OPINION OPINION Try Jewish Literacy Understanding Humanism observance. It was here that the real n a recent issue of The Jewish crisis of toleration and pluralism lies. News, a confrontation was If you can stop people from lighting reported. The Shabbat dinner of candles (a private behavior) in a non- the Seventh Biennial Congress religious setting like a hotel, why not of Secular Humanistic Jews was invad- forbid them to drive or read "outside" ed by Orthodox protesters who object- books or dress differently? This is not ed to the lighting of Shabbat the Jewish state that Herzl and candles after sundown. Ben-Gurion had in mind. In response to this report, Liberal Jews in Israel who some letters to the editor are in favor of pluralism have expressed outrage — not at to tolerate the existence of the the uninvited protesters, but at segregation of women at the the Secular Humanistic Jews Western Wall, a national shrine who dared to light candles for all Jews. This situation, in after sundown. As a Secular my opinion, is an affront to Humanistic Jew training for the Reform and Conservative the rabbinate, I was very dis- AD AM movements in which families mayed by this response. CHAL OM may sit together and pray and Our delegates were not try- Speci al to to basic ideas of equality. Yet I, ing to singlehandedly destroy The J ewish and other pluralistic Jews, the Orthodox monopoly on Ne ws would never demand that religious life in Israel. We were Orthodox men and women be in what we were told was a forced to do anything that violates their private room in the hotel. We did not convictions. Toleration only works go around to yeshivas eating ham and when it is a two-way street. cheese sandwiches. We did not run It constantly amazes me that we can into the kitchen to pollute it with be more tolerant of other religions than treife meat. We merely wanted to cele- we are of our fellow Jews. I would brate our Jewish identity in a different never tell other Jews how they must, way, a way no more halachically objec- and must not, celebrate their Jewish tionable than driving home from identity. Yet, many Jews have no trou- Shabbat services. ble telling me what to do. There are as We were not insensitive to what is many personally significant ways of important to the Orthodox in Israel; feeling Jewish as there are Jews because they were insensitive to what was every Jew is an individual who responds important to us. We were not even to his or her own Jewish convictions. making a public event of our Shabbat The basic issue is whether you accept I Adam Chalom is a rabbinic intern at the Birmingham Temple. the reality of individuality and plural- ism, or whether you reject it. Humanistic Jews do not run around telling other Jews what they have to do for their Jewish identity. Humanistic Jews do tell others that they have the right and the freedom to find for themselves their own path to happiness and Jewish identity. If that means following Halachah, fine. If that means celebrating freedom from Halachah, fine. If that means celebrat- ing our Jewish identity in some mid- dle ground, then that's fine, too. Plu- ralism rests on mutual toleration and mutual respect. Toleration only works on a two-way street. The biggest myth of Jewish history is that Jews always celebrated Judaism uniformly in one (Orthodox) way until modern times. The historical fact is that there have always been varieties of Jewish observance, permitted or not. Early Chasidism challenged the establishment's belief that prayer at the correct time was more important than prayer with the correct intention. Ashkenazim and Sephardim still can't eat at each other's houses during Passover because of alternate rules of chametz. What have we forgotten from our past when the power of an indi- vidual rabbi determined the pluralism of Jewish behavior? ❑ LITTERS largely un-Jewish Detroit." He proba- bly meant un-Orthodox Detroit. I am also inclined to believe he was refer- ring to the northwest area where many Jews live who are not Orthodox. We are decimated by so many in so many ways, why should any Orthodox Jews confuse non-Orthodox with non- Jewish? We have the same ancestry and pray to the same God. The point I am making is that most Jews are not Orthodox, but are 100 percent Jewish. To be more specif- ic, when they wish their children, friends and family to be more Jewish, they probably mean more Orthodox because their children and others are already 100 percent Jewish by birth. I suppose it is a matter of semantics. Moishe Baruch (Ben) Mandell Southfield 11 / 20 1998 32 Detroit Jewish News On The Path To Destruction? Tragic that the Oslo Accords 1993 and 1995 and the Wye Summit 1998 did not cause Jews to protest against the State Department and the presi- dency. Quite the opposite. An editorial in The Jewish News ("Stay The Course," Nov. 13) proclaimed that to surrender to the Arabs was the only plausible choice. "What is the alternative?" the editorial cried. The classic Czechoslovakian solu- tion (1939) was one of surrender and capitulation to the Nazis under British 'fraud. Today, it is the Arabs under American tutelage. Regardless of the editorial claims, a similar super-Intifa- da rebellion exists already, even if Israel conceded. Thus, the Jews will have to decide again whether to fire real bullets causing death in defense of Hebron, Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, or with- drawal in the face of raging Arab mobs and Jewish children being shot and murdered in cold blood. For what? Half an Israel that is again under Arab domination as "palestine"? Indeed, tensions with the United States, the "massive provider of Israeli aid," are bound to increase because of the Wye Summit and Israeli surrender. Even if Israel gave the entire Judea- Samarian hills (the Arab "west bank") to the Arabs, Jews will continue to die from increased Arab aggression because of Oslo and Wye. There can be no treaty that will stop the Arab expansion into Jewish areas. Besides, if Israel surrenders land, would it not need less aid rather than more? The Israeli economy is always DAVID WEINBERG Special to The Jewish News 0 ne key approach to repairing the fraying Israel-Diaspora relationship didn't find much of an echo at this week's grand CJF/UJA General Assembly program in Jerusalem. A renewed commitment to the study of Jewish heritage: Jewish literacy as the bond between Americans and Israelis. American Jewish experts will explain that Israel is not the utopian dream of yesteryear; no longer roman- tic enough to capture the imagination of the masses or serve as an identity builder for youth. Indeed, the state's politics have changed, grown complicated and dark- er. Sephardim, religious Jews and the Right have taken the driver's seat — and they don't exactly share all the lib- eral values of American Jews. Israel's rabbis, they'll also tell you, effectively have impugned the Jewishness of American Jews. Moreover, Israeli leaders themselves have taken the wind out of American Jewry's Israel-identification sails by telling them Israel no longer needs American Jewish communal lobbying (Yitzhak Rabin), public relations efforts (Shimon Peres) or philanthropy (Yossi Beilin). Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu welcomes the JEWISH LITERACY on page 35 David Weinberg is a regular commenta- tor on public affairs for the Jerusalem Post. straining because of its smallness. But since the editorial agrees that Russian immigration would increase because of "Russia's domestic situation," why should not Israel keep the land and put Russians into Judea and Samaria, rather than surrendering it to the Arabs and having less room in a shrunken Israel? As plausible as the above may be, it is outside pressure from the president of the United States that earned the collapse and dissolution of the State of Israel. Jews do not, cannot, under- stand that. Presidents have been work- ing from its very beginning to destroy Israel. Still, the Zionist-Jewish dream of peace did not come from simply declaring "peace" with the Arabs (Shimon Peres) nor by withdrawing PATH To DESTRUCTION on page 34