Monday, October 20, 2025

Jewish Culture Does Not Define Us

Wesleyan University president Michael Roth 
I have long been lamenting the decline of American Jews who care about identifying as Jews. That we are now at record levels in that sad statistic is well known, thanks to a Pew Research survey taken a few years ago. The corollary to that decline is that over 70% of American Jews are marrying non-Jewish spouses — which means that in about half of those cases, their children will not be Jewish at all.

Although in some — perhaps many — cases they may still identify as Jewish, it doesn’t help that the Reform Movement now considers patrilineal descent a legitimate definition of Jewish identity. When a denomination whose very genesis came about by rejecting the foundational document that created the Jewish people that defines us, it hardly lends credence to their definitional pronouncements. It only makes matters worse by confusing the rest of the world about who is and isn’t a Jew.

Besides, as most secular Jews will tell you, what difference does it make anyway how a person identifies? To most secular Jews, Judaism is a culture derived from traditions accumulated over time — traditions they later accept or reject as their cultural values evolve.

How we got here is a complicated issue that I have addressed many times. What I will say is that the vast majority of American Jews fall into a category called Tinok Shenishba — literally, ‘a child taken captive’. In this context, it refers to Jews born and raised in an environment that included no substantive Jewish education. Their parents were mostly non-observant, many of whom ran away from the ‘old world’ image of the uneducated, uncultured European Jew in order to assimilate and pursue the American dream. Children raised with those values could hardly be expected to understand what Judaism is about. At best, they will embrace cultural values like social justice and call it the quintessential Jewish value.

Conservative rabbis have only encouraged this attitude and focus little — if at all — on the mitzvos of the Torah. To the extent that they do, their congregants mostly observe those mitzvos in the breach, if they pay attention to them at all.

Even these rabbis are not entirely at fault — this is what they were taught. Reform Jews refer to mitzvah observance as a nice thing to do but ultimately voluntary, while Conservative rabbis do little to convince their congregants to observe the mitzvos they themselves consider mandatory. Which is probably rooted in the way they were educated to relate to their congregants. Both resulting in a willful disregard for the obligatory nature of halacha.

Although this is a situation not of my making, it does not make me feel any less sad. The consequences of either a lack of authentic Jewish education or its distortion by heterodox clergy upon their members have recently shocked me. This has become especially evident since the war in Gaza began and with the exponential rise of antisemitism in this country — most visibly on college campuses, especially the more prominent ones.

The pro-Palestinian voices have been coming almost exclusively from the left — the only politically correct position to take on those campuses. There is also a strong presence of students from the Middle East who are entirely sympathetic to the Palestinian cause while completely rejecting the Israeli point of view. They are joined in solidarity by their American counterparts, by DEI hires — some from the Middle East themselves, often Palestinians or deeply sympathetic to them — and by far-left progressive faculty members, many of whom are Jewish. It should be no surprise that organizations like “Jews for Justice in Palestine” exist and parrot the Hamas narrative at rallies, some of which are blatantly antisemitic and even call for the genocide of Jews in Israel.

The Trump administration has gone out of its way to clamp down on campus antisemitism, including deporting Middle Eastern students who shout such rhetoric. So when a Tinok Shenishba like Michael Roth — Wesleyan’s Jewish president — defends that rhetoric on the basis of freedom of speech, and then makes a point of emphasizing how Jewish he is, that is the saddest thing of all.

Yes, he is Jewish. And yes, he is proud of it. But what exactly is he proud of? Because his status as a Tinok Shenishba makes him unqualified to define what it means to be proud of Judaism. I do not believe he is observant. Without observance — the most essential defining characteristic of being a Jew — his definition is missing Judaism’s most vital component. It’s like a Ferrari owner proudly declaring ownership even though the car is missing its engine.

