56 Friday, February 19, 1982 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Fifty Years of American Judaism in Retrospect (Continued from Page 12) dresses. And they find the pattern of living in a new and strange environment very easy to adopt and fit into, be- cause what they are leav- ing was not radically different. There is, Jewishly _speaking, no trauma connected with the change. - This is especially notice- able on the college campus. Adolescent boys and girls get their first real feeling of independence when they go to college away from home. New vistas open before them. They meet new friends from all over. They are stimulated by new fields of knowledge. There is a new social milieu to which they are strongly attracted. Home and parents play a shrinking role in their lives. The old connections are not vital; they become nominal. Another by-product of the threat of intermarriage is the large number of candi- dates for conversion in every Jewish community. This is also a very new phe- nomenon. But it is an in- adequate solution to a very difficult problem. One would expect a convert to Judaism who seeks membership in the Jewish people and the Jewish faith to be wel- comed with open arms, to be absorbed into the Jewish community, and to adopt the life style of this new connection. This does not exactly work out as one would expect. LOUIS BRANDEIS type that we had in the past, locally as well as nationally. To mention only one case out of many: Louis D. Bran- deis came into Jewish life from the outside, so to speak, with a minimal Jewish background and ex- perience. He joined the Zionist movement when he was already in his middle 50s. As a labor mediator among his fellow Jews and as an active Zionist he came in close contact with the Jewish masses throughout the country. This made a noble, dedi- cated Jew out of him. One of the by-products of this transformation is the little-known fact that when Brandeis died he willed half of his estate to Palestine and the ad- vancement of the work of Zionism. This could hardly happen today. The effective leaders of the American Jewish community today are not leaders in the traditional sense of the word. The work is being done by executive directors of federations and national organizations. They are for the most part `not Jewishly-trained for their jobs. They are often not too knowledgeable in Jewish affairs and not ob- servant in terms of religious practice. They are adminis- trators and usually stay in the background. The Jewish family that converts becomes part of a world that is generally in- different and non-observant in the Jewish sense of the word. We find that for the most part there is no strong objection to a child marry- ing a convert because the difference is not that sharp. The absorption is not so much Jewish as it is social. There are no real standards of Jewish living for the most part that the The putative leaders of convert can aspire to, very little to imitate. The the Jewish community are standards of Jewish living generally wealthy Jews that they are taught to who are drawn into posi- adopt they do not always tions of leadership for have occasion to practice. prestige purposes and in And there is a definite feel- order to enhance their repu- ing of letdown on the part of tations. They look to their these innocent applicants professionals. their execu- for- membership in the tive directors, for guidance. Jewish faith. The only hope They are doing a notable in the problem of converts to piece of work, and their ef- Judaism is that when the forts should be encouraged new couple begins to plan a and appreciated. But they family and have children of reflect the eroding situation their own, they will feel the of the general American urge to give them some kind Jewish community. What is going on in the of Jewish environment and some kind of Jewish educa- United States generally that is really affecting our tion. - The leaders of the Jewish situation is a gradual proc- community are also not the ess of secularization. interest to continue beyond that stage. A good deal of the slack has been picked up by the all-day schools, a rather new phenomenon on the American Jewish scene. Here a Jewish child is placed in a Jewish environment for the greater part of the day. The _educa- tion he is given is intensive. The best teachers are drawn to the all-day schools. America is strictly and le- gally speaking not a reli- gious civilization. We are founded on the principle of the separation of church and state, and on religious liberty. Religion in the U.S. is a private affair, and this is the basis of freedom and conscience. Religion cannot be a matter of public con- cern or responsibility. That is why the Christian com- munity — the vast majority in the U.S. — is facing the same problems that we are facing. This type of school is still new and has not had a chance to prove itself. Some Christians as well as very important questions, Jews pay lip service to however, have to be asked. religion but are actually How many parents send not guided or influenced their children to these by ethical or religious schools because they want standards in their private them to have an intensive lives where religion is - Jewish education and will supposed to have its provide them with the kind of environment that will place. This is the plight of the make this type of education secular Jews in our commu- stick? And how many par- nity. They have given up ents send their children to all-day schools because they religion as a matter of pub- lic community concern. If want to take them out of the you wish to be religious in public school system, and your private life, no one will will provide them with a minimal Jewish environ- interfere. Judaism — Yiddishkeit ment? Can the all-day schools — is an ethnic and cultural succeed in developing a concern. But ethnicity is not a very strong handle to hold program of parent edu- on to. The melting pot of cul- cation that will be effec- tures and ethnic groups in tive in creating Jewish the U.S. is too strong for home environments for them to resist. The older their children? And not generation of secular Jews the least, how much at least had religious roots, community support can and they rebelled against a the all-day schools get so religiously observant that the tuition will be within reach of the aver- milieu. age Jewish family? Process of In the course of this pre- Secularization