some of the Samaritans and non-Jewish Galileans. Interestingly,
they proved to be very loyal Jews during the War or 66-72. There
is also evidence that the Jews were active missionaries during this
period as well; the Christian emphasis on proselytizing reflects,
in part, the environment in which early Christianity developed.
As far as I have been able to find out, there were a variety of
conversion practices and ways of determining who was a Jew. The
evidence of the Bible is that during the Monarchy, identification
was based on patrilineal descent. Somewhere around the fourth century
C.E. the Amoraim made matrilineal descent or conversion the criterion.
In between, it is not clear what determinants were used.
Aaron
|
609.22 | | TERZA::ZANE | Science = Structured Chaos | Tue Dec 27 1988 18:16 | 22 |
|
I may be asking for it here, but I have just one simple question:
What difference does it make to you whether my _mother_ was *really*
Jewish or whether some Rabbi, be he orthodox or otherwise, has *really*
determined whether or not I am Jewish? Are you really going to treat
me differently from the halachically declared "kosher" Jew?
If so, how? Do I have to sit in the back of the bus? Do I have to
wear an armband? Will I not be allowed into the shul for High Holy
Days? (I'm not asking the government of Israel's opinion or even
a halachic official here, I'm asking yours.) What will change in
our relations or our everyday living?
Just how tolerant a people are we? And if we are tolerant, (and
I say we are, for the most part), then how can it be so important
(to you) who my mother was, or whether I have undergone an orthodox or
a non-orthodox conversion?
Terza
|
609.23 | Things that may be different... | GVRIEL::SCHOELLER | Who's on first? | Tue Dec 27 1988 18:56 | 31 |
| Shalom Terza,
Some things that come to mind which would effect me based on such determination:
1) Would I be counted in a minyan?
2) Would I be allowed aliyot (to say the blessing for the reading of the Torah)
or other honors as part of religious services?
3) Could I be a witness at a wedding (assuming I was otherwise Shomer Mitzvot)?
4) Could I be married under Orthodox auspices? (to an Orthodox Jew or the
daughter of one who cares what her parents think).
5) If I were a woman would my children be able to not worry about the above.
It is not just a matter of day-to-day tolerance. It is a matter real
acceptance AS A JEW by Orthodox Jews. The treatment of gentiles in the
religious aspects of Jewish life is substantially different than the
treatment of Jews. (This should not surprise anyone).
SET FLAME MILD
The answers to the above questions certainly make a difference to me.
If they don't make a difference to you then you don't have a problem.
SET FLAME OFF
L'hit,
Gavriel
I am speaking here as Gavriel the hot-head not Gavriel the moderator 8^{).
|
609.24 | Gibeonites were not converts | VAXWRK::ZAITCHIK | VAXworkers of the World Unite! | Wed Dec 28 1988 00:07 | 26 |
| re .20
>Are you referring to the Nesinites? According to the Artscroll Mishna
>Yevamos, "The Nesinites were descendants of the Hivite inhabitants of the
>city of Gibeon in Eretz Yisrael at the time of Joshua's conquest of the
>land. They deceived Joshua into allowing them to convert to Judaism.
>Having sworn to accept them, Joshua did not repudiate their conversion
>but instead relegated them to wood choppers and water carriers (Joshua,
>chapter 9)." The Nesinites were forbidden to marry into the Jewish
>community.
No, because according to tradition the Gibeonites never converted
to Judaism but only foreswore idolatry. Their status was certainly
NOT that of converts. I was refering to the debate amongst the rabbis
as to under what conditions Canaanites could remain in the Land of
Israel, and I was refering to the theoretical possibility that
some Canaanites "converted" under historical duress, since, according
to this theory, their only alternatives would be to fight the
Israelites or leave Canaan. BUT NOTE: this was not intended as a
serious historical supposition. As far as I know there is no evidence
that any Canaanites actually did this. I was just reacting to the
idea that Jews never/often/sometimes "forced others to convert".
(That we hardly ever had the POWER to do so is obvious! Maybe we
would have proved just as tyrranical and intolerant as others had
our historical circumstances been different.)
-Zaitch
|
609.25 | let's not get _too far_ off the course | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Wed Dec 28 1988 15:25 | 13 |
| This digression on the Roman era et al kind of gets off the course
of _my_ earlier digression which prompted it...
While it _may_ be inaccurate to say that _never_ in history did
Judaism force or even encourage conversion, our modern tradition
clearly does not encourage it. That alone makes us different from
some other religious groups. And since it's the case today, then
I'd posit that our view of conversion should be based on a sincerity
test, not upon one's great-great-great grandmother's yichus or the
legitemacy (in whomever's eyes) of the rabbi(s) who performed the
conversion.
