::sh's Thought Provoking Book Goodenough's Posthumous 'Psychology of Religious Dr. Reviews Current Challenges to Jewry Experiences' Points to Religious-Secular Blendings - With his newest analyses of Jewry's position, with emphasis on American Jewry's current status, Rabbi David Polish emerges as a challenger to action who is certain to cause responsible Jewish spokesmen to think more seriously about the prob- lems that face Jewry today. His new book, "The Higher Freedom — A New Turning Point in Jewish History," pub- lished by Quad- rangle Book s, Inc. (1 8 0 N. Wacker Dr., Chicago), touches upon Israel, the fallacies of na- tionalism, Jewish peoplehood and a score of other Dr. P-:dish related subjects. In the main, it challenges us to think in terms of continuity that I will redeem Jewry's claims to be- ing a hol.. people and will provide for Israe: the status that dignifies an historic heritage. At the very outset, Dr. Polish calls upon us to look to the rock whence we were hewn and he places emphasis on a basic prin- ciple: " !i ,? moral law is from God; it is not subject to a popu- lar referendum. It is important to know this in an age that will some day be judged to have been both mad and savage." And he commences with a challenge: "The Jewish people is in dan- ger of distintegration because both identity and purpose are being dissolved. This danger is all the more acute because vast segments of the Jewish people in the free world are unmindful of the inroads of distintegra- tion." Taking into account the realism of the fulfilment of the Zionist ideal through the establishment of Israel, and the changes that have occurred in the structure of Jew- ish life, Rabbi Polish warns about the "decline of Jewish vitality" and of the urgency of the emerg- ing conditions. Recognizing "the unprecedented magnitude" of the work that is in evidence in Israel, he states that "these very achieve- ments have brought problems in their wake." He considers seriously the religious problems in Israel and he declares: "Our objective must not be a diaspora spiritually dependent upon the state, nor a state ma- terially subservient to diaspora . . . It must be the organic one- ness of the people of Israel, in ter- ritory and beyond." He sees the possibility of the emergence of a new world structure out of new configurations and states: "The concept of diaspora can be transformed for the first time in 2,000 years. It need no longer represent repression and exile imposed by the restraints of a hostile world. The creation of Israel: has annihilated the pri•ciple of duress in the West- ern world and replaced it with a community which chooses its own form of existence. It chooses because it is no longer, in theory or in practice, denied any other alternative. This rep- re-cuts an altogether new con- figuration for the Western Jew, and it is much more than an in- tellectual configuration alone. As a consequence of this, there now exists both a voluntary diaspora in the West and an in- dependent state in Israel. This is new for world Jewry. It is new for the world itself. Out of this new relationship could emerge a new social pattern for mankind. In it, one could be both a national of a given ter- ritory and a member of a greater unit, a world structure. He could be both patriot and world citi- zen, resident of a homeland and THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 40—Friday, August 27, 1965 member of a universal com- munity." In chis fashion, Dr. Polish de- molishes the dilemma of duality in citizenship and points to a new order that can solve problems and salve consciences. He states also in relation to the double dilemma: "Inherent in Zionism—inherent ir_ Judaism—is the persistent pull of the Jew in two directions simul- taneously: the inner pull toward the people, and the outer pull into the world. Both of these pulls are indigenous to Judaism and the authentic Jew is required to re- spond to both. When we respond to either one to the exclusion of the other, we betray Judaism • . . If, in abandoning his Judaism, the Jew retained the prophetic zeal with which his Jewishness informs him, his defection might be toler- ahle. But then he would remain a Jew! And this would be his per- sonal paradox. But in the main, when a Jew feels that he must sever his bond with Judaism in order to respond to the world, the inciting away of his Jewishness also results in the melting away of his humanity." Rabbi Polish's emphasis is that "Judaism cannot survive unless the Jew's commitment is of own choosing, not born out of compulsion." "Traditions," he declares, "are not contrived. They are not even conceived. They take form amidst a people's existence." Turning to the claims of Jewish liberals that "the Jewish question will be resolved through the solu- tion. of more universal problems," Rabbi Polish declares that it is "an egregious mistake which has frequently led to disastrous re- sults." that: "It cannot be