Friday, May 13, 1983 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Rediscovering C osenness: Shavuot Meditation By DR. IRVING, GREENBERG National Jewish Resource Center In the Book of Exodus, be- fore the giving of the Ten Comtnandments, God tells Moses that by accepting Re- velation the people of Israel will become "a kingdom of priests, a holy nation" (Exodus 19:6). As American Jews increasingly assert a liberated Jewish identity — one not afraid- to stand out politically or culturally — they are rediscovering the classic doctrine of Jewish Chosenness in its honest, healthy, aboveboard form. The fundamental asser- tion of chosenness was one of the first victims of exces- sive Jewish modernization. The longing for a "truly equal status in American culture" was the American Jew's "deepest and most messianic need" (Arthur Hertzberg). As Jews per- ceived that democratic theory was against chosen- ness, they dropped the doc- trine. In Reconstructionism, the most thorough reformula- tion of Judaism in the spirit of modernity and democ- racy, Mordecai M. Kaplan decided to reject the doc- trine and he eliminated it from the Reconstructionist prayer book. Kaplan's was a moral/ethical rejection — who are the Jews to set themselves up a superior or even to give that impression to others? In Kaplan's and others' views, it is undemocratic for one group to claim special status or privilege in the divine realm or the democratic polity. There was also a sociolog- ical critique of chosenness. One does not have to be a Jew --or anything. Birth is a statistical accident. To elevati Jewish birth into a prinaple is to fly into the face of the randomness of biological peoplehood. Of course, Jews found it difficult to give up their spe- cialness. If there is nothing different about it, why bother being Jewish? So even as they overtly gave up the Chosen People doctrine, Jews slipped it back into their consciousness in dis- guised fashion. Jews drink less; Jews go to college more; Jews achieve more — all these claims become code views for chosenness. Hannah Arendt argued that the belief that the Jewish people had always been the passive suffering object of Christian persecu- tions was really the hidden claim that Jews are sinned against but do not sin, which is to say that Jews are more moral. In Arendt's view, secular and even as- similating Jews' exagger- ated antagonism and critique of Christianity ac- tually amounts to a prolon- gation and modernization of the belief in chosenness. These "bidden" claims of election are attempts to fill the vacuum left by the rejection of the original, doctrine and the demise of differences in ways of living between Jews and non-Jews! The net effect was that often nothing was left of Jewish consciousness except the convert and unjustified conviction that Jews were superior. This was attacked bit- terly by such people as Philip Roth as a decadent and arrogant assumption which was often correlated with vulgarity and an ex- cessively materialistic way of life. In the afterinath of the Holocaust and the rebirth of Israel, Jews are entering a post-modern phase. In the Holocaust, Jews experi- enced the reality of chosen- ness in its most elemental form — Jews were singled out for a different fate. Mod- ern universal categories (citizenship, democracy, liberalism) did not make a bit of difference nor did the democracies reach' out to protect the European Jews. So if modern culture de- nies the legitimacy of Jewish distinctiveness, then it only proves its own limitations. Every day, Jews experience Israel's standing alone, isolated at the UN by the world coun- cils, as another example of the singularity of Jewish existence. ' The result has been a steadily expanding will- lingness to assert Jewish distinctiveness unapologetically. This new view is spilling over AA& RABBI GREENBERG God's love for you and ob- servance of His oath which He swore to your fathers .. . God chose you to be His treasured nation . . ." (Deuteronomy 7:7 and 8:6). In truth, God's choosing made the people feel their own limitations as the ob- jects of unmerited infinite love; and the Bible candidly showed Jews repeatedly failing to live up to their covenantal moral obliga- tions. On Shavuot, the holi- day which celebrates the Revelation at Sinai, the rabbis instituted the reading of the Book of Ruth at that very occa- sion. In telling the story of a gentile woman con- vert who became ances- tor of King David and the future Messiah, the rab- bis made clear that Jews should not get a swelled head and assume that their personal merit led God to make them the ve- hicle of Divine Revela- tion. A gentile outsider is held up as the human model of faithfulneess and dedication and of love overcoming _death. from the political realm — unselfconscious battle for Israel — into the theological/sociological areas— price of Jewish identity, search for Jewish content, and open affirmation of chosen- ness. In modern culture, Jews were uncomfortable with Gentile criticism of the claim of specialness ("how odd of God, to choose the Jews"). They responded by a disclaimer ("it was not odd, they chose God"). But the post-modern chosenness doctrine is humbler and more moral than its modern ersatz forms. The claim that Jews chose God, which was intended to de-escalate the Post-modern chosenness claim of being special, de is truly modest in that it facto exaggerated Jewish recognizes that divine cho- greatness by making Jews -senness is not restricted to the source of God and of Jews alone. Out- of the their mission. recognition of the dignity The authentic biblical and humanity of the others statement of chosenness comes the insight that Jews made clear that Jews are are a chosen people and that not intrinsically superior. - God can and does choose t`. . . you are the least of all again. Therefore, all na- the nations . . . But