Posted on 07/12/2016 6:01:37 PM PDT by SJackson
What kind of question is this? Of course you can be Jewish and liberal. Millions of American Jews prove it every day of their lives. They are Jewish Americans the most liberal group in America. And they are well Jewish Americans. That is to say: Jewish.
And yet, the question stands. The evidence makes it necessary. The numbers make it real. Not real in the sense that it is impossible to be Jewish and liberal real in the sense that the combination of Jewish and liberal apparently presents a unique challenge for those of us who worry about the Jewish future. Numbers have this annoying habit of forcing an inconvenient reality upon us. Numbers assembled by Prof. Steven Cohen have often forced inconvenient reality upon us in recent years and I suspect his recent collection of numbers could do it again.
Cohen presented these numbers at a keynote address at the last NRJE (Network for Research in Jewish Education) annual conference last month. He opened his presentation by sharing the headline that American Jews are very liberal. His alternate read as follows: Does being liberal conflict with Jewish engagement? (Definitely). Definitely. Conflict. These are strong words that surely justify the question Can you be Jewish and Liberal? strong words backed by evidence. American Jews are disproportionately liberal, in terms of self-definition, Cohen says and shows. 51% of them are liberal or very liberal. They are secular, in terms of their beliefs & religious participation. About as religious as non-churched Christians. All this data is based on further analysis of the numbers presented in the 2013 PEW report on American Jewry. 56% of Reform Jews are liberal 18% of them very liberal. 28% of other Jews Jews that do not belong to any denomination are very liberal. Younger Jews are somewhat more liberal. Jews liberalism, Cohen said, is not going away very soon.
So what?
The more liberal they are, the less their tendency to be actively Jewish. The level of liberalism is high among those who raise non-Jewish children or who are married to non-Jews. Liberal Jews feel less responsible for other Jews. They have a somewhat lesser sense of belonging to the Jewish people. Only a third of the very liberal (34%) feel that being Jewish is very important compared to 54% of right of center non-Orthodox Jews. The very liberal dont belong to synagogues (18%), have less Jewish friends, and tend less than others to fast on Yom Kippur or light Shabbat candles. Their attachment to Israel is markedly lower than the attachment of less liberal Jews.
That is to say: all across the board feelings, activities, traditions, and affiliations the liberals show a lesser level of engagement. The correlation between liberalism and disengagement is modest when it comes to feelings (Feel responsible for Jews in need, Feel a sense of belonging to the Jewish people, Feel being Jewish is very important). It is strong when it comes to religious engagement (Being religious very important, Kosher home, Shabbat candles usually+,
Attends services monthly). It is also strong when it comes to Israel attachment (Israel essential to being Jewish, Feel very attached to Israel). In other words: liberal Jews feel moderately passionate about being Jewish; but they do not appreciate religion and do not appreciate Israel, and they especially do not appreciate hawkish views on Israel.
If you are a reasonably curious Jew if you have had a chance to meet with Jews and speak with Jews in the United States if you havent just returned from a mission to Mars none of this should be a huge surprise to you. I assume that the numbers were not a huge surprise to Prof. Cohen when he assembled the data and analyzed it. He surely is curious enough, has spoken to many Jews (probably too many for his own good), and is still waiting for his turn to go to Mars. What Cohen does with the numbers is not to unearth a shocking revelation, it is to try and force a conversation about an unpleasant reality a reality that American Jews do not like to discuss.
Why is it so difficult to seriously discusses these numbers and this reality? Thats simple: because often times liberal Jews tend to value their liberalism more than they value their Jewishness (this is me speaking, not Cohen. I am not sure hed agree). If the numbers tell a story from which one learns that liberalism and Judaism cannot go hand in hand, the liberals will choose liberalism. So the obvious policy of Jewish leaders and institutions is to avoid this seeming contradiction to hide it for as long as possible and thus not force the choice on a growing group of Jewish liberals.
It is good not to force this choice on liberal Jews, because it is a false choice (somewhat similar to the one often forced on Israel between Jewishness and democracy). It is good not to force this false choice, but it's not good to not discuss these true numbers.
These numbers have meaning. They have implications, and these implications could be of three possible types:
- Judaism and liberalism cannot go hand in hand, and we ought to understand that some Jewish Americans are lost to us, Jews.
- There is a need to make Jews slightly less liberal at least when it comes to the kind of liberalism that seems to make it difficult for them to be actively Jewish.
