Shmuley Boteach Rabbi
Shmuley Boteach, whom Newsweek and The Washington Post call ‘the most
famous Rabbi in America’, is the international best-selling … [More] author of 29 books, and will shortly publish The Fed-up Man of Faith: Challenging God in the Face of Tragedy and Suffering
By now you’ve heard about the Pew Research poll, published this week, which concludes that American Jewry is on its way to oblivion.
No need to wait for Hassan Rouhani of Iran to drop a bomb on us. We’re
doing an incredibly fine job of destroying ourselves, thank you very
much.
What all this shows is that what my friend mega-philanthropist Michael Steinhardt and I have been saying for years is unfortunately correct. Despite the untold billions that have been sunk into Jewish communal outreach for the last half century, it has barely made a dent in the rate of assimilation.
What all this shows is that what my friend mega-philanthropist Michael Steinhardt and I have been saying for years is unfortunately correct. Despite the untold billions that have been sunk into Jewish communal outreach for the last half century, it has barely made a dent in the rate of assimilation.
Here are three ways to give mouth-to-mouth to our dying community.
Stop creating a divide between the Jewish and non-Jewish worlds.
Today’s
model of outreach is fatally flawed seeing as it necessarily forces a
choice on non-affiliated Jews to choose between the Jewish and
mainstream worlds. So, a student at University who hangs out with his
non-Jewish friends is encouraged to stop going only to mainstream
University events and come instead to Hillel or Chabad. I’m not knocking
that. We need
Jewish organizations that invite Jews in to classes, religious
services, lectures, social events, and debates. But far more effective
is not forcing the choice on them in the first place. Bring Judaism instead to where they are at.
On campus, do colossal events that bring Jewish values, teachings, and
wisdom to all students so that young men and women are not forced to
choose.
Last week, in collaboration with Rabbi Yehuda Sarna of Hillel at NYU, our organization, This World: The Values Network,
staged a huge event of over 1000 Jewish and non-Jewish students that
had me moderating a discussion on genocide between Elie Wiesel and Paul
Kagame, the President of Rwanda.
In a similar manner, bring Judaism to the culture via TV shows, plays, and music
that are mainstream and intended for all audiences. Some examples
include the new Shlomo Carlebach-based musical ‘Soul Doctor,’ produced
by
Jeremy Chess, that is currently running on Broadway, the music of
Matisyahu, and the TV show I hosted on TLC called ‘Shalom in the Home.’
Like the Kabbalah movement, bring Judaism and Jewish values to everybody
instead of just focusing on the Jews. We are not a proselytizing faith,
but that is no excuse not to make the Jewish people a light to all
nations.
Fix the broken and boring synagogue service.
The
overwhelming number of Jews who still step into a Synagogue do so for
three days of every year and then swear they will never come back.
Sometimes I think we should ban secular Jews from High Holy Day services
and shift their attendance instead to Simchas Torah and Purim. But
since that’s not going to happen, let’s take the focus off of cantorial
recital yodeling, which makes congregants into spectators, shift the
teachings away from dry sermons, and focus instead on having services
engage the heart and
mind. Carlebach-style services that make people sing real spiritual
melodies rather than listening to opera is the way to go. Rabbis putting
out moral questions between each of the seven readings of the Torah on
Saturday mornings is a means by which to influence congregants to apply
the lessons of the Torah to their everyday lives, making Judaism
relevant rather than aloof. And don’t forget a fantastic Kiddush with
fine single malt whisky. Can’t afford it? Build less elaborate buildings
and have a more elaborate cholent and sushi.
Make rabbinical and Jewish day school teaching professions fashionable again.
You
basically become a Jewish day school teacher or a rabbi after your
fifth rejection from Harvard Business School. There is no social clout
in it and you get paid in cholent beans. How do we change all this? By
having AIPAC, Federation, Birthright, and other prestigious Jewish
organizations respect
Rabbis at their major conventions rather than having them say the
blessing on the bread. How do we ensure they can make more money? Take
the ten smartest Jewish hedge fund managers and have them create a fund
open only to Jewish activists where their money will be managed by the
smartest people in the world so that a teacher in cheder will have
enough money to marry off his children without having to moonlight as a
bar bouncer. The more money rabbis and teachers make, without putting
strains on the communal purse, and the more clout these professions
enjoy, the more talent we will attract to those professions that are
supposed to be inspiring our youth.
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