The current secular Jew sentation references have does not have the experi- been made to the Jewish family as a source of much of ence of having been part of a Jewish life-style. He is an the difficulty that American Judaism finds itself in. The uprooted Jew who has a label and an affiliation, but Jewish family together with the entire Jewish commu- in his private life is com- pletely lacking in the ex- nity is a victim of circum- stances. The time has come perience of Jewish living. within the last few years There is very little dif- ference between him and when national Jewish organizations are focusing the secular American. in on the problems of the An institution that has been particularly af- Jewish family and inter- fected by the erosion of marriage, and trying to see Jewish life in the U.S. is what, if anything, can be Jewish education. The done to improve the situa- afternoon school was the tion. We have been taking the bulwark of our educa- tional system in the past. Jewish family for granted This type of education because we assumed that it can no longer be ex- was functioning. It did so, in pected to accomplish fact, for hundreds of years, and we assumed that it was what it formerly did. It still doing so. The family cannot take a child with absolutely no Jewish was the basic social unit of knowledge and out of a the community. Not only very weak Jewish did every individual belong environment in the home to a family, but he could not and make a knowledge- possibly picture himself not able and practicing Jew belonging. The family was the in- out of him. stitution through which the It can prepare children for Bar or Bat Mitzva, but un- heritage of Judaism was fortunately only a very transmitted. The pattern of small percentage of these life set by the parents was expected to be followed by have the motivation and the the children, and when they became parents they had the same expectations as far as their children were con- cerned. . The Jewish family was always more basic than either the synagogue or the school. They both de- pended largely on the family for their ability to function. The school was not expected to start teaching the child from scratch, but rather con- tinued on the basis of what the child absorbed in the home and in the synagogue. there are advantages to being different and to being part of a small minority, and that to be part of a great mass of people is not always a blessing. The synagogue also based itself on the religious needs and practices of the home. Shabat dinners and com- munity sedorim were not needed in the traditional synagogue because it was correctly assumed that every Jewish home had a Shabat dinner and a Pesach seder. The reconstitution and the rejuvenation of the Jewish family is our hope for the future. This will re- quire a great deal of stub- born dedication. The Jews have always been a stub- born, stiff-necked people, and we have to regain a good measure of that old stubbornness. We have in the U.S. a category of Jews previously unheard of: non-observant Reform, Conservative and even Orthodox Jews. They have synagogue affilia- tions, and some attend serv- ices, but in their private lives they are all pretty much alike in their watered-down Judaism. They will thus have to find a greater measure of fulfillment in being them- selves and knowing them- selves. And this means being the product and out- growth of 4,000 years of Jewish historical experi- ence and Jewish living, as well as a link strong enough - to enable the 'tradition to continue into the future. If they do this there will be a Jewish community with sufficient life re- sources to be able to con- tinue and even flourish, be- cause they will not be a di- minished product of past momentum, but rather have an inner propulsion that will be sufficient for maintaining personal and community life on a high, meaningful, and creative level. The Jewish community of America is in reality only about 100 years old, If we start counting from the be- ginning of the mass immi- gration of Jews from east- ern Europe in 1881. Centers None of these groups of Jewish settlement in the have observant Jews in past history of our people sufficient numbers. If have lasted at least several they did, the walls of our hundred years. synagogues could not contain them. But there are in the Orthodox, Con- servative and Reform movements a sufficient number of observant Jews, in each group ac- cording to its own standards. It is upon these Jews that our hopes for the future must rest. The - observant Jews in each group will have to band together and consti- tute the core of the Ameri- can Jewish community of the future. They may be small in number, but they will stick it through. In the days of the Pharisees in the period of the Second Temple there were Jews who were called Haverim. These Jews were part of the Pharisee move- ment, but they assumed religious obligations over and above those assumed by the mass of Jews. They were the hard core of observant Jews of their time. These Haverim should be emu- lated in our generation. Even they will not have an easy time of it. They will have to live their Jewish lives on a high plane of con- sciousness. It will have to be planned Jewish living in every sense of the word — planned with a definite purpose. They will have to edu- cate themselves to live a certain type of life and educate their children and indoctrinate them to follow in their footsteps. They will have to find satisfaction and fulfill- ment in a limited area of life. They will have to learn what Jews of the past always knew: that For American Jewry to be experiencing a decline in such a short time would be a tragic phe- nomenon in Jewish his- tory. There have been other communities that have gone through periods of decline and disintegration. Some have also experienced revivals and sustained growth. American Jewry can do the same if we h a - -ve the same commitment and the same stamina that our an- cestors have shown in the past. And let not a very small population disturb us either. Baron Salo Prof. estmated that at the end of the Middle Ages there were left only about 1,000,000 Jews in all the world. And yet we not only survived but grew in number and flourished. It all depends on the determination and the stubbornness with which we apply ourselves to living a meaningful and creative Jewish lfie. It can be done, and, with God's help, it will be done. DR. SALO W. BARON