•I, AE.CPTW, VP.::s.reZ.'.., . ..& 6,7" • SPECIAL COMMENTARY The Baby And The Bathwater Jerusalem Of the many fascinating paradoxes of srael's 52nd birthday, its first of Zionism, this is the saddest. This, and. the new millennium, came and not denominational issues, is what went this week. And it's as fine world Jewry ought to be most con- an occasion as any to muse on cerned about. The religious pluralism the State of the Jews. question is slowly working itself out. In America, democracy is an axiom. The Reform and Conservative move- ments are pressing on with court cases, Immigrants unschooled in democratic values imbibe the common seeking to compel the state creed in the process of their to accept non-Orthodox naturalization. Citizenship is converts trained in Israel as granted only after completing Jews. a course of study. The Reform movement In Israel, no Jewish immi- has just inaugurated a pro- grant ever-•1as had to pass a gram to certify physicians — citizenship test. One Jewish male and female — as mohe- grandparent, and zap, you're lim (ritual circumcisers), pro- an Israeli. Most Israelis derive voking a predictable denun- from countries with no tradi- ciation from the Orthodox. STUART tion of democracy (or reli- This aside, the deeper SCHOFFMAN question that might fairly gious pluralism). Special to For many Israelis, democ- be asked is: How Jewish are the Jewish News racy means the license to Israeli Jews? wield decisive parliamentary Shas leader Rabbi Ovadiah power while at the same time reserv- Yosef, by scurrilously comparing Edu- ing the right to flout the rule of law or cation Minister Yossi Sarid to Haman shirk civic responsibility. and Pharoah, only reinforced the alienation of secular Israelis from the Of course, one major issue is the perceived power of the Orthodox religious establishment. Yet when the haredim; it may be the single biggest rabbi wondered why Sarid did not agonize over how so many Israeli stu- reason that so many Israelis are, ironi- cally — indeed tragically — turned dents were ignorant of the prayer off to Judaism in the very country Shema Yisrael, he had a point. invented to preserve and protect it. I suspect that the garden-variety Israeli youngster does, in fact, know Stuart Schoffman is associate editor of the difference between Shema Yisrael the Jerusalem Report and a contributing and "Beam Me Up, Scotty," but it columnist to the Jewish News. His e- may well be that his or her Jewish lit- mail address is steart@netvision.net.il eracy doesn't go much beyond that. I Secular Jewish leaders of earlier generations --- David Ben-Gurion and Menachem Begin, for example — were steeped in the religious heritage they chose to transmute into some- thing new That legacy has been all but lost. At the same time, the wide- spread consensus in society that right- wing Orthodoxy represents Jewish authenticity minimizes the likelihood that many secular, liberal Israelis will be inclined to re-embrace their roots. In the Midrash Tanhuma, we find a beautiful legend about Rabbi Akiva. A cynical Roman, known as Tornosrufus the Wicked, inquires scoffingly: "If cir- cumcision is so important to your God, how come boys don't emerge from the womb pre-circumcised?" Rabbi Akiva promptly produces a stalk of wheat and some cakes. "We are commanded to improve upon creation," is his reply, "and thereby to participate in God's ongoing enterprise." Let me offer an additional layer of interpretation. This midrash teaches that improving the world is the very essence of the brit mila, entering into the covenant. Tikkun olam is thus no ordinary commandment — it is inscribed in the flesh. Many secular Israelis, of course, espouse a similar philosophy, though not couched in religious language. And it is true that a growing number of secular Israelis are taking up classical Jewish texts in various study groups. But many of these same people retain a strong sus- picion of traditional Judaism, and of rabbis in particular, and as a result are reluctant to go the next step and become religiously affiliated, even with the non-Orthodox streams. The word haredi means "fearful", and these ultra-Orthodox are first of all God-fearing, and also afraid that the sec- ular authorities — mainly the Supreme Court — will erode the Jewishness of Israel by awarding further victories to the Reform and Conservative move- . ments. The staunch secularists are no less doctrinaire. They are fearful that the haredim, given their druthers, would turn Israel into a Jewish version of Iran. Rabbi Meir, the great mishnaic sage, was a student of nisha ben Avuyah, a rabbinic genius who became a heretic (consequently called Aber, the "Other") — yet continued to regard him as his master even after Flisha abandoned his Jewish faith. It was said of Rabbi Mein "He found a pomegranate, ate the seeds and threw away the peel." Analogously (and conversely), liberal Jews in Israel and elsewhere ought not be automatically put off by the "other- ness" of the black-hatted haredim. There's a world of wisdom to be gleaned frnm the ultra-Orthodox, the Chasidim not least. As the great Galician Rebbe Elimelech of Lizhensk (1717-1787) taught in his "Prayer Before Praying": • "May it be given to me to see my neigh- bor's virtues, not his faults." Such a capability is a gift indeed, one that all Jews are empowered to give themselves, and, God willing, each other. ❑ Make Mother's Day A Peace Day a 6-year-old child shooting a classmate near Flint. We have natural disasters like torna- does in Oklahoma and the more • recent floods in Mozambique. Let us put a stop to the self-manifested dis- asters. On this Mother's Day, let us take a stand and wear a black-and- white ribbon. Teach our children and send letters to Congress. As Julia Ward Howe said, "We will not have questions decided by irrelevant agencies. Our husbands shall not come to us reeking with carnage for causes and applause. Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn all that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience." Film Festival- A Delight Contrary to popular belief, Hall- mark did not invent Mother's Day. Mother's Day was Julia Ward Howe's original idea. She chose June 2, 1872, as the proper date and wrote Mother's Day peace letters to friends and family. Mrs. Howe's idea was not sending flowers and gifts. She conceived Mother's Day as the day when every- one should be bringing about world peace. This Mother's Day, I would like to reintroduce Mother's Peace Day. On this day, I would have all mothers, grand- mothers, aunts and sisters wear a black- and-white ribbon: white for peace and - black for mourn- ing the killing fields in Kosovo, the tragedy at Columbine High School in Colorado and the most recent tragedy of Ruth Fuller West Bloomfield What a wonderful opportunity for the Jewish community to be able to attend the JCC Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival ("Of Faith & Flicks," April 21, page 81). We saw so many outstanding movies on different topics. These - movies might never have been shown in our area if not for this film festival. Yasher koach (thank you) to the Marwil family, the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit, the sponsors, the organization supporters, the steering committee and all the vol- unteers. We look forward to joining you again next year. Dr. Marvin and Joyce Weckstein West Bloomfield IN t 5/12 2000 47