stressed too em- phatically that the Jewish ques- tion is identified with the world question, but it is not identical with it. The uniqueness of the Jewish people, of its history, of its situation in the world, dis- qualifies it for prefabricated reme- dies. A current example is the race question in the United States. Jews must be committed to help- ing achieve unconditional and total freedom for the American Negro. Yet it is highly questionable whether either the solution or the defenders—Jew and non-Jew alike —of complete integration will by this alone reduce anti-Semitism as a lateni social and religious force. Only if they draw the necessary inferences and apply them equally to the dangerous position of Jews m many parts of the world, and to the dormant feelings about Jews in the United States, will the struggle for integration yield specific results for Jews." Jewish socialists and commun- ists, Dr. Polish indicate s, "quickly learned that some of the liberal causes of their time were desirous only of Jews in their ranks, but not of Jewish problems on the agenda." But "Jews flung their Jewish bag- gage aside in a leap of faith to the messianic summons of socialism" while "non-Jewish socialists steadfastly precluded and specific Jewish issues as ir- relevant • . . This is one of the primary reasons for the growth of political Zionism. It was a reaction against the kind of liberalism that required the liquidation of the Jewish peo- ple as a price for 'solving the Jewish problem.' As a conse- quence, socialism became trans- muted into labor Zionism, and European nationalism into po- litical Zionism. .. ." On the question of church and state, Dr. Polish contends that "separation" is a misnomer, that it implies alienation and it also "implies parallels that do not meet." He admonishes that "reli- gionists who would share their duties with the state will discover that the state will not be influ- enced by religion but will shape it in its own nationalistic image" and that "for the state to- give religion its unreserved release would involve an act of self-limi- Basic Books (404 Park, S., NY 16) shoulders and leave the deluded ings "is justice, love, kindness, have just issued, posthumously, in their delusions or forgive them hufnility, and these the prophets "The Psychology of Religious Ex- their insuperable ignorance, but left to the later rabbis to formu- periences" by Prof. Erwin R. that we by understanding can and late into laws. Goodenough. do share in their points of view. Commenting on the blending of In this work, Dr. Goodenough, That way, the full life." religious and secular laws, Dr. who passed away Was he cynical, critical or the Goodenough wrote: two months ago, more realist when he wrote: "The rabbis taught this when clarified myths, "Legalism has its full value they laid down one of the chief creed s, philos- as a religious pattern only in principles of rabbinic Judaism: ophies, new pat- unified societies, which offer no `The law of the land is Law.' terns. divergencies or contradictory It is especially interesting that the late Dr. Goodenough, who became world fa- mous for his en- cyclopedic work, "Jewish Symbols in the Greco- Roman Period," should, as a for- mer theist, have written in his•Dr. Goodenough preface to this book: "Freud, himself the founder of a great religious sect, could typically call all traditional faiths and, by implication, all `religion' merely illusion. He was typical because those practicing the new way of thinking consid- ered that they had put away `religion' as a childish thing codes. The joy of traditional Judaism (and joy it is) can be felt only in a Jewish community living in collective observance, for only so does the law present itself without complications as really the formulation of one's social center. Jews who live in `Jewish quarters' in Alexandria long before the Christian era did so by choice, so that to- gether they could live in the life of the law. Christians have done terrible things to Jews in the ghettos, but Jews themselves created the ghettos, if not the locks on them. The only dis- agreement was about who was to have the key. Jews of old wanted to live together because the ben- efit and peace of legalism can come only when men are faced with a single code, unchallenged by rival codes." . Indeed, this is realism, and Dr. when they had discarded Chris- tian or Jewish theology and called themselves atheists or Goodenough emphasized that "ev- agnostics. Meanwhile, in all ery community that wants happi- fields, but especially in psychol- ness in living by a code must do ogy, researchers developed vo- the same." Indeed, new ghettos cabularies and criteria of think- ing that made a return to the data of religion increasingly dif- ficult, and a person trained in religion has come to sound ama- teurish when he tries to use the language of psychology." And he added that "religion of one sort or another is one of the two or three great