Freedom: The Promise And The Challenge
"Freedom to observe, freedom to neglect," in the words of one
19th-century rabbi
By Samuel G. Freedman
Reprinted with permission
of the author from Hadassah Magazine.
If the essence of the Jewish
encounter with America were to be telescoped down to a single location, the
epicenter would not be the Lower East Side [of Manhattan] or Hollywood or
Cincinnati or Tin Pan Alley or Miami Beach or the Borscht Belt or Crown
Heights, important as each of those places has been to 350 years of intertwined
tribal and national history.
The emblematic point just
might be a former resort town in southern New Jersey named Lakewood, a spot
seemingly not so Jewish at all. In Lakewood's prime, John D. Rockefeller and
Grover Cleveland wintered there as "millionaires trod the wooden
sidewalks, and went fox-hunting in the pines," one chronicler recorded.
When Lakewood's half-century
heyday as a tourist destination ended in the 1920s, however, the Jewish chicken
farmers began to arrive. Fresh from the Pale of Settlement, perhaps with a
midway stop in the tenements and garment factories of Lower Manhattan, they
came to own land because they had been banned from doing so in the Old Country.
They came to work the land because proving themselves physically capable and
economically self-sufficient was part of their commitment to throwing off
centuries of oppression. Their language was Yiddish, their culture was
agnostic, and their faith was socialism, and for all those reasons they
attracted the antagonism of new enemies from the Ku Klux Klan to Senator Joseph
McCarthy.
A generation after the
chicken farmers appeared, there materialized in Lakewood an even less likely
newcomer, an ultra-Orthodox rabbi named Aharon Kotler. Until the German
invasion of Poland in 1939, he had served as the rosh yeshiva [head of a
school of advanced Jewish learning] of the renowned religious academy
in Slutzk, and his journey to America had traced a furtive refugee's path to
Vilna, then Siberia, then Shanghai, then San Francisco, then New York, and
finally to a backwater in southern Jersey, where the prevailing style of
Jewishness was anathema to all Rabbi Kotler embodied. Undeterred, he went ahead
and in 1943 established a classical yeshiva for 15 students. Over the decades
to come, it grew 50 times as large.
Coexistence
To appreciate the Jewish
experience in America is to understand how two such dissimilar species of
American Jewry could flourish in the same improbable soil. What each required
and each received was that rarest of conditions in two millennia of exile:
freedom.
Freedom allowed both the
secular radicals and the frum [traditionally observant] to secure
a niche in the very town that had been a playground of the WASP gentry and to
outlast their bigoted foes. Freedom allowed each faction to indulge its
disparate, in fact irreconcilable, versions of identity, community, and belief.
There had been nothing quite
like this American freedom in Jewish history. Until America, political freedom
had existed only in periods of Jewish nationhood, and the last of those had
ended with the Roman destruction of the Second Temple [in 70 C.E.].
Social freedom--the freedom
to dynamically engage with a surrounding gentile culture--had flickered only
briefly and always ended brutally. In Hellenistic Palestine and Alexandria, in
Moorish Spain, in Weimar Germany, the golden ages of pluralism and tolerance
gave way to hateful conquerors, and Jews learned with each pogrom and
Inquisition and expulsion and Final Solution that their identity was defined
solely by their Otherness, that they were the sum of what they were not and
would never be permitted to be.
Never Disenfranchised
Virtually from its creation,
even before those 23 Jews from Brazil set ashore in New Amsterdam in 1654 [becoming the first Jews in the New
World], America offered an unprecedented
and almost unfathomable alternative. Religious dissidents, albeit Christians,
founded colonies such as Massachusetts and Rhode Island; other settlements,
such as South Carolina, arose as commercial enterprises. Whether for
theological or capitalistic reasons, then, the New World offered Jews the
possibility, if not initially the overt promise, of inclusion.
When the United States
declared its independence, it did not need to enfranchise Jews, as the nations
of Western Europe would in the 18th and 19th centuries, because it had never
disenfranchised them in the first place. In his famous letter in 1790 to the
Jewish community in Newport, Rhode Island, George Washington assured the "Children
of the Stock of Abraham" that in America, "everyone shall sit in
safety under his own vine and fig-tree, and there shall be none to make him
afraid."
Relatively few Jews trod
American ground at the time--1,350in total, constituting 0.03
percent of the national population--and the number did not reach 50,000 until 1850. By then, the initial trickle
of Sephardic immigrants [from Spain and Portugal] was being supplanted by
German Jews, who would in turn be overwhelmed by the arrival of East European
Jews between 1880 and 1920.