Yet he has been one of the most vocal critics of the Trump administration’s efforts to clamp down on campus antisemitism, claiming they are merely an excuse to advance a conservative DEI agenda. The thing is, if DEI policies on campus have contributed to the massive wave of antisemitic protests we’ve seen, then looking at DEI as part of the problem is a step in the right direction. So, with all due respect to Mr. Roth, I reject his framing of the Trump administration’s antisemitism policy as a cynical political tool — and his use of his Jewish identity to bolster that argument.

That the vast majority of Orthodox Jews approve of Trump’s antisemitism policies surely indicates that Jews who understand what truly makes someone Jewish recognize that these policies align far more closely with authentic Jewish values than those of cultural Jews whose values shift with the winds of time. It should not go unnoticed that Jewish college students — and even the ADL — approve of the administration’s approach.

The question then becomes: why isn’t the most exponentially growing  right-wing segment of Orthodox Jewry doing more about this? The right wing has largely failed to reach out to the Tinok Shenishba. While there are many fine organizations that do — such as Chabad, NCSY, and Aish, to name just a few — they are nevertheless a drop in the bucket, representing only a small fraction of the Orthodox world.

The last time a right-wing rabbi (Rabbi Yosef Reinman) tried to do something of significance like this — well over a decade ago — he was shot down almost before he started. And there has been no serious attempt since. That is how we get the Michael Roths of the world, who publicly speak as Jews when their Judaism is at best cultural — if that.

The right-wing Orthodox world has become so self-focused that they barely acknowledge the problem. They seem interested only in perpetuating themselves, and they are doing a pretty good job of it. The rest of the Jewish world? In their minds, it is a lost cause — best ignored.

But is this what God really wants? Does God want us to write off 90% of American Jewry? I don’t think so. The results of that attitude have so far not been favorable.

5 comments:

  1. The only group that has believed in a binding halacha using a halachik process that we recognize has been the Orthodox-since at least 1950 wghen Conservative movement issue a ruling permitting driving to synagogue on Shabbas. They should have followed Chabad model-have activities that everyone drives to on Shabbas-have parking at their Chabad houses but just don't discuss issue.
    BTW not really recent when Jews were given rights during the Enlightenment-it marked the end of Rabbinic hegemony in Europe everyplace within 50 years. The combination of Haskalah with the Chassidic revolution led to Reform everyplace in Europe-generally a majority way before Jews came to US en masse.
    OJ has raised the bar see eg OU stopping having non glatt hashgacha around 1980-in no time increased amount of glatt meat eaten but decreased the amount of kosher meat eaten-Read Kosher USA for why.
    With raising of the bars such as essentially requiring attending day school to be part of system-eliminates at least from Centrist/MO Orthodoxy families of non wealthy parents and children who are not above average in verbal skills-if we really cared about spreading dvar hashem we would not put up extra barriers to entry.FWIW Chabad is found many more places than NCSY not even in the same ballpark-whole states with no resident NCSY but Chabad every 20-30 miles or so in large sections. Of course, can't forget used to be YUSY but they were forced to stop by backers of a then rival organization-read Victor Geller who alludes to that.

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  2. HM, the physicist Richard Feynman said, “the first rule of science is that you must not fool yourself — and to keep in mind that the easiest person to fool is yourself.” You are fooling yourself, HM. Because you care, and you therefore hunt for anecdotal or episodic evidence that observant Judaism is on its way back.

    Most secular and heterodox American Jews are not seeking the answers offered by Orthodoxy. Some know more than you might think about Orthodox practice, belief, and intellectual tradition — it’s not as if Orthodoxy is an elite fraternity of believers whose members are sworn to secrecy about its innermost nuggets of deep wisdom. People know. But ordinary non-Orthodox American Jews just don’t buy it. They don’t want it. No one can design an outreach program that might make more than a few of them want it.