- There is a need to make Jewish Americanism more adaptable to the priorities of liberal Americanism. In all likelihood, to succeed in an enterprise whose aim is to strengthen the active Jewishness of American Jewish liberals, it will have to be a combination of both points two and three (that is, if you do not accept point one). But the exact prescription will not be easy, as the numbers while telling us a story do not reveal its source. As Cohen framed it: What about being liberal makes them less Jewish?
In other words: as hard as it is to spell it out with such bluntness, as a general rule, liberal American Jews seem to be less Jewish. It is our job to understand why it is our duty to understand if this phenomenon can be altered.
* * *
For those of you who like to see the data, here are some of the numbers that Prof. Cohen kindly agreed to share with me: The numbers are based on PEW 2013, and refer to non-Orthodox Jews (the Orthodox are a different world including them changes the picture).
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They are agnostic Jews.
Liberal Jews are the most bizarre folks I’ve ever come across.
They are The Only Nation with God’s Fingerprints on them and they decide to toss that winning lottery ticket away as if it’s a curse.
Zechariah 8:23 (Not fulfilled yet)
This is what the LORD Almighty says: “In those days ten people from all languages and nations will take firm hold of one Jew by the hem of his robe and say, ‘Let us go with you, because we have heard that God is with you.’”
Jewish guilt? Wouldn’t be surprising if that is the answer. No other religious group has been more despised by others, religious and non-religious than any other group, and for generations. There was a brief time following WWII where this was not the case and Jews were by and large much more conservative.
I have met far, far more liberal Jews than Conservative Jews.
- and these folks are not just a little liberal, they are way out there in moonbat territory.
As I tell my Jewish friends, Jews in many areas are among the smartest people in the world. Politically they are among the biggest idiots.
Jewish or a Jew? Lots of Jews aren’t practicing but are liberals.
Jewish atheists? Does not compute!
>>As I tell my Jewish friends, Jews in many areas are among the smartest people in the world. Politically they are among the biggest idiots.
<<
Then I say “Happy Yom Kippur!”
You can’t support abortion and be ANY kind of theist, because murder is a direct attack on the primary image of God in our world, created by God himself—the innocent human person.
Maybe this is like how bumble bees can’t fly, according to the laws of aerodynamics. But, they manage it. As a majority of Jews manage to be liberal. I don’t know if they are managing well to be Jewish, but they are managing to be liberal.
That is our perspective. Not one they share. So to them it never happened...
Liberal Jews are less Jewish because their religion is liberalism, Socialism or Communism. In other words, they are JINOs.
Before anyone blames me, I am Jewish, and have noticed this for decades. This study is hardly groundbreaking.
“flames” not “blames.”
In my experience, Jewish and Liberal are virtually synonymous.
This comment kills me: a Berkeley professor who gets it?????
Quoted comment from Jjournal:
Christopher Arend University of California, Berkeley, Boalt Hall
Liberals in the USA used to stand for individual freedom, equality under the law and for a strong posture against totalitarian systems.. That was in the 1950s and 1960s. 21st century liberals, however, are a fearful lot who look to big government to tuck them it at night. They would regulate our lives in every respect in the name of combatting the chimera of climate change. They are gutless examples of the Stockhom syndrom in the face of international challenges from Islamic extremisim, the Russians, the Chinese, the Iranians and even North Korea. Liberals are panicked by the idea of a free market economy, while at the same time benefitting from the fact that the more regulation and interference by government, the more the opportunity for playing favorites in crony capitalism. Liberals allow themselves to be played the fool by Black Lives Matter and other shakedown specialists such as Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton because liberals dread the idea of being called “racist”. Remember how Bernie Sanders allowed BLM activists to completely disrupt a public appearance several months ago? Liberals are also almost without exception intellectually lazy when challenged on an issue, resorting to ad hominem as soon as they run out of platitudes, or simply lying (e.g. Benghazi, email scandal). In a word, 21st liberals are “decadent” in the truest sense of the word, namely, they are a product of a society that has become weaker and moved far away from the principles of individual liberty and individual responsibiliy.
End quote. Me clapping.
I am about to join a very liberal synagogue. I am dreading “coming out” there and disagreeing with the whole, probably nice, congregation. I fantasize that I stay closeted for a while ... It is hard to have a decent social life in a Jewish liberal community. But their preschool is exactly what we want. And they give you a membership along with paying for the school. The other preschool has a lesbian rabbi. I’m good.
I hold that you can’t be Christian and liberal or even a Democrat
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