The rest is a distraction.
|
609.26 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Dec 28 1988 15:43 | 9 |
| re .25:
> While it _may_ be inaccurate to say that _never_ in history did
> Judaism force or even encourage conversion, our modern tradition
> clearly does not encourage it.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but my understanding of the current
Reform position is that it encourages conversion of the
non-Jewish partner in intermarriage.
|
609.27 | it's more an effort to make mixed families feel accepted | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Dec 29 1988 12:33 | 21 |
| I don't know if there is an official "policy" amongst reform rabbis to
encourage non-Jewish people who are married to Jews to convert,
although it seems like a good percentage of them eventually do (I guess
they like what they see?), but there definitely *is* a policy to try to
make intermarried people feel comfortable with synagogue life and some
kind of a part of the community. The husband of the current chirperson
of our ritual committee (I'm glad it's not *me* anymore - as the
congregation grows, running that committee is getting to be a fulltime
job) is some kind of Buddhist, but he frequently comes to events at the
synagogue, helps out a good deal with things like carpentry and
repairing siddurim and such stuff, and often even attends services with
his wife - in fact, I wasn't sure he was not Jewish until very
recently, when it happened to come up in conversation (I had wondered a
bit since he did not have aliyahs and things like that). I have no
idea whether he may decide to become Jewish, but he is already a member
of our little community (and a very pleasant fellow, too). Programs to
try to make intermarried people feel comfortable are usually termed
"outreach" programs, and I guess this could be misinterpreted by some
people as some kind of conversion drive, but that is not the way it
works (at least, in our schul).
|
609.28 | Cast them out of shul, they're ripe for the picking | YOUNG::YOUNG | | Thu Dec 29 1988 14:00 | 14 |
| The issue of conversion is a bit different from the issue of
non-Jewish spouses.
If a person in a mixed-marriage is made to feel sufficiently
uncomfortable by a shul, there are various "Jews who belive in
Jesus" groups out there looking for such couples. I think there
is one such group operating in the Shrewsbury/Worcester area. I
don't think it was J4J, but I don't remember the name.
Some interfaith couples become Unitarians, too. For some reason
that doesn't bother me as much as the J4J Christianity.
Paul
|
609.29 | | STEREO::LEVINE | | Fri Dec 30 1988 16:11 | 14 |
| I just happened upon your discussion and find it most interesting.
What would you folks call Ruth, Naomi's daughter-in-law?
I understand that the 'laws' determining 'who/what is a Jew' were
written by men for man. Why then may they note be 'unwritten' by
other men?
Havint lived through three US wars, and remember,weel, what we in
the States were doing for those we managed to rescue from the ovens,
ANYONE who wants to live and die as a Jew must be respected, and
honored for his/her choice. Surely they must be insane. Me? I
was born a Jew, have lived as a Jew, and will die as a Jew, if the
G_D, Rabana---lem has so defined that that is the purpose for my
life.
|
609.30 | Who is a Rav | TAVIS::JUAN | | Mon Jan 02 1989 13:09 | 32 |
| I will turn the discussion to a different aspect of this problem,
the real problem as I see it:
The object of the law is not "who is a Jew" but "who is a Rav".
The change to the Law of Return (modification we call "who is a
Jew") would only affect the ellegibility of single converses that
come to Israel to receive special low interest mortgages and import
tax exempts.
The number of olim per year is now very low, and I doubt this law
would change that number in any way. So as far as the implications
for Israel of this law is absolutely "batel be-shishim" (despreciable).
However it is important for the religious establishment in Israel
to show to all the observant community wherever they are that they
have the power to decide who can make conversions, who can marry
people or divorce married couples. I believe some Orthodox leaders
seeing their message is loosing atraction to the Jewish masses,
want to justify their position and importance by showing the "power"
and muscles they have.
I would rather prefer to see representatives of different tendencies
in Judaism come together and define an inter-tendency standard for
those that want to join the Jewish People that would take care also
the belonging to the Jewish "Folk" as well as rulings and procedures
and so take care of the unity of the comunity. In my view, in that
keeping only the procedural way, we loose the hart of Jewishness.
We should apply, as in many other things, the teachings of the school
of Hillel.
Juan-Carlos Kiel
|
609.31 | The same questions from another source | COGMK::MALMBERG | | Tue Jan 03 1989 13:00 | 62 |
| Copied from BUSINESS WEEK/DECEMBER 26, 1988 without permission
Who is an Indian, and Why Are They Asking?
Native American Artists want a crackdown on 'masqueraders'
"I follow the Red road," says John Redtail Freesoul, a Santa Fe
sculptor. "In everything I do, I am an Indian."
