OTHER VIEWS Behind The Numbers Philadelphia oes anyone really care exactly how many Jews there are in the United States? Judging by some of the initial cov- erage of the release last month of the National Jewish Population Survey 2000-01, you would think that the dispute over whether there are 5.2 million (down from 5.5 million in 1990) or 6.7 million Jews — as another survey asserts — was the crucial point in this story. Though the headline on the press release from the United Jewish Communities that sponsored the survey claimed the numbers showed a "fairly stable" population, the pic- ture actually painted by the survey was of an aging, shrinking popula- tion. Among those not accepting all of this was demographer Gary Tobin (no relation to this writer), who claims that 1.5 million people who should be counted as Jews were left out of the NJPS numbers. This includes people who currently adhere to other religions; those who don't list their religion as Jewish, but claim to be ethnically or culturally D Jonathan S. Tobin is executive editor of the Jewish Exponent in Philadelphia. E- mail: jtobin@jewishexponentcom Jewish; and those who had been raised as Jews or had at least one Jewish parent. Intermarriage Focus But no matter which set of statistics you choose to accept as being closer to the truth, the real questions this long-awaited survey and other studies raise has little to do with just figures. Rather, as the categories counted by Gary Tobin and omitted by the NJPS indicate, it is about how we define ourselves. More to the point, it is also about what kind of a community we want to be in the future, no matter how big or small our numbers. More than a decade ago, when the predecessor to this study was released in 1990, many Jews were taken aback by the high rate of intermarriage that was reported. Whether the numbers were completely accurate or not (some analyses disputed the famous 52 percent intermarriage rate), the 1990 survey had the effect of con- centrating communal minds on the question of rising rates of assimila- tion and the shrinking Jewish popu- lation base. Though much of the talk centered on Jews marrying non-Jews, that was, of course, not the problem itself. It was merely an indicator of the fact that not only were American Jews From Jersey, 'The Protocols' Philadelphia rab Voice, an Arabic-language newspaper published weekly since 1993 from Main Street in Paterson, N.J., appears to be just another one of America's many ethnic publications. Its news pages are replete with items about Palestinian travails and possible war with Iraq. Its featured columnist is James Zogby, president of the Arab American Institute. Its publisher, Walid Rabah, modestly describes him- self as "an activist with the Palestinian Writer's Guild in the United States." Its pages are filled with ads hawking A Daniel Pipes is director of the Middle JN 11/15 2002 X3 0 East Forum and author of 'Militant Islam Reaches America." E-mail• Pipes@MEForum.org Arab-owned restaurants, travel agen- cies, real estate offices, retail stores, and doctors' offices. It all appears achingly ordinary. But it is not. For some weeks now, the Arab Voice has been serializing an Arabic-language version of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion in its pages, but not — revealingly — on its Web site, wvvw.arabvoice.com And the Protocols is no ordinary book. It purports to be the secret tran- scription of a Zionist Congress that met in Switzerland in 1897, as taken down by a czarist spy and first pub- lished in St. Petersburg in 1903. At the meeting, Jewish leaders allegedly discussed their plans to establish Jewish "sovereignty over all the world." The Protocols includes their boasts of being "invincible" and plans to establish a "Super-Government Over the course of the accepted in society, but also decade, both sides got a little we were living lives that were little different from those of of what they wanted. Day-school enrollment, for our neighbors. Given a Jewish communal example, grew by leaps and bounds, but a lack of com- ethos focused more on exter- munal support, high tuition nal factors — resisting anti- and a culture that looked Semitism and supporting askance at parochial educa- Israel — and largely de- JONATHAN tion ensured that that these emphasizing faith and S. TOBIN schools would not become Judaism as a way of life, it Special the answer for the majority of was little wonder that a Commentary Jews. majority of American Jews On the other hand, Jewish recognized no personal federations and other organizations imperative to marry within the faith. poured a great deal of money into Reaction to the 1990 numbers also outreach events. Predictably, this split the Jewish world on the ques- effort was not enough to satisfy the tion of "outreach" versus "inreach" as outreach advocates who felt the mar- the best response to this problem. ginal success of such programs was Some of us asserted that reaching out the result of insufficient support, not to the intermarried and the growing the idea itself. numbers of American Jews who were This once red-hot argument has unaffiliated was the correct response. cooled down in recent years as the Others claimed with more justice Palestinian war on Israel got us that investing most of our scarce thinking less about catch phrases Jewish communal resources on such such as "Jewish continuity" and more efforts would prove futile. They about supporting the Jewish state. insisted that "in-reach," or programs devoted to helping reinforce the identity of those already affiliated, Everything Okay? was the best chance for strengthening While serious thought about the our plight. This fight spilled over meaning of the numbers might indi- into many areas as "in-reach" advo- cate a rekindling of a genuine debate, cates pointed to Jewish day schools as Jewish leaders would prefer that we the way to keep our core population avoid this. Both "outreach" and stable. somewhat reducing its appeal Administration" that will and reach (Ford and the "subdue all the nations." Times both retracted their In fact, the Protocols is a endorsements), it remained a fabrication forged by the powerful force. A 1926 study czarist secret police, the found that "no piece of mod- Okhrana, in about 1898-99. ern literature has even This pseudo-document had approximated the circulation limited impact until 20 years of the Protocols." later, after World War I and DAN IEL the Russian Revolution, when PI PES a receptivity had developed Sp ecial `Warrant For Genocide' for its message about a Jewish Corn mentary The historic importance of conspiracy to dominate the the Protocols lies in permitting world. The Protocols quickly anti-Semites to reach beyond their became a best seller on appearing in traditional circles and find a huge German translation in January 1920. international audience. Its vagueness The former German royal family — almost no names, dates, or issues helped defray publication costs, and are specified — was one key to this deposed Kaiser Wilhelm II had por- success. tions of the book read out loud to The purportedly Jewish authorship dinner guests. Translations into other also helped to make the book more languages quickly followed. Henry convincing. Its facile embrace of con- Ford endorsed the book, as did the tradiction — Jews supposedly use all London Times. tools available, including capitalism Although the book's forged nature and communism, philo-Semitism and was already established by 1921,