Monday, February 1, 2010

American Jewish Explosion

by Joshua (Gedalyah Chaim) Reback

Seven years ago in his New York Times article, A Jewish Recount, JJ Goldberg attacked the United Jewish Communities for promoting population surveys that misrepresented the American Jewish population as declining. He cited inconsistent standards for defining a Jew in demographic surveys, only assessing religious attitudes of subcultures in the community, and inflating the number of intermarriages in the country. The motivation, in his eyes, was to shock American Jews into greater observance.

He was right then, and he is right now. Worse yet, this policy of alarm has not produced results in reversing the assimilation trends that were then exaggerated but still a profound problem.

Without delving too much into how the American Jewish community needs to adjust its approach to demographics, it is important to note these myths have hurt the policymakers of dozens of Jewish organizations. Most importantly, the underestimation of the community's size and utter failure to recognize even scant aspects of people's personal ethnic identities have hurt religious leadership's ability to accommodate the growing demand for conversions in the United States from children of mixed marriages, which are high with or without statistical inflation.

I am personally one of those Jews who has a Jewish Father, but whose Mother does not come from that background. Speaking with Rabbis at major English-speaking post-college Yeshivas and Midrashot in Jerusalem, they estimate their students may comprise as high a figure as 20% hailing from mixed marriages in which the Mother is not Jewish, whether or not they had yet completed conversions.

This figure is dramatic. And other students, with no Jewish heritage at all, are joining them. The internet age has increased interest in new religions. Information can be sought with a simple click, and it is happening en masse. It is driving greater interest in Jewish practice, without the need to call Rabbis in distant cities.

The Jewish Learning Initiative, a combined program of the Orthodox Union and Hillel to serve Orthodox college students, has seen all its Rabbis supervise at least one student learning for conversion since the program's inception several years ago. Children of mixed marriages are essential elements to Jewish activism, be it on campus or in the plethora of non-profits dotting the country.

And yet, the Rabbinical Council of America is unable to perceive just how large a constituency this represents, nor just how large the interest in resolving their identity crises is. Since the adoption of the Geirus Policy & Standards in 2008, roughly 300 people have converted to Orthodox Judaism in the US. This is happening in a country with as many as 6.7 million Jews and where well over 10 million people could be eligible for immigration to Israel under the Law of Return. There are only 12 courts authorized to perform conversion in the United States.

This lack of resources demonstrates a gross unpreparedness to meet the needs of the American Jewish community. It is a guarantee that if the Orthodox community is unwilling to meet this immense demand, the Reform and Conservative Movements will fill the void. This is certainly true in light of years of successful outreach programs throughout Orthodoxy and a general shift to traditionalism and the right throughout all of Judaism's major denominations. The low number of courts is borderline scandalous.


Jewish demographic distribution in the United States

This should bring attention to the calls by former RCA head Rabbi Marc Angel to re-delegate the conversion process to local rabbis, lest a centralized leadership become inefficient, unreliable or even corrupt as was the case with the Eternal Jewish Family.

One does not need to be an expert to sit on a conversion court, though a Rabbi is certainly preferable to a layman. But the proscription these very recent regulations has initiated does little to serve the interests of the American Jewish community and pays lip service to the voice that says Rabbis' personal validity and integrity as judges should be inherently flimsy and feeble. It stymies Jewish religious growth at the same time it undermines the authority of the community's Rabbis.

The GPS may bring more universal standards to deal in conversion, but is limited in scope. The new system can easily be preserved, if only the RCA recognized the need to establish more formal courts in more locations throughout the country. The American Orthodox community needs to be ready, because demand is only growing.

by Seth Farber: The New Conversion Law is a Joke

View this OpEd as originally posted in the Jerusalem Post

by Seth Farber

Coalition MKs have added a clause that effectively neutralized the law.

At the immigration and absorption conference in Ashdod this week, both Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman and Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman called for universal support for a new conversion bill - a bill which would ostensibly "take the power away" from the Conversion Authority and allow local community rabbis to perform conversions.

At first glance, their suggestion is meritorious. The Conversion Authority has been notoriously deficient in effecting conversions - to a large extent because of lack of leadership and policy. By "privatizing" conversion, the process would become much more personal and much less overwhelming. This, in turn, might alleviate a looming demographic crisis threatening the Jewish character of the State of Israel - given the more than 300,000 citizens who emigrated under the Law of Return, but do not meet the Orthodox halachic definition of Jewish.

However, the law which these ministers support is layered with populism and party interests, and ultimately, will help few potential converts.

In fact, in its original form, the bill would have allowed all community rabbis to perform conversions. Since a handful of community rabbis are considered "moderate" in their approach to conversion, the authors of the bill assumed that converts would be able to approach these rabbis and have their conversions certified nationally.

However, all that changed four months ago.

It was then that the bill came up for review in the Knesset Law Committee and almost immediately, MKs who serve in the coalition added a clause that effectively neutralized the law. The new provision mandates that community rabbis can perform conversions "if they receive an additional certification from the Chief Rabbinical Council."

IN OTHER words, the fact that a rabbi has received the authority to register marriages, supervise burials and organize kashrut in his city doesn't imply that he can effect conversions (even though he has been examined on the laws and rituals concerning this matter).

This clause is a deliberate slap in the face to the moderate city rabbis. It suggests that notwithstanding their scholarship or experience (many used to perform conversions before the Conversion Authority was established), they need further "approval." Given the constitution of the Chief Rabbinical Council, it is a given that none of the moderate city rabbis will ever be certified to convert.

Just to provide two examples, one of the members of the council is himself a city rabbi who won't register people who convert in the Conversion Authority. And another served on the rabbinical court which issued the notorious decision in 2008 by Rabbi Avraham Sherman annulling Rabbi Haim Druckman's conversions.

In short, the new conversion bill - in its present and apparently final form - is sophistry of the first order and is being promoted as an offering to the immigrant population, with no substance supporting it. In many respects, the country would be better off if the law wasn't passed and if politicians began studying the core issues and seeking genuine resolutions, rather than trying to simply pass off another bill as a solution to an essential issue threatening the Jewish fabric of Israel.

There needs to be a full review of conversion policy and strategy, and a public relations effort that will make conversion a national priority. Anything less, and we will continue spinning our wheels for another decade.

The writer is the director of ITIM: The Jewish Life Information Center (www.itim.org.il), an organization dedicated to helping Israelis and immigrants navigate Jewish life here.

View this OpEd as originally posted in the Jerusalem Post