Opinion Community Views Can We Save The Next Generation? Pieces Of A Peace RABBI WILLIAM G. GERSHON SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS LEONARD FEIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS The story is told of a group of el- derly, retired men who gather each morning in a cafe in Tel Aviv. They drink their coffee and sit for hours discussing the world situa- tion. Given the state of the world, their talks usually are de- pressing. One day, one of the men startles the others by an- nouncing, "You know what? I'm an optimist." The others are shocked, but then one of them notices something fishy. "Wait a minute! If you're an optimist, why do you look so worried?" To which the man responds, "You think it's easy to be an opti- mist?" It is difficult these days to be optimistic about the future of the American Jewish commu- nity. By now everyone has heard about the CJF population study which sadly confirms sta- tistically what many of us have known intuitively for years. This generation ofJews and the next are in trouble. There are more Jews converting out of Ju- daism than non-Jews convert- ing into Judaism. The intermarriage rate is out of control. The study suggests that 78 percent of my genera- tion's children will not even call themselves Jewish! We are los- ing generations ofJews and we are losing them because we are not committed totally to the so- lution required to turn the tide on Jewish assimilation and in- termarriage. The sad reality is that we know how to keep Jews Jewish and we are not doing it. The longest continuous religious tra- dition the world has ever known is here today because of one ma- jor factor: its ability to transmit the Jewish tradition to each generation. The buzzword of the Jewish community is continuity. Everyone is scrambling to re- define Jewish life in America around this principle. The prob- lem is that we cannot agree on what the "C" word really means. To me, the solution is simple. We are using the wrong word. We need to be buzzing about the "E" word: education. After all, what is Jewish continuity if not an infusion ofJewish education and religious experiences that will make an indelible imprint on the hearts and minds of our young people — creating loyal- ty and commitment to Jewish life? Jews who live in a religious context are far more likely to re- Rabbi Gershon is associate rabbi of Congregation Shaarey Zedek. tain their Jewishness than Jews who live only in secular society. I never could understand parents who fear too much Jew- ish education or observance lest their child become "too Jewish." There is no such thing. There is, however, the prob- lem of being too secular, which is far more likely to occur. And if we are afraid that our children will rebel, then at least they will have something unique to rebel against and, therefore, have something to return to after re- bellion. No other Jewish educational environment can provide the in- tensity, the creativity, the con- sistency and the quality of Jewish education needed to cre- ate committed Jews as can the day school. No other Jewish educational environment can provide the intensity, the creativity, the consistency and the quality of Jewish education needed to create committed Jews as can the day school. This is not to say that the af- ternoon Hebrew school cannot and does not produce commit- ted Jews. However, only the day school can deliver the kind of intensive Jewish educational content that we need to transmit to the next generation. The day school pro- vides a child with a Jewish ed- ucation that does not have to compete with his or her secular education. It offers Jewish ed- ucation in an academic and re- ligious framework which is taken seriously by both student and parent. The day school is not just some private school that hap- pens to have a lot ofJewish kids. It is about saving the Jewish souls of our children. If is about parents who are willing to mort- gage their homes so that they do not have to mortgage their children's Jewish future. It is nothing short of saving the next generation of the Jewish people. The Federation is working very hard to produce more dol- lars so that there will be more money available to meet the needs of our community. The day schools are doing everything they can to provide tuition as- sistance while at the same time maintaining fiscal responsibil- ity. What lesson would we be teaching our children if we did not help to provide for our pop- ulations at risk? As partners with the Federation, we must do more. It was Moses Ibn Ezra who said, "If you don't want to bear the light burden of education, then you will have to bear the heavy burden of ignorance." The financial burden of provid- ing Jewish education is no longer light, but the alternative is unthinkable. If our children are going to re- main Jewish, if there is going to be a next generation ofJews to serve the boards of federations, to provide for Jewish causes and to fill our synagogues, then we must invest now in the Jewish education of our children. ❑ Imagine an im- mense jigsaw puzzle, large enough to contain all the pieces that made an agree- ment between Is- rael and the Palestinians pos- sible. (I don't re- ally mean all the pieces, else we'd have to go back to Herzl or even to Abraham. So let's arbitrarily specify as our time frame just the last 15 years.) The historians who come years from now to explain what it was that led to the Israel-PLO agreement on Gaza and Jericho will, as historians do, seek to pre- sent an orderly array of causes leading to an inevitable result. Inevitable? Yes, because that which happened is, if adequate- ly explained, retrospectively in- evitable. If what happened — that which you seek to explain — had been other than it was, then your depiction of causes would likewise require change. The one correct and complete analysis points to but one con- clusion. Let's begin: Plainly, as all the analysts have already said, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War mat- tered, as did the Gulf War. (Here we see the first hint of the historians' problem: A tru- ly full accounting would have to explain why Saddam Hussein launched his war, why the PLO chose to support him, why each of the U.S. senators who backed the war did so. Were we to fol- low the trail back and wide enough, we'd end up with an ex- planation of everything — in- cluding, ultimately, the beating of the butterfly's wings. Even our most powerful computers can- not handle that much data, so let's accept that even our richest explanation is incomplete.) The rise of Islamic funda- mentalism belongs in our puz- zle, as does the change of government in Israel. So, too, go- ing back a bit, do Anwar Sadat coming to Jerusalem and Jim- my Carter and the others as- sembled at Camp David. But all those are the easy ones, large and obvious. What of the bits and pieces that belong? What of a Norwegian professor who happened to talk with a member of the Knesset who was soon to become Israel's deputy foreign minister, and a professor at the University of Haifa who gave the Norwegian some time? (See how complicated it can be, and how chancy? Suppose Leonard Fein is a Boston-based commentator on Jewish issues. the Haifa professor — his name is Yair Hirschfeld — had been on sabbatical? Suppose that the Knesset member — Yossi Beilin — had sent the Norwegian pro- fessor — Terje Rod Larsen — to see someone else, someone with less imagination?) And, moving somewhat far- ther afield, what of Israel's vic- tory in the $10 billion loan guarantee debate, which may have persuaded the PLO lead- ership that there was simply no way that the United States could be weaned away from Israel? What, therefore, of Tom Dine and the others who helped fash- ion that victory? (And, therefore, what if Tom Dine's unfortunate remarks regarding Orthodox Jews had been published a cou- ple of years before they were — as well they might have been, the interview in which he offered those remarks having taken place four years before the book With the pule as complete as we can make it, all its pieces in place, now ask which piece(s) you can safely remove without disturbing the outcome. in which they were included was published? But if Mr. Dine had been forced to resign earlier, would not others have picked up the slack? Was any one person key to the $10 billion victory? Prob- ably not — but possibly yes. What of the hard-liners here in America — say, for example, bad cops Abe Rosenthal and Bill Safire of the New York Times — who came to remind the PLO people that they'd not win over public opinion here, notwith- standing some people's readiness to rationalize terrorism? And what of the peaceniks, of Shalom Achshav in Israel and Americans for Peace Now here? Were they the good cops, the ones who taught the PLO that there was an option other than total victory and total defeat — and who taught the State De- partment that American Jews were not quite so monolithical- ly hard-line as they sometimes seemed, that there was, there- fore, some running room for cre- ative policy? PEACE page 8