Cover Story THE SQUEEZE from page 21 ;4. 11/14 2003 22 Conservative Jews to begin to live their lives based on Halachah. Without seri- ous commitment to that challenge, the promise that our ancestors saw in Conservative Judaism will never be real- ized." During the convention, Rabbi Epstein announced the formation of a new com- mission of rabbis, educators and lay leaders to coordinate those efforts. In recent years, the issue of gays also has sparked intense debate. While the Reform and Reconstructionist movements ordain gays, and Orthodoxy forbids it, the cen- trist Conservative movement takes a third path: Synagogues welcome gay members, but the movement does not allow gay commitment ceremonies or ordain openly gay students as rabbis. Why The Decline? What Do Numbers Mean? Once the dominant post-World War II stream of American Judaism, Conservative Jewry is facing a critical crossroads. While its membership appears to be falling, the more liberal Reform and Reconstructionist move- ments — and the more traditional Orthodox movement — are gaining ground. The NJPS noted that those belonging to Reform congregations increased from 35 percent in 1990 to a current 39 per- cent, while Orthodox membership jumped from 16 to 21 percent and Reconstructionist from 2 to 3 percent. The Reform movement is attracting intermarried couples, and often their Jewish parents who leave Conservative synagogues that won't include their intermarried children. It remains to be seen how many intermarried families will see themselves as Jewish in the next generation. While Conservative congregations are urged to make interfaith couples feel welcome, non-Jewish members of those families are not allowed to lead public prayer services. Modern Orthodox synagogues are gaining members, many of whom, after spending years with the strong influence of Conservative traditionalism in youth groups, do not find the same commit- ment in their synagogue's members. "Every religious movement expresses a spectrum of approaches and practices," said Rabbi Charles Popky of Congregation Beth Ahm in West Bloomfield. "For the Conservative movement — which is in the middle — we feel the tension. As one moves to either extreme, they may find themselves realizing they show more and more characteristics of another movement." Conservative Judaism refused to fol- low the Reform movement in sanction- ing patrilineal descent — accepting as Jews those with Jewish fathers but non- Jewish mothers — but followed Reform in ordaining women as rabbis. Those new rules spurred members to leave on either end of the halachic field, toward more and less traditional streams, observers say. Jack Wertheimer, Jewish Theological Seminary of America provost, maintains "the Conservative movement has been in demographic decline for nearly two gen- erations," but others question the notion that the movement is shrinking. Rela Mintz Geffen, president of Baltimore's Hebrew University, said it is difficult to interpret the meaning of the latest population survey data showing fewer self-identified Conservatives. "In 1990, more people called them- selves Reform than Conservative, but when you looked at Conservative syna- gogue membership, it was higher" than in the Reform ranks, she said. It is therefore possible the NJPS over- states the share of Reform movement affiliates because some who identify as Reform Jews might not be considered halachically Jewish by the Conservative or Orthodox movement's conversion or patrilineal descent standards. Still, a few local synagogues, including the West Bloomfield-based B'nai Moshe, have seen a slight decrease in member- ship. While Rabbi Elliot Pachter acknowledges it, he also said, "Our pop- ulation of active members remains steady, or slightly increasing. So the activity in our building is strong, even though the actual paid membership is down slightly." Rabbi David Nelson of Congregation Beth Shalom in Oak Park said his syna- gogue is growing. "Overall, the Conservative movement in Detroit is not in a decline," he said. "But Detroit is a different and strong Jewish commu- nity. Perhaps the numbers will become smaller, but we're still not yet at the Golden Age of Conservative Judaism." And before that happens, local rabbis are ready to put up a fight. "Our movement faces challenges right now, but many of the fundamentals are very strong," said Rabbi Daniel Nevins of Adat Shalom Synagogue in Farmington Hills, where he said mem- bership numbers are stable. He is concerned about the shrinking of the overall American Jewish popula- tion — from just below 5.5 million in 1990 to 5.2 million in the latest NJPS Dr. Jacques Rosenfeld of Southfield is among adult learners at Adat Shalom Synagogue. — and that "the Detroit community is growing more diffuse and sparse as time goes on. Metro Detroit is home to about 96,000 Jews, according to the Jewish Federation. "Adat Shalom exists not simply to maintain a market share, but to increase the quality and quantity of Jewish life for our entire community," Rabbi Nevins said. "It is also important to remember that a few decades ago, many observers assumed that Orthodoxy was on its last legs. The young people were all joining Conservative synagogues and Orthodoxy seemed Old World. But it rejuvenated, based on serious efforts to educate its young. "My goal is to increase the joy of doing commandments and the depth of studying Torah," Rabbi Nevins said. "We will be able to measure success not by a spreadsheet indicating the percent- age of congregants who keep a certain number of commandments, but by our ability to create a community where Torah and mitzvot are attractive and compelling on all levels." He said in the past 10-15 years, United Synagogue has seen its member- ship rolls remain steady. Indeed, Rabbi Epstein and others con- tend that the focus on numbers misses the point. Some even maintain that fewer members translate into a leaner, meaner movement spiritually. "The numbers may drop, but you have a more passionate core that in turn generates greater numbers," said LA.'s Rabbi Wolpe. According to Rabbi Nevins, "The National Jewish Population Survey is the catalyst for all this talk, but it really is unclear how much lasting value these numbers have in the deeper discussion of the Jewish future. "I guess our synagogue numbers may be down, but our early childhood pro- grams and (Conservative movement Solomon) Schechter schools are flourish- ing — they are way up from 10 years ago. The challenge is how to translate that affiliation into a meaningful person- al commitment. Calling ours a shrinking movement is not fully accurate." Leaner But Stronger In the opening USCJ biennial address, Rabbi Bradley Artson, dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies and vice president of the University of Whether or not individual synagogue membership is down, the USCJ's Rabbi Epstein said, "the issue for me is, we're not growing." Tradition, Tradition THE SQUEEZE on page 24