So it would seem. A member of the intertribal Redtail Hawk Society,
Freesoul is the official pipemaker of the Cheyenne-Arapahoe tribe in
Oklahoma. He has taken part in seven sun dances. Freesoul has even
been a spiritual advisor to Indians in the New Mexico state
penitentiary. He says: "I follow the way of earth mother and sky
father."
But if Freesoul promotes himself as an Indian artist or even tells
collectors he has Indian blood, the state of New Mexico can fine him
up to $10,000. Born in New Jersey -- he took his grandfather's name
of Freesoul in 1974 -- he claims to be at least 1/4 Indian. But
Freesoul is not an enrolled member of any tribe recognized by the
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), and thus by New Mexico's standards,
he's not an Indian....
Therein lies a nasty controversy that has split Santa Fe, home of a
lucrative art market that is the nation's third largest....
Under pressure from the NAAA (Native American Artists Assn.), Randall
Childress, asst. attorney general in New Mexico, has been sending
investigators posing as art collectors into Santa Fe galleries to
track down artists who say they're Indians but don't have registration
numbers issued by a BIA-recognized tribe....
Since 1929, it has been illegal in New Mexico to sell non-Indian goods
as Indian. The law was passed to protect Indian artisans from
non-Indian competition and to safeguard tourists from imitations.
Than, a decade ago, as prices for Native American paintings
skyrocketed, "a large amount of people decided magically to become
Indians,".... They demanded to be included in shows open only to Native
Americans, such as Santa Fe's Indian Market, which generates about
$140 million in added business for the city annually....
Few disagree with the law's spirit. The dispute is over its letter,
specifically over how it determines who is an Indian. Tribes set
their own rules, and they vary widely. To be a Navajo, for example,
one must have 1/4th Navajo blood, while Cherokees require only 1/16th.
Making matters stickier, ancestry can be tough to prove, since family
records often were oral. Freesoul says he can't enroll because his
grandparents were not married. Others choose not to enroll for
political or personal reasons.
Freesoul wants the law changed so that a registration number alone
won't determine who is an Indian. But it's unlikely the state will
usurp the tribes' rights. "It's between themselves and their tribe,"
says Alfred C. Harris, deputy director of New Mexico's Office of
Indian Affairs. In fact, a report from his office ... will recommend
tightening that definition by excluding members of tribes that no
longer exist. The legislature is expected to act on that as well as a
recommendation for better enforcement of the law in its next session.
Yet more likely than not, those measures will only serve to divide
Santa Fe's art community even more.
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609.32 | it boggles *this* mind | TRACTR::PULKSTENIS | Are you an intercessor? | Tue Jan 03 1989 14:50 | 48 |
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re: < Note 609.31 by COGMK::MALMBERG >
Shalom,
Thanks for .31. As one who is neither Indian nor Jewish, I
find the parallels interesting, and the solutions elusive.
I agree there can be no disagreement with the spirit of the
law...
>a report from his office (Alfred C. Harris, deputy director of
>New Mexico's Office of Indian Affairs) ... will recommend
>tightening that definition by excluding members of tribes that no
>longer exist. The legislature is expected to act on that
This is just the kind of thing I'd expect the government to
recommend. Am I misreading it? How can the phrase "members of
tribes that no longer exist" make any sense? If members exist,
tribes exist [even if they're scattered], no? Is my brain slow
[after all the holidays and vacation time?]
>Tribes set their own rules, and they vary widely. To be a Navajo,
>for example, one must have 1/4th Navajo blood, while Cherokees
>require only 1/16th
Interesting. The great grandmother of my new daughter-in-law was
a full blooded Cherokee. That would make my daughter-in-law a
Cherokee. Would that mean that my grandchildren [when then come
along] will be Cherokee?
And, since my son is the offspring of two Latvian born people,
he's an American born Latvian. That means his children would
be American Indian Latvians? I could carry that farther...but
it boggles my mind today. ;^)
I'm glad I don't really have to worry about it and that it's nothing
more than interesting speculation...
I'd much rather be Jewish anyway. [My definition, of course ;^)]
Irena
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609.33 | Indian situation is even worse | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Wed Jan 04 1989 11:43 | 31 |
| While a digression, .31 is certainly an interesting one, with a
degree of relevance. HOW relevant, however, depends on perspective.
I think "member of a tribe that no longer exists" refers to the
fact that a tribe can be _legally_ dissolved by the Federales when
it is determined that the members have assimilated! For example,
the Mashpee Wanpanoag lost their reservation (Town of Mashpee) because
they became English-speaking Christians and didn't maintain an active
tribal government. During the Eisenhower administration, the BIA
practiced active genocide, encouraging assimilation and causing
numerous tribes to no longer legally exist. A survivor (who doesn't
want to pretend to be white) is thus excluded under the New Mexico
proposal.