universal as- pects of human life. As for its re- lation to psychology, religion has been the psychotherapy of all ages, and no one would dispute that at least what other people call their religions have been psychological need mythology, poetry, music, philosophy critics, social loyalty and security, and one man cannot be creative in all. Here is true tolerance: not that we shrug our tation which would be considered abhorrent. Yet, without such un- equivocal release, separation of church and state is partly fiction." Dr. Polish declares, in his en- lightening essay on "Peoplehood," that "the Jewish people can see itself as undergoing a redemptive experience in history and 'serving a redeeming purpose among men." His entire work is thought-pro- voking. It deals with Jewish issues frankly. It does not pull punches. It is a major contribution to cur- rent efforts to solve problems that have resulted from assimilatory tendencies that have increased both as a result of the reality of Israel's statehood and the emanci- pationist delusions. It leads in the proper direction of realism in facing the facts of life in Jewry's current experience. "The Psychology of Religious Ex- periences"—an enlightening and thought-provoking work that must lead to further study of religious aspects in mankind. arise all the time, even when old Hebrew Corner ones are fled from: then, new ones arise: the rich with the rich: the less affluent together. The Mishna states: "There are no In the matter of Jewish-Chris- more festive days for Israel than the fifteenth of Av and Yom Kippur." The tian superlegalism, Prof. Good- Sages said: Yom Kippur is easy to enough emphasized that what real- understand since it is a day of atone- ly counted in the prophetic teach- ment and pardon, but why is the fif- The 15th of Av New Anti-Semitic Journal Issued in Casablanca; Jews Are Slandered CASABLANCA (JTA) —A new anti-Semitic newspaper, published by the director of a newspaper experiences. The 'psychology of re- banned by the government, appear- ligion,' accordingly, neglected as ed in Morocco Aug. 22. it is now, remains a crucial part of The first issue of the new publica- the study of man." Aien, "Atiaf," contained articles The eminent scholar, in a chal-; charging Moroccan Jews in res- lenging opening chapter, "What Is Religion?" maintains that "it is basically man's adjustment to the tremendum (that which must be feared." Until man is omniscient, Dr. Goodenough wrote, he "must live by religious trust in the patterns he projects on his curtains, which means, so far as I can see, that he will always have to live by re- ligious faith . . . " "Religious tolerance," the em- inent scholar stated "is of the greatest importance, since to at- tack other peoples' basic pat- terns, to destroy their curtains or to rob them of the right to explore for themselves, so inun- dates them with the tremendum that they become utterly dis- traught or murderously vindic- tive." He made the point that "we That is, Law, the Torah, the holy law of the Jews, includes the laws of whichever nation a Jew may be living in. An observant Jew considers that his duty to pay taxes, to serve on the jury, to vote at elections, and all the rest are part of his legal obliga- tion to God, to his religion." He also made the point that "the glory of the Hebrew tradition was its long line of supralegalists, a line which by means ended with Jesus, even though it finally crys- tallized, for most Jews, in the elab- orate legal formulations of rab- binic Judaism." The great Christian scholar, who, at the time of his death, was pro- fessor emeritus of religion at Yale and visiting professor of Mediter- ranean studies at Brandeis Uni- versity, left another great work in = ponsible posts with showing fav- oritism toward co-religionists. A prominent article reported on a Jewish doctor on the staff of a hospital in a small town, Alcazar- quivir, in northern Morocco. The artitcle alleged that the doctor at- tended only to Jewish patients and allowed Moslems "to die of their illnesses." nt. teenth of Av a day of joy? One says: For on this day permission was restored to the tribe of Benjamin to intermarry with the daughters of the other tribes, since hitherto the tribe of Benjamin had committed a dis- graceful deed — the deed of the Con- cubine at Gibeah—and the other tribes decided not to give their daughters in marriage to the sons of the tribe of Benjamin. Another sage said: Because on this day the heat of the sun begins to wane. On the fifteenth of Av the daughters of Jerusalem would go out to dance in the vineyards. Each one would wear white garments and their garments would be borrowed — they took them for a day from. others. Why? "so as not to put to shame those who had none." The daughters of Jerusalem would go forth to dance in the vineyards and the young men would come too to gaze at them. And what did the girls say? 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