    The increasingly apparent merger between Orthodoxy and hard-right political belief isn’t helping things. Poll after poll shows that the vast majority of American Jews are essentially liberal, as that term was used until around ten to fifteen years ago. They favor civil rights for everyone, including gays; they want to shore up public education rather than to destroy it with vouchers; they oppose the use of thuggery and military force to round up and deport illegal immigrants; they want the government to protect Medicare, Medicaid, and related safety-net programs; they favor the low prices and economic stability eliminated by massive use of arbitrary tariffs; they oppose wholesale gerrymandering aimed at reducing the impact of Black and other minority voters; they oppose what lawyers call the “unitary executive,” meaning more power to the president and less to Congress and the courts; and the oppose the president’s extortionate attempts to control the curriculum of private colleges in the name of fighting campus antisemitism.

    They do not like Trump (they really, really don’t) or Vance or Hegseth or Leavitt or Noem or Miller or Witkoff or Bessent or Lutnick. They fear RFK Jr. and Bondi.

    And most have reached a pragmatic if slightly schizophrenic attitude on Israel: They support the Israeli people and Israeli state in somewhat idealized form, and hope that Israel somehow will get back to its old ways of dealing with the rest of the world. Most non-Orthodox American Jews — including those who are kind of Main Street conservative — are exceedingly unhappy with Netanyahu and his government, and are deeply disturbed by Israel’s conduct of the Gaza war. They keep themselves in line by reminding themselves of the horror of Hamas and all it stands for. If more and more Israelis keep marching farther to the right, most American Jews will tune Israel out, popping up now and then to oppose BDS or blatantly anti-Israel action on college campuses but otherwise stepping away from the Middle Eastern melodrama.

    This bodes ill for both the growth of centrist RZ Orthodoxy in America and America’s continuing close ties to Israel. It’s as bad now as it has even been since World War II, and is getting worse day by day.

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  3. God has written off (so to speak) many more Jews than that.

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    1. Certainly can sacrifice for Jews/Israel as non Orthodox. I believe that most of the lone soldiers that are from US are from non Orthodox homes. Certainly, IDF could not exist with only Orthodox soldiers. I can make a good argument that I living in galut and would be called Orthodox am as likely to be written off by God as a chiloni who helped protect Israel by serving in IDF.

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  4. "The right-wing Orthodox world has become so self-focused that they barely acknowledge the problem"

    There is truth in this.

    However, Prof. Adam Ferziger of Bar Ilan, in his 2015 book "Beyond Sectarianism: The Realignment of American Orthodox Judaism", has argued that Haredi Orthodoxy has evolved from strict sectarianism and engaged in outreach, while MO retreated into survivalist mode. In the book, Prof. Ferziger traces a narrowing of the gap between MO/RW and ultimately a realignment of American Orthodox Judaism and presents evidence for the growing influence of Chabad Hasidism.

    In an earlier 2005 article, 'Between Outreach and "Inreach": Redrawing the Lines of the American Orthodox Rabbinate' published in Modern Judaism, linked below, Prof. Ferziger similarly flipped the paradigm:

    "The argument advanced in this article is that in regard to constituency definition, along with Orthodoxy’s growth and empowerment, the last decade has witnessed a redrawing of the lines that divide then American Modern Orthodox and Right-Wing Orthodox rabbinates.

    To an increasing extent, it is the graduates of yeshivish institutions that are being trained to strengthen the Jewish identity of the broader Jewish community. The Modern Orthodox institutions, in contrast, have to a great degree relinquished this role and concentrate on producing rabbis who can inspire their committed congregants."

    https://www.amazon.com/Beyond-Sectarianism-Realignment-American-Orthodox/dp/0814339530

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/31177332_Between_Outreach_and_Inreach_Redrawing_the_Lines_of_the_American_Orthodox_Rabbinate

    For an updated article on the state of kiruv which includes the role of RW efforts, see the Fall 2022 issue of Jewish Action:

    https://jewishaction.com/religion/outreach/the-state-of-jewish-outreach/

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