EDITOR'S NOTEBOOK Working To Overcome The Enemy Within / - being pushed aside for matters of spir- ingering notions that Israel's it. Jewish mysticism and God-search external threats are more is in. urgent than internal ones Synagogues, particularly ones with drowned in a massive sea of day schools, are now primary cultiva- black and white in Jerusalem on Sun- tors of Jewish identity. Jewish com- day. munity centers find Up to a quarter-million "Judaism 101" classes haredi (black hat) Jews peace- booming. Nobody's scream- fully blocked the city's ing for the philosophy of entrance to protest Supreme Ber Borochov and Vladimir Court dictates challenging Jabotinsky. Orthodoxy's hegemony on Meanwhile, with Israel's state-funded religious coun- increasing cacophony of cils, military deferment and confusing images, we are lifecycle events. Leaders of more apt to shake our the rally had referred to the heads and say, "Such a court as "enemies of the mess; such a pity," and NEIL RUBIN Jews." ignore the Jewish state's Senior Editor Down the road, about woes. And a generation 50,000 counter-demonstra- moves farther from embrac- tors returned the favor, , ing what the writer Ahad Ha'am yelling that the haredim are "para- referred to as the cultural center of sites" who take state funding for the Jewish world. yeshivot without serving in the mili- The problem is that we American tary. The predicted violence didn't Jews desperately need the spiritual occur. But one day soon it's likely. injection that the hills of Jerusalem Don't ignore the possibility. offer. And the Israelis urgently need Ahh Jerusalem . . . city of peace. our help in figuring out how Jews From the safe confines of America, can cooperate on a basic agenda — where the separation of religion and such as promoting Jewish learning state is a sacred value, what does it instead of focusing on unconquerable mean? Plenty. divides. It comes when more American Only religious American Jews, Jews than ever seek a spiritual expres- reared in a culture of accommodation, sion of Judaism. With the death of can set the example; Israelis, bred on Jewish neighborhoods, other than a culture of conflict, are incapable. Orthodox ones, Jews who connect But that would entail a Jewish-Jew- Jewishly increasingly do so via reli- ish dialogue group? American Jews gion. Israel still looms large in our seem much more interested in meet- official communal agenda, but it is Thus, Jordan invaded Israel twice, once in 1948 under Abdullah (Hus- sein's father), to destroy the Jewish government and people, and second, in 1967, under the "kindly" Hussein himself, where thousands of Jews were murdered as Jerusalem and the Judean-Sumarian Hills were finally won. Still, Jordan lost both wars and the "west bank" of its kingdom. Jews must remember Jordan is a dictatorship. Backed by a Bedouin- Arab military force, Hussein ruled his palestinian"-Arab population. While careful not to exacerbate the strained relationships inherent, King Hussein, with an iron hand, used force when his now grieving "palestinian"-Arab population rebelled to gain control over Jordan through war and assassi- nation of Hussein. Instead, Hussein's destruction of CC the PLO in September 1970 indicated he had no problem with obliteration and driving the PLO into Lebanon. It left him in power, albeit with a smaller and certainly now docile population of ‘`palestinian"-Arabs. Were Hussein, and now his son King Abdullah, really interested in peace with Israel, that portion of Israel given would be returned for peace. Jordan also would allow all the king- dom's Arab people to vote honestly on whom should remain in power. Thirdly, the new king should use his influence to prevent the Judea- Samarian Hills from becoming a palestinian"-Arab state because the second "palestinian" state will become a threat to both Jordan and Israel. But the king is dead, another monarch has been enthroned and, therefore, Israel will be faced with " ing Catholics, Protestants and Baptists than our own. Theological gaps will always remain. Only through an apparatus for continual dialogue with one another (not just for rabbis) will the non-Orthodox see that the very- Only American Jews including the black hats can save Israel. Orthodox do care for every single Jew — and believe that non-Jews, in their definition, are still created in the image of God and commanding of respect. And only in this way will the haredim (without whose consent modern Orthodoxy is afraid to budge) see the many Reform and Conservative Jews who care deeply about Torah and tradition. They are not heathens; they are spiritual seekers who include tradition in their approach. Many in the haredi camp will reject this, seeing only a non-Ortho- dox world rampant with assimilation, another ruler. For the present, the new King Abdullah awaits Syrian, Egyptian or "palestinian"-Arab invasion. Or the king may trade on Hussein's memories to wrest and regain control of his "west bank" to the profound disap- intermarriage and Jewish illiteracy. To an extent, they're right. So they must engage that world before 80 percent of the Jewish people disappears — a disaster far greater than they currently understand. For their part, many in the other camps see the haredim as an insular world withdrawn from modernity's promise. To an extent, they're right. But the non-Orthodox need to better learn basic texts to fully claim the label religious Jews. And the Ortho- dox, ultra or others, provide the best models of "text-wrestling." After some dialogue, the groups need to take their understandings to Israel and set up parallel discussions. Ultimately, they need to work toward separation of religion and state while pushing Israel's obligation to promote Jewish learning and liv- ing. Mind you, I've recently floated this idea with various rabbinical friends. I am, they say, more likely to get a cholent recipe from the pope. But right now everyone has a raw deal. Israel's haredim are subject to interpretations of a secular court. Israel's secular are burdened with an imposed and unwanted lifestyle. American Jews zone out from the crit- ical debate. And we all miss the point. Unity is not uniformity. It is about Jews hav- ing some coffee together and talking about things Jewish — even if they have to bring their own mug. IT pointment of his persistent Jewish detractors. Michael Drissman Executive director Committee for the Jewish Idea Troy Letters Policy The Jewish News welcomes letters to the editor on topics of interest to the Jewish community. We reserve the right to edit as well as reject letters. They should be limited to approxi- mately 350 words. Deadline for consideration is 10 a.m. Tuesday for Friday's edition. Letters should be typewritten and double spaced. They must contain the full name of the writer and a daytime telephone number so authorship can be verified. Include the town of residence or employment of the writer as well as a position or title, if appropriate. Original copies must be hand signed. Letters can be mailed or brought to The Jewish News at 27676 Franklin Rd., South- field, MI 48034; Faxed to (248) 354-6069; or e-mail to: TheDJN@AOL.COM . Letters to the Editor are posted regularly on our JN Online website at www.detroitjewishnews.com 2/19 1999 Detroit Jewish News 29