RELIGION O 7- L Mordecai Kaplan (1888-1983) addressed a new American Jewish audience. Understanding Judaism's Fourth Branch Reconstructionism is the creation. of Mordecai Kaplan, who emphasized Jewish Peoplehood. Belonging, he said, takes precedence over believing. HAROLD M. SCHULWEIS Contributing Editor ne hundred and five years ago Mordecai M. Kaplan, the founder of Jewish Reconstructionism, was born. His thinking is par- ticularly pertinent to a com- munity which seeks to pre- serve its unity in the midst of diversity. Reconstructionism is the only Jewish spiritual move- ment indigenous to the American environment. Its ideology remains the creation of its founder and theoreti- cian, Mordecai Menachem Kaplan, who died in 1983 at 102. His major work, Juda- ism as a Civilization, first published in 1934, laid the ar- chitectural frame of Recon- structionist thinking. In 1959, Rabbi Ira Eisenstein assumed the leadership of the Reconstructionist Founda- tion; and when the Recon- structionist Rabbinic College was founded in Philadelphia (1968), Reconstructionism emerged from its role as a school of thought into the fourth religious movement in America, alongside Ortho- dox, Reform and Conser- vative Judaism. Kaplan may best be under- stood as a philosopher states- man in that his sociological analysis of the Jewish condi- tion and his proposed theo- logical reconstruction were motivated by an over-riding concern: to preserve the iden- tity, unity and creativity of the Jewish people threatened by the ambivalent forces of modern nationalism and naturalism. Kaplan viewed modern Jewry as an old-new people whose present socio- political and religious state of affairs are unprecedented in its history. No analogy with other Jewish communities in the pre-modern past properly applies to present day Jews who are citizens of demo- cratic societies. The forces of Emancipation and Enlighten- ment shattered the unity of Judaism and the Jewish peo- ple which could no longer be assured by a uniform theol- ogy and ritual practice. Kaplan addressed a new American Jewish audience, secularly educated, unwilling to accept the premises of supernaturalism or the auth- ority of other-worldly tradi- tion, unconvinced that public and private life should be regulated by revealed law. Reconstructionism was de- signed to effect a creative adjustment to modern life in order to salvage and strengthen the corporate will to live. Kaplan argued for the values of living simultaneous- ly in two civilizations. He proposed new categories to deal with the radically dif- ferent conditions of world Jewry; he called for a revalua- tion of Jewish institutions and the formulation of new programs to re-define the modern status of world Jewry. Kaplan's social strategy was not simply that of a statesman's accommodation to the undeniable reality of modernism. For him, natural- ism, humanism and democ- racy were not inimical forces to be fought against; they contributed insights and values indispensable for the revitalization of Judaism. With equal force, Kaplan warned against the perver- sion of those values into reductionist scientism, chauvinism and privatism. Nothing less than a synthesis of tradition and modernity could secure the continuity and creativity of Judaism. Basic to such a grand plan for reconstructing Judaism was Kaplan's characterization of Judaism as a religious civilization. On theoretic and pragmatic grounds, Kaplan held that the post-enlight- enment categories which view Judaism as either' a religion or nationality distorted the complex, varied and growing expressions of a living organ- ism, the Jewish people. Juda- ism as a civilization refers to the collective articulation of a people's wants, needs, yearnings and discoveries of sanctity and meaning. Jewish civilization is the human product of a particular people whose transactions with its environment yield laws, mores, language, history, art, attachment of a people to a land and religion. The re- ligious character of civiliza- tion is the expression of a people's spiritual personality, its self-awareness as a com- munity striving for the salva- tion or realization of all who belong to it. Kaplan's holistic perception of Judaism as a religious civilization enlarged the domain of Jewish in- terests and talents; incor- porated the diversity of Jewish religious and cultural expression; and focussed at- tention on the organic inter- dependence of culture, re- ligion and peoplehood. Judaism is existentially rooted in a living organism with an instinctual will-to- live. The matrix of the Jewish civilization is the Jewish peo- ple. Belonging, the need to feel part of a people whose salvation is linked with in- dividual self-fulfillment, takes precedence over believing. The Jewish heritage exists for the sake of the Jewish people, not the Jewish people for the sake of the Jewish heritage. The superstructure of Judaism must be responsive to the needs of the people, and must be responsible for the spiritual actualization of the people. Judaism as an evolv- ing religious civilization is "existentially Jewish peoplehood, essentially Jewish religion and func- tionally the Jewish way of life." The priority of Jewish existence over Jewish essence lies at the heart of Kaplan's "Copernican revolution." The Jewish heritage exists for the sake of the Jewish peo- ple, not the Jewish people for the sake of the Jewish her- itage. Kaplan's social existen- tialism means that the ex- istential reality of the Jewish people is prior to and transcends any doctrinaire set of beliefs and practices. In the past, the process of ad- justing tradition to the needs of the day was largely un- conscious, devoid of historic perspective. Revitalizing the spiritual values of the tradi- tion and making the transi- tion from traditional Judaism to a Judaism capable of sur- Continued on next page 47