out of tions can have a special role in the redemption of the world. Out of infinite love, God chooses without re- pudiating the first love which expresses itself in Jewish chosenness. The ultimate irony is that those who denied chosen- ness out of democratic con- cerns failed to 'see that elec- tion is ultimately the most powerful confirmation of democracy. If the only valid categories are uniform and universal then all humans end up being the same - -thus democracy leads to its own nemesis: homogeneity and totalitarian democracy. The stubborn Jewish in- sistence on maintaining a distinct existence thus is the early warning test of a culture's capacity to accept pluralism or to turn to- talitarian. America's abil- ity to accept the special Jewish ways of living and special relationship to Is- rael is the best sign of its societal health. In the face of the pow- erful centralizing forces of modern culture, the Jewish reassertion of chosenness affirms that birth or group member- ship is no accident to be wiped out. Rather, each person and group is called to their special role and existence even as they become part of one world. Chosenness validates pluraliSm and the variety of religion and culture as the will of God and the glory of humanity. - The U.S. Army Approves of Shavuot and Sukkot B y ALLAN M BLUSTEIN Chaplain, Sinai Hospital The United States Army doesn't lose many battles but this story tells of one that it did —to the benefit of all Jewish personnel as- signed to VII Corps stationed in West Germany. An Army corps usually con- sists of several 19,000-man divisions so one can see that the Jewish contingent was a sizeable one. In my capacity as staff chaplain to the European Command Support Activity (under the overall command of the then General Alexan- der Haig), I was responsible for, among other things, supplying the significant dates and times of major Jewish Holy Days to the Ad- jutant General. These would then be incorporated into a periodic command di- rective and issued to all lower echelon commanders. In essence, the orders ad- vised that all Jewish per- sonnel should be allowed to observe their major days of tion. When they finally saw the Jewish chaplain and his assistant hard at work, during Hanuka, that decided the matter. But we still had quite a job to do. The mission was to teach the Army about two other major feasts of obliga- tion in the Jewish calendar — Shavuot (the Feast of Weeks) and Sukkot (the Feast of Booths). And what I originally thought of as just a simple religious lesson turned out to be a battle- royal with the sergeant major of the Adjutant Gen- RABBI BLUSTEIN ' eral's Office. religious obligation (within I entered his office and the exigencies of the par- mounted the attack: ticular military situation). "Sergeant Majorhave The holidays so recognized the information" you need by the Army were: Rosh for the annual religious Hashana; Yom Kippur, command directive activi Hanuka and Passover. ties," I said. Since the Army re- "Thank you sir," hesajj .. garded Hanuka as the as I handed him the papers. Jewish equivalent to "By the way, chaplain, Christmas, it took us what's this Shavuot and quite a while to convince Sukkot business? I never the authorities that it was heard of those before." not a Jewish feast of "I figured as much" I major religious obliga- mumbled to myself. "What did you say, Sir?" "Er . . . nothing, Sergeant Major. These two holy days are just as important as Passover." "That reminds me Chap- lain, do I get my matzot again this year?" "You can bank on it, Sarge. Now let's get Shavuot and Sukkot into that directive shall we?" "First I have to know what this Shavuot is all ab- out, Sir." "It's one of the three pil- grimage festivals, Sarge." "Pilgrimage? Where to?" "Jerusalem and the Holy Temple of course," I replied; "What special food do you eat on that holiday?" "Mainly dairy dishes." "I thought pilgrims ate turkey," he joked. "If you don't stop the fooling around, I'll see that you eat crow," I mut- tered under my breath again. "Pardon me, Sir?" "Nothing . . . nothing at all. What's holding it up now Sarge?" "Why dairy dishes Sir?" "Because Shavuot commemorates the giv- ing of the Law to Moses on Mount Sinai. Prior to that, the Israelites we- ren't too familiar with laws pertaining to prep- aration of meat, so to celebrate the momentous event, the Jews featured blintzes." "What's that, Sir?" "Cheese delicacies." "Like cheesecake?" "Sort of," I said. "Will you see that I get some of that when this Shavuot rolls around, Sir?" "Sure, if you'll only put Shavuot into the directive already." "Consider it done, Chap- lain. But what gives with this Sukkot? Is that a pil- grim's holiday too, Sir?" "Of course, I told you that before. It's also called the Feast of Booths. It lasts nine days all told." "Nine days?" Who'll fight TEARS- for the Army if all the Jews are at chapel, Sir?" "The Jews will finish any war long before that, Sarge. Didn't you ever hear of the Six-Day War? Jews have to get the job done quickly these days." "But what about these booths, chaplain? Do you vote in them?" he guf- fawed. "Yes," I answered. "We vote for God and his teach- ings on how to live life cor- rectly and compassion- ately." "Okay, Chaplain, I'll see that they both get into the directive. It'll be the longest one that VII Corps ever is- sued." By G.I. BERNSTEIN I left this land a child To liberate the Dead, I returned to strangers For who could read my mask. Those who tended to a sapling Joyful as it towered Proud and strong, And in its growing, loved them in return, Disappeared from chimneys In the land they left. From where they smile at me No dark curtain hides the sun. Is there such a Land? I could not weep for them As I could not for their Kin, For the millions of the Doomed. I will weep for forty clays And forty nights, And the world will be reborn.