JN Thoughts A MONTHLY MIX OF IDEAS George Cantor's Reality Check column will return next week Ideas Worthy Of Embrace F orty years ago, the Six-Day War ended. The generation of Jews that were privileged to witness Israel's victory saw great religious signifi- cance in the reunification of Jerusalem. On the verge of annihilation, Israel stood alone and the few defeated the many. Jews felt they had experienced the hand of God at work; the messiah's arrival seemed imminent. However, the next generation did not witness Israel's miraculous escape from near destruction. Unlike their parents, they did not witness God's entry into history. To the children of baby boomers, Israel is a valued democratic ally of the United States. It is a safe haven for the Jewish people. Israel is a font of intellectual, literary, scientific, cultural and linguistic creativity that has contributed enormously to the western world. But they may not see Israel's religious significance. That is why educators today must chal- lenge their students to think about how Israel completes them as a Jew. Students grapple with questions like: "What does Israel contribute to their Jewish identity?" "How does support of Israel not only enrich Israel but the quality and character of their religious lives? How do they view the establishment of the state in the sweep of Jewish history? Are the birth of the state and liberation of Jerusalem part of a larg- er redemptive process, or are they merely political achievements — important as they may be — of a particular people? Some young people will see Israel as the most tangible place where they feel God's presence because the land is holy or because Israel is central to the Jewish story since Abraham. The Torah is the diary of a journey to Canaan; and Tanach, as a whole, is the story of exile from and return to the land God promised to Abraham. They may prefer HaRav Kook's theol- ogy that there is a special sense of sanc- tity when the land of Israel, the people of Israel and the Torah of Israel come together. They may see the ingathering of the exiles, the blossoming of arid hills, victories of biblical proportions and the expansion of territory in 1967 as the first signs of a redemptive process. They may resonate with Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel's words, "We do not wor- ship the soil, but it is endowed with the power to inspir' Some may view Israel as a place of pilgrimage where they can most comfortably live their lives as Jews. It offers the normalcy of home. Others may be attracted to Rabbi David Hartman's idea that Israel is an experi- ment of the Jewish people in building a nation. It is a place where Judaism is not confined to kashrut, Shabbat and tefillah (prayer), but where Jewish values are tested and applied, in keeping with the messianic vision of the biblical prophets, in politics, power, immi- grant absorption, hospital care and social welfare. As Rabbi Hartman says, "Zionism enables us to rediscover the vitality of Torah as a way of life' Israel expands the opportunities to hear God's call. Some may prefer the outlook of Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik who sees Israel embodying the drama of Jewish history when the "few defeated the many." After the Holocaust, when God's face was hid- den and when chaos ruled, the birth of Israel shows that there is Divine order. Israel represents the renewal of God's love relationship with the people. Or, they may gravitate to the thinking of Rabbi Moshe Lichtenstein, the grandson of Rabbi Joseph Soloveitchik, who understands Israel's religious sig- nificance in that Zionism brought back to life a renewed sense of peoplehood. Israel reinvigorated the notion that Jews are bound by a berit avot, a covenant of responsibility that we have to one another as members of a sacred family. We are blessed to live at a time when great thinkers have articulated profound ways to understand the religious signifi- cance of Israel. In the aftermath of the Six-Day War, we have the responsibility to introduce these ideas to our children. I Rabbi Buckman is head of school at the Frankel Jewish Academy of Metropolitan of Detroit in West Bloomfield. Don't Dismiss Boycotts T he concept of Jews sponsoring boycotts is anathema to the Jewish body politic. But the reasons behind boycotting boycotts are based on flawed strategy. What brings the issue to mind? The fact that three major unions in England — unions representing journalists, aca- demia and general labor — have called for boycotts of Israeli goods. The reaction of Jewish organizations? Statements that they are terribly concerned. As usual, they issue press releases describ- ing the actions as unfair and one-sided. It seems, at times, that communication is the ultimate objective of these organiza- tions that proudly distribute newspapers articles quoting them to their members and the community at-large. PR — letters to the editor, letter-writing campaigns, distributing talking points — seems to be the end in itself. But we need more than PR. Responding to political attacks on Israel in the form of boycotts requires more than shaking one's head and stating "it is a shande [shame]." Presumably, Jewish organizations base their policies on the fact that under Nazi Germany Jewish businesses were boycotted, i.e., boycotts are bad ideas. But that analysis is simplistic. Yes, boycotts based on religion, ethnicity, race or sexual orienta- tion are wrong and immoral and should be avoided. Boycotts based on politics should not only be considered but be embraced. Indeed, mem- bers and officers of most Jewish organiza- tions do not cross pickets lines. They are, in effect, participating in boycotts. The strategy of labor strikes was devel- oped, partly, by Jewish union leaders at the turn of the 20th century, particularly in the garment industry. Indeed, the entire civil rights movement, in which Jews played such a prominent role, was based on economic boycotts of bus systems, restaurants and other busi- nesses in the South, and it's time — nay, long overdue — to adopt more sophisti- cated thinking on this issue. Need one point out that the South suc- cumbed not because granting rights to blacks was morally right but because of political pressure and economic boycotts? Businesses picketed by unions grant wage hikes and increases in benefits not because they suddenly have an awakening like Scrooge during Christmas that they should do the right thing, but because the pickets may destroy their businesses. Jewish organizations ought to use their precious resources to respond to the anti- Jewish onslaught in England. The Jewish population of England is about 280,000, about a half of one percent of the total pop- ulation, and it ought to be mobilized with help from Jews in the U.S. to affect the eco- nomic interests and other major political and monetary interests of the three unions. For instance, in the case of the journal- ists, perhaps advertisers can be convinced to withhold their ads from appropriate media outlets. Perhaps Jews can be per- suaded to cancel newspaper subscriptions and boycott TV and radio news. Regarding academia, contributions to universities ought to be withheld and chairs endowed by Jews ought to be canceled. As to labor, Jews can use non-union labor and convince others to do the same. The point is: Stating that we are "sad- dened" or that we need to "build bridges of understanding" does nothing to change the posture of the anti-Jewish and anti- Semitic organizations. We need to affect their political and economic interests. It is the height of naivete to believe that such anti-Israel and anti-Semitic, organiza- tions will change course on principle, that they will cross "bridges of understanding" to confess the error of their ways. Consider: Blacks organize boycotts. Women participate in them. Hispanics support boycotts. Gays will throw up picket lines. Every offended minority is prepared to engage in boycotts and picket lines — except Jews. Oh, yes, Jews will participate in these political activities sponsored by other minorities, but they will not engage in them to achieve their own political and economic interests. Crazy? Indeed. While Jews — considered liberals as a body — participate in the political activ- ism of other minorities, Jews who propose we also act accordingly for our own causes are labeled "ultra-conservatives" and are shunned as pariahs. Someone explain this. It might be useful to point out that the word "boycott" is not composed of four letters and it is not a dirty word. I I A former political reporter, Berl Falbaum, an author and PR executive, teaches journalism part time at Wayne State University in Detroit. June 28 • 2007 19