World Photo by Frank Monkiewicz Substance New chancellor energizes Conservative rabbis. mitment to marrying critical scholar- ship and fidelity to Jewish law. • Some have argued publicly that a gap between the more observant Cambridge, Mass. practices of Conservative clergy and less observant laypeople challenges e was given four standing ova- the accuracy of the movement's self- tions and received universal description as "halachic." praise from Conservative rabbis During the heyday of Conservative last week, but Arnold Eisen still has his Judaism in the mid-20th century, the work cut out for him as he prepares to movement was well in tune with the help steer the Conservative movement out demographic and cultural trends of of the doldrums. American Jews. It was boosted by its On July 1, Eisen will assume the chan- move to allow driving to synagogue on cellorship of the Jewish Theological Shabbat, a ruling that coincided with Seminary and with it the de-facto leader- the great Jewish migration from dense ship of the Conservative movement. urban neighborhoods to the suburbs. Eisen, a professor of Jewish studies at Eisen said contemporary beliefs and Stanford University for the past 20 years Arnold Eisen speaks to the Conservative convention. practices of American Jews are no lon- and a leading scholar of contemporary Jewry, is only the second non-rabbi to lead ger working in the movement's favor. said he was filled with confidence. ingful and convincing. Freedom and mobility have threatened the movement's flagship seminary. His "Today," Rabbi Kushner told Eisen after "Jews are living in a time and space that appointment last year raised some hackles. the building of strong communities, which his presentation, "I am thrilled that you is not Jewish," he said. The claims of obli- Eisen identified as a critical component in Yet by all accounts, any qualms about will be the new leader of our movement." gation "are not plausible unless they come the success of Orthodoxy. Eisen's leadership evaporated after two Rabbi Raphael Friedman of the in a situation of community." Jews are committed to the modern speeches last week before some 400 rabbis Emanuel Synagogue in West Hartford, Above all, the movement must intensely ideology of personal sovereignty, which at the Rabbinical Assembly's annual con- Conn., echoed the views of many when he engage its congregants in a way that rivals rubs against the notion of Halachah as a vention in Cambridge, Mass. said of Eisen: "I was not blown away by what is frequently found in Orthodox binding set of laws. And they take their In his remarks, his first to movement charisma. I was impressed by substance communities. There is a hunger for that, cues on the meaning of prayer and reli- rabbis since being appointed chancellor, and insight:' I Eisen said, and the Conservative move- gious obligation from the surrounding Eisen was frank in pointing out where the ment must provide it. Christian culture. movement has come up short. He sug- "If we can't win on that count," Eisen Changed circumstances require gested the movement has "largely dropped said, "we can't win." changes in rabbinic training and in the the ball" by allowing pluralism — the Answering Rabbis from across the country and notion of competing views of Halachah, or movement's strategies, Eisen said. He around the world greeted Eisen with a urged Conservative rabbis to build "tight Israel's Critics Jewish law, coexisting harmoniously — to communities" in which meaningful Jewish standing ovation before and after one pre- become its core message. sentation. They were on their feet for Eisen practice is part of the broader rhythms "Let's be mature about this': Eisen said. The Charge again that evening in a public address at of life. He warned them against pursuing "Agreeing to disagree is not enough to Last week, the World Bank called on Congregation Mishkan Tefila in nearby a top-down pedagogy that begins with keep a movement going." Israel to ease restrictions on the move- Chestnut Hill. asserting the requirements of Jewish law. His tenure begins at a time of great ment of Palestinians in the West Bank In the hallways, the rabbis uniformly Eisen urged the rabbis to think more unease within the Conservative move- and Gaza, saying they prevented a praised his intellect, vision, energy and broadly about the concept of "mitzvah," ment, once America's largest Jewish Palestinian economic revival. courage in speaking forthrightly about the which he suggested means more than denomination but now surpassed by the challenges facing the movement. simply "commandment," as it is normally Reform movement. The Answer Former Detroiter Harold Kushner, a defined. But the numbers tell only part of the Israel's system of restrictions is nec- longtime Conservative rabbi and the best- Instead of the rabbi preaching about story. The movement has been through essary to counter terrorism. The When Bad Things Happen selling author of what everyone is obliged to do, he said, a bruising year in which a controversial Palestinians' economic problems are a said he was "dismayed" to Good People, rabbis need to create strong bonds of decision by its top legal authorities to direct result of that terrorism as well as when the Seminary first announced it had community that make obligation to one permit the ordination of gay and lesbian internal violence and political instability chosen a non-rabbi as its leader. another and to God much more appealing clergy led to concerns about an internal Rabbi Kushner said a gulf has opened to a contemporary person. split and a further erosion in the coher- - Allan Gale up in recent years between the Seminary Eisen also argued that Jewish life must ence of its message. Jewish Community Relations Council and the experience of rabbis in the field. • Some worry that Conservative Judaism be lived inside what he called a "plausibil- of Metropolitan Detroit But after reading several of Eisen's books ity structure" — the social and cultural has chosen pluralism as its defining fea- and hearing him speak, Rabbi Kushner context that makes religious claims mean- ture and lost touch with its historic com- Ben Harris Jewish Telegraphic Agency H May 17 0 2007 19