Vanishing Or Revitalizing? For 350 years in America, Jews have been rising to the challenge of survival, scholar says. SHARON LUCKERMAN StaffWriter I have used over the years to deal with fears of Jewish survival: • Keeping tradition. The Orthodox stressed educating Jews, even translating prayers into English, but nothing deviated from Jewish law. • Adapting to the new land meant coping with pressures on Judaism to change and make it more spiritually uplifting in the 1800s. Jewish congregations added organ music, shortened prayers and initiated mixed seating. In the early 1900s, the Conservative move- ment saw tremendous growth, but is now out- paced by Reform Judaism. • Preserving Jewish peoplehood appealed to those who rejected the synagogue. They formed groups like B'nai Brith (sons of the covenant), which began in 1843. It didn't mention God or Torah, but stressed Jewish unity regardless of ideology. "American history oscillates back and forth among these core values," Sarna said. f you're one of the many Jews worrying whether Judaism will survive amid the intermarriage and freedoms in America today, historically you are not alone. Jews have worried about whether their religion would endure in America ever since the first Jewish community was established 350 years ago. That's the observation of Jonathan Sarna, the Joseph H. and Belle R. Braun Professor in American Jewish History at Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass., who spoke at the Jewish Book Fair Nov. 13 at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Sarna, the author and editor of more than 20 books, received the 2004 National Jewish Book of the Year Sarna Award for his latest work, . Good To Worry American Judaism: A History. Today, as often before, American Jews find cre- With humor and authority, Sarna told ative ways to maintain Jewish life with vision- almost 300 people who attended his talk that ary leaders, committed followers and generous the long-standing fear that Judaism is doomed philanthropists, he said. He admitted contra- in America has, so -far, proven unfounded. dictory trends still exist. Intermarriage is high, Through his research, he discovered, instead, but so is the number of new Jewish day that in every era Jews in America actually rose schools. And Jews today are more engaged reli- to meet the challenge. giously than they were 70 years ago. "Jews transformed their faith to make it "It's good for Jews to worry, it keeps us from more appealing to the concerns of the day," becoming complacent," he said, concluding Sarna said. with humor that hopefully it will prove pos- Brothers Adolph and Sam Frankel immigrated though Galvest on Although some didn't succeed, he said, "my sible for the current "vanishing generation" story is not a linear descent from being Orthodox and eventually owned clothing stores in Texas and Oklahoma. of American Jews to be succeeded by another to marching down the aisle of a church, but a "vanishing generation." dynamic story about struggling to be American Jews but bad for Judaism? An audience member, Eric Grossman of Southfield, and Jewish. It's a story about those who lose and those said, -"Sarna's idea that the nature of American society who regain their faith; about assimilation and about Strategies Of Survival and economy has emboldened American Judaism is revitalization." brilliant." Over the years, options we take for granted — such as Sarna recounted a conversation 30 years ago when However, Richard Leland of West Bloomfield was choosing the way we want to observe Judaism or he told a rabbinical scholar that he studied American skeptical of Sarna's optimism that the diversity within which synagogue to belong to — once were consid- Jewish. history. The man was appalled. Judaism is good. "I think it's the opposite, particularly ered revolutionary. "I'll tell you all you need to know about American with Jews who don't recognize other Jews — that's A big question at the time of the American Jewish history," the elder told Sarna. "The Jews came Revolution was could Judaism be reconciled with free- destructive. And he passed over lightly the 54 percent to America, they abandoned their faith, they began to intermarriage rate among Jews. What'll happen in a dom? Would it survive in a democracy? live like goyim and, after a generation or two, they couple generations?" In the 1800s, the theme of survival translated into intermarried and disappeared! That's American Jewish Mark Goldsmith of Huntington Woods found concerns over new Jewish immigrants coming from history. All the rest is commentary. Don't waste your Sarna's research encouraging and said he liked how Central Europe. Would they keep the Jewish faith time. Go and study the Talmud." Sarna's thoughts tempered the pessimism over the once here? Lucky for today's scholars, the young man did not decline in Judaism. "Sands theme that the varied Today, the concerns include intermarriage and the take the advice. streams of Judaism are strengthening rather than dis- acrimony between the various streams of Judaism. Sarna, chief historian of both the National Museum membering Judaism was most inviting," Goldsmith These tensions, Sarna said, check the excesses of of American Jewish History in Philadelphia and the said. "It's a hopeful note to take away. Rather than opposing groups and renew Judaism as people com- 350th commemoration of Jewish life in America, dis- worrying about the diversity of Judaism, we should pete to survive. covered over the years a much richer, more complex Sarna listed three strategies that Jewish communities celebrate it." story to the recurrent question: Is America good for