"Our Palestine"
Yet even when their presence
was statistically negligible, Jews were availing themselves of dual meanings of
American freedom: the freedom to express their Jewishness without fear of
persecution and the freedom to participate in the public life of a polyglot
country. The first Jewish governor in America, David Emanuel of Georgia, was
elected in 1801; the first Jewish senator, David Levy Yulee of Florida, was
elected in 1845. Jewish congregations, burial societies, charities, and newspapers
emerged by the middle of the 19th century. A
rabbi in South Carolina felt confident enough to proclaim, "This
country is our Palestine."
Yet it was never quite that
simple, as even some of those fortunate American Jews understood. For all the
horrors of the golus (exile), it had
relieved Jews of the responsibility to determine for themselves the basis of
identity and the obligation of community. Whatever vicious rifts had rent
Jewry in the Old World--Hasidim versus Mitnagdim [Orthodox Jews who vehemently
opposed the Hasidic movement] in Poland and Lithuania, Reform versus Modern
Orthodox in Germany, freethinkers like Mendelssohn and Spinoza against Judaism
itself--remained irrelevant to the impermeable barrier between Christian and
Jew.
Freedom to Observe or Neglect
"In countries where we
have lived for centuries," Theodor Herzl wrote, "we are still cried
down as strangers." That barrier, as much as Talmud and Torah, maintained
the concept of Klal Yisrael [the community of Israel]. But as
early as 1893, well before the bulk of Jewish immigration and nearly a century
ahead of the peak era of assimilation, a Reform rabbi named Maurice Harris
delivered a remarkably perceptive prophecy about the mixed blessing of
American freedom:
Those Jews are emancipated in America in the fullest
sense; we are an integral part of the nation, sharing its duties and its
rights, and at times indistinguishable from the Gentiles. In the large cities
there are self-imposed Ghettoes, it is true, but they are created by poverty
rather than religion, and their ranks are serried by many agnostic and
atheistic exceptions, who, nevertheless, pass uncriticized. The religious
freedom for which we have fought 3,000 years is ours at last. But there are two
sides to freedom--freedom to observe, freedom to neglect. In the Ghetto, it was
easier to observe; in the larger world, it is easier to neglect.
Those words echo through the decades and indeed the
centuries. It is true that America has been a Promised land for Jews, the rejoinder
not only to the Dreyfus Affair, the Kishinev pogrom, Stalin and Hitler, but also
to the Zionist precept that Jews could only live a normal life in a Jewish
state.
At this juncture in time,
Jews hold more than 30 seats in Congress while accounting for less than two
percent of the population. In the Ivy League universities that before World War
II maintained anti-Semitic quotas, Jews now account for 20 to 30 percent of
their student bodies and faculties. The most successful musical in Broadway
history, at least financially speaking, is that quintessential example of edgy,
outsider Jewish humor, Mel Brooks' The
Producers. And when Joseph Lieberman was named Al Gore's running mate in
2000, the first Jewish candidate for vice president on a major party; Time magazine ran the cover headline "Chutzpah!"
in the serene assurance that its tens of millions of non-Jewish readers would
get the joke.
It is also true, though, that
there are "two sides to freedom." Nowhere else in history have Jews
been as eager and as successful in shedding their Jewishness, not as a
life-saving act of conversion but as a willing selection in the cafeteria of
American identity. Many hands have been wrung, many calumnies uttered, much ink
spilled on the subject of the intermarriage rate, as if intermarriage were a
disease with a cure rather than the logical outgrowth of our tribal love affair
with America and America's with us. The thoroughgoing assimilation of post-war
America, the emergence of Jewishness as just another brand of white ethnicity
that can be halved or quartered, attests most profoundly to Oscar Wilde's
aphorism to be careful what you wish for, because you might get it.
And yet Rabbi Harris, neither
the first nor the last Cassandra on the subject of American Jewish survival,
worried too much. Even as a substantial share of American Jewry leaps from the
marital altar into the melting pot, another portion enjoys a religious
renaissance that derives its energy and many of its models from the Orthodox
sector. From day schools to Hasidic praise songs, from daf yomi Talmud groups [that study a page of Talmud every day] to glatt kosher bistros, this revival
touches observant Jews in every denomination.
Three hundred fifty years
from the beginning, we have learned that American freedom is capacious and
indiscriminate enough to enable virtually anything the Jews of Lakewood--or
for that matter--Brookline or Great Neck or Skokie or Pico-Robertson or
Buckhead--have in mind.
Samuel G. Freedman, a professor of journalism at
Columbia University, is the author most recently of Jew
vs. Jew: The Struggle for the Soul of American Jewry (Simon &
Schuster), winner of the National Jewish
Book Award.