Jewish identity is relatiavely clear in religious terms. If your
rabbi says you're Jewish, then you're Jewish to that rabbi! The
Orthodox rabbinate follows halachic rules, which are purely
matrilineal, plus their own conversions. (The BIA refuses to allow
conversion to "Indian", though. I think that's discrimination.)
What the State of Israel accepts as basis for citizenship is the
political issue, though. Whose rabbis are acceptable for conversion?
If the fellow in .30 thinks he's Indian, but tribal records don't
list him (being bar sinister), then it's analogous to the case of
the Hungarian-Jewish immigrant to Israel who was refused the right
to marry since a) his fiancee' was clearly Jewish and there was
a questionable (not Orthodox enough) rabbi who converted him or
a matrilineal ancestor, and b) he was about to enter the Army and
couldn't leave the country to marry in Cyprus, which is pretty common
among Israelis!
Religion and politics mix as well as sodium and water.
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609.34 | Genocide is murder, not assimilation | MARVIN::SILVERMAN | | Wed Jan 04 1989 12:32 | 12 |
| < Note 609.33 by DELNI::GOLDSTEIN "Room 101, Ministry of Love" >
-< Indian situation is even worse >-
>During the Eisenhower administration, the BIA practiced active
>genocide, encouraging assimilation and causing numerous tribes to no
>longer legally exist.
Genocide doesn't mean "encouraging assimilation". It means
"deliberate extermination of a race or group", where extermination
means murder (-cide means killing, as in patricide).
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609.35 | assimilate the survivors of the Indian Wars | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Thu Jan 05 1989 12:04 | 8 |
| re:.-1
While it is true that the Eisenhower administration policy of
assimilation was not literally genocide, it was in effect the follow-up
to many previous administrations' (esp. Jackson and Grant) policies
of literal genocide. The survivors were to be mopped up via
assimilation, to complete the effect of the genocide.
Sloppy wording on my part. Now back to whatever the topic was.
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609.36 | Still too loud... | HPSTEK::SIMON | Curiosier and curiosier... | Fri Jan 06 1989 00:04 | 8 |
| Re: -.1
I still think that "literal genocide" is also meaningless. If you
make a new definition, please specify it. At least you owe us an
explanation of the term.
Regards,
Leo
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609.37 | I think it's time to stop | DPDMAI::POPIK | NOMAD | Fri Jan 06 1989 11:27 | 27 |
| I have replied to this and other notes on this topic before, and expect
that after this I will no longer. This discussion has gotten out of hand.
We're now talking about Indians and "literal genocide".
The problem here is not whether non-orthodox conversions are valid
or not, but one of EMOTION and basic beliefs. These are the types
of things that reasoned argument will never change, because the
basic assumptions are different.
About a month ago, my wifes aunt and uncle were visiting us. They
live in Jerusalem and are Orthodox. While they are orthodox they
were willing to stay with us, eat off our plates(I insisted they
use paper instead) although we are a non-kosher as you can get without
keeping pork products in the house, which was to me somewhat of
a contradiction to being Orthodox. Anyway I had this discussion
with my wife's uncle. We got nowhere. We'd repeat ourselves, he'd
throw Halacha at me. I'd throw what Halacha I know and "reason"
and compassion at him. It was to no avail. He was convinced he was
right and I was (still am) convinced I was right. It reminded me
of the arguments between the Right-to-Life and Pro-abortion movements.
You cannot win the argument, at best you remain calm and understand
that the other side is not evil, but just doesn't hold the same
values as you do.
My wife was terrified they'd never speak to us again, but they are
really good people, and an argumemnt to a Jew is just a good way to
have fun anyway.
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609.38 | I meant what I said | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Fri Jan 06 1989 11:55 | 8 |
| re:.36,.34 and let's end this digression.
By "literal genocide", I mean literally, per the definition in .34,
"deliberate extermination of a race or group". This was the policy of
many white Americans (in power) towards the Native American population.
Specifics are beyond the scope of this conference, but suffice to say
that it was pretty horrible, and not something for Americans to be
proud of.
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609.39 | When is an ARGUMENT a DISCUSSION, or vice verse | STEREO::LEVINE | | Mon Jan 09 1989 10:21 | 9 |
| .37> You are correct, an 'argument' among Jews is not an argument,
but
an intellectual discussion.......AND the origin of the Talmud, Mishna,
etc. each 'argument' being mothing more than the considered opinions
of two or more people who could not agree on a given term or
interpretation of a term, and having been recorded for others to
see and agree with or not and to literally 'chooose up sides'...
we
tend to forget that these days.
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