CLOSE-UP `In Separation There Is Strength' Orthodoxy's aggressive lobby, Agudath Israel of America, is establishing a Washington office, and the organization is accustomed to playing hardball for its strong conservative views. JAMES D. BESSER Washington Correspondent n Orthodoxy, the tension between in- volvement and insularity is an age- old story. On one hand, observant Jews have always sought to insulate themselves from a hostile and im- pure outside world. But in a pluralistic society—and in a democracy in particular —insularity is a luxury few groups can afford. Agudath Israel of America, the 66 year- old Orthodox group, walks this precarious line with agility. In the last few years, Agudah representatives have played poli- tical hardball on Capitol Hill with an effec- tiveness that makes their opponents in the liberal Jewish organizations gnash their teeth. The right wing of Orthodox Jewry is flexing its political muscle with new authority, and Agudath Israel is at the head of the pack. According to both sup- porters and opponents, the group's effec- tiveness is directly tied to the clarity and pinpoint focus of its message. "We're not all over the board," says David Zwiebel, director of the group's Office of Govern- ment Affairs. "We work on issues that have a very direct connection to our member- ship." Rabbi Moshe Sherer, Agudath Israel's longtime leader and one of the most charismatic figures in modern Judaism, suggests a deeper cause of the group's straight-ahead momentum. "We are committed to the very idea that decisions in Jewish life all stem from cer- tain outlooks," he says. "The important decisions in Jewish life should be made by those who have the credentials, on the I 24 FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1988 basis of their wide knowledge of the total- ity of Jewish history and Jewish life. We're opposed to the current system—where serious decisions are made by officers whose only credentials are that they are major contributors." It is the Torah scholars and rabbinical sages who make the decisions for Agudath Israel. The Spirit Of Torah Formed in 1912 in Kattowitz, a small Polish town near the border with Germany, the organization was charged with creating a central body uniting the different fac- tions of Orthodox Jewry, and to bring together under a single umbrella Jews from Eastern European shtetls and cosmopoli- tan cities in the West. Agudath Israel was designed to provide a central reference point for the application of Torah principles to the demands of everyday living in the different environ- ments in which Jews found themselves. The goal, according to the founders, was "the solution of all problems facing the Jewish people, in the spirit of Tbrah." The new organization was also a response to the growth of secular Zionism. From the beginning, Agudath Israel fought ferociously against what they regarded as a rejection of Torah by leaders of the Zionist movement. The clearest expression of Agudah's unique approach was its Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah, the Council of Torah Sages, the panel of top rabbinical sages who set policy for the group. (The late Rabbi Jacob Ruder- man, who headed the Ner Israel Rabbinical College here, was a member of the Council until his death last summer.) Even today, the Council determines Agudath Israel's positions on every important public policy issue. Agudath Israel of America was founded in 1922 in response to the same pressures on Jewish life—and in particular to the lack of yeshivas in this country. It came in- to its own as an organization in the terri- ble days of World War II, when it played an important role in rescue and resettle- ment activities. In working to save Europe's tortured Jews, Agudah leaders began the serious cultivation of useful con- tacts in the federal government. This period also shaped the attitudes of Rabbi Sherer, Agudath Israel's longtime president, who attended Ner Israel Rab- binical College in Baltimore. "In Baltimore I saw Orthodox Jews who were looked on as second-class Jews by the Jewish establishment," he says. "Especially in the war years, when they were so concerned with laws, with regulations. I felt we needed an arm so the Orthodox would speak with clarity and integrity. I saw the price we paid because of those who put technicality and laws in front of Jewish survival." The theme of the abandonment of Europe's Jews by the mainline organiza- tions is a thread that still runs through the group's activities. With anger undiminish- ed by the passage of more than three decades, Sherer tells about the time Agudah offices were picketed by members of the American Jewish Congress— because Agudath Israel was smuggling food packages to Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto, a technical violation of the boycott against Germany. Today, Agudath Israel's activities en- compass the whole range of Jewish life. The group is the hub of a network of