Overview: Jewish Continuity
Scholar Simon Rawidowicz once called the Jews “an ever-dying
people.” It does seem that, every few years, a major American Jewish magazine
publishes an article proclaiming the “disappearance of the Jews,” arguing that
assimilation and intermarriage place the future of the Jewish community--Jewish
continuity--in serious danger. What prompts such an alarmist appeal? Is
comfort, safety, and acceptance in mainstream society more threatening to the
Jewish people than discrimination or persecution?
The American Jewish community is changing through
intermarriage. Current statistics show
that up to half of all Jews today consider intermarriage an option for
themselves. As more and more children are being born to intermarried parents,
the denominations have been forced to answer the question of how to determine
an individual’s Jewish status. The Reconstructionist and Reform movements have
made their views on the issue crystal-clear: a child born to either a Jewish
mother or a Jewish father and raised in a Jewish home, with a Jewish
education is a Jew. The Conservative and Orthodox movements have not only
rejected patrilineal descent, but have also criticized the Reform and
Reconstructionist movements for creating disharmony for all of Klal Yisrael (the community of the
Jewish people) by taking such a stance.
While the denominations craft formal responses to the
question of "Who is a Jew?" individuals have also responded with
their own personal experiences. For example, The Half-Jewish Book: A
Celebration presents the opportunities and challenges of those people
raised as “half-Jewish,” citing famous celebrity examples from Paul Newman to
Paula Abdul. This book clearly takes a very different view of intermarriage;
here being half-Jewish has its own unique character, which allows enjoyment of
all of the benefits of Jewish culture, as well as those of the other “half”
culture.
Beyond intermarriage, which takes a front seat in many
continuity conversations, questions of "Who is a Jew?" and "How
do we ensure the continuity of the community?" extend to issues of
practice and ethnicity. Among many of today’s twenty- and thirty-something
Jews, being Jewish is an ethnic identity, though it may not be expressed by the
previous generations’ standards of joining a synagogue, marrying Jewish, or
volunteering for the Jewish community. There is clearly a sense that being a
“Jew” needs a very fluid definition; for some, it may be living a traditional,
observant life, for some it may be living out Judaism’s ethical and prophetic
visions. For others, the recipe being Jewish is less clearly defined, but
includes the feeling of “belonging” to an ethnic group.
While Jewish ethnicity appears, on the surface, to be a more
inclusive philosophy, it actually causes problems for “Jews by choice,” or
converts to Judaism. Jews by choice do not have easy access to Yiddishisms,
inherited memories of the shtetl, or the "lox and bagel" Judaism of
many North American Jews (most of whom are of eastern European descent). They
learn Judaism as a religion, and often report feelings of alienation regarding
its ethnic dimensions.
Jewish institutions have demonstrated a commitment to
addressing the issues of continuity with a variety of outreach program meant to
provide Jewish individuals, non-Jewish individuals interested in learning more
about Judaism, and families (including interfaith families) with rich and
varied Jewish experiences that will draw them into Jewish life. These sorts of
outreach programs include, for example, the Reform Movement’s popular “Taste of
Judaism” course (a widely advertised, free, three-week class on Jewish
spirituality, ethics and community designed for unaffiliated Jews, non-Jews,
and intermarried couples searching for an entry into Jewish life) and the
United Jewish Communities “Shalom Baby” program, a service that delivers a
basket full of newborn toys and information about local Jewish parenting
resources to babies born to a Jewish parent.
Local and national Jewish institutions sponsor Jewish
camping, Israel experiences