Orthodoxy
The Future of Judaism?
by Daniel Pipes
Until
the eighteenth century, there was basically only one kind of Judaism,
that which is now called Orthodox. It meant living by the religion’s
613 laws, and doing so suffused Jews’ lives with their faith.
Then, starting with the thinker Baruch Spinoza (1632-77) and moving
briskly during the Haskala (“enlightenment”) from the
late eighteenth century, Jews developed a wide variety of alternate
interpretations of their religion, most of which diminished the
role of faith in their lives and led to a concomitant reduction
in Jewish affiliation.
These
alternatives and other developments, in particular the Holocaust,
caused the ranks of the Orthodox to be reduced to a small minority.
Their percentage of the world Jewish population reached a nadir
in the post-World War II era, when it declined to about 5 percent.
The
subsequent sixty years, however, witnessed a resurgence of the Orthodox
element. This was, again, due to many factors, especially a tendency
among the non-Orthodox to marry non-Jews and then to have fewer
children. Recent figures for the United States published by the
National Jewish Population Survey point in this direction. The Orthodox
proportion of American synagogue members, for example, went from
11 percent in 1971 to 16 percent in 1990 to 21 percent in 2000-01.
(In absolute numbers, it bears noting, the American Jewish population
went steadily down during these decades.)
Should
this trend continue, it is conceivable that the ratio will return
to somewhat where it was two centuries ago, with the Orthodox again
constituting the great majority of Jews. Were that to happen, the
non-Orthodox phenomenon could seem in retrospect but an episode,
an interesting, eventful, consequential, and yet doomed search for
alternatives, suggesting that living by the law may be essential
for maintaining a Jewish identity over the long term.
These
demographic thoughts come to mind on reading a recent article in
the Jerusalem Post, “US haredi leader urges activism,”
by Uriel Heilman, in which he reports on a “landmark address”
in late November 2004 by Rabbi Shmuel Bloom, executive vice president
of Agudath Israel of America. Agudath, an Orthodox organization
with a stated mission to “mobilize Torah-loyal Jews for the
perpetuation of authentic Judaism,” has a membership ranging
from clean-shaven men to black-hatted ones (the haredi), from Jews
educated in secular universities to full-time, Yiddish-speaking
students of the Talmud.
Rabbi
Bloom told an Agudath audience that Jewish demographic trends imply
that American Orthodox can no longer, as in the past, bury themselves
in their parochial interests and expect non-Orthodox Jewish institutions
to shoulder the major burden of communal responsibilities. Rather,
the Orthodox must now join in, or even take over from their non-Orthodox
co-religionists such tasks as fighting antisemitism, sending funds
to Israel, and lobbying the U.S. government. “The things we
rely on secular Jews for,” he asked, “who’s going
to do that if the secular community whittles down? We have to broaden
our agenda to include things that up until now we’ve relied
upon secular Jews to do.”
He
exaggerates, in that some Orthodox Jews in the United States have
been prominently involved in both national (think of Senator Joseph
Lieberman) and communal affairs (Morton Klein of the Zionist Organization
of America comes to mind). But he is accurate in so far as Orthodox
institutions have generally stayed out of the American fray except
to pursue their narrow agenda.
Others
in Agudath agree with the need for the Orthodox to broaden their
ambitions. David Zwiebel, the organization’s executive vice
president for government and public affairs, notes that, “With
our growing numbers and the maturing of the community and the greater
self-confidence that comes with that maturity and those numbers,
there’s no question that we need to at least recognize that
there may be certain responsibilities that now have to shift to
our shoulders.”
Heilman
understands this intent to assume a greater role in national and
Jewish life as “a sign both of the success of the American
haredi community in sustaining its numbers and its failure to translate
that success into greater influence in the community at large.”
It
also could portend a much deeper shift in Jewish life in the United
States and beyond, being a leading indicator of Orthodoxy’s
political coming of age and perhaps even its eventual replacement
of non-Orthodox Judaism.
Daniel
Pipes (www.DanielPipes.org)
is director of the Middle East Forum and author of Miniatures (Transaction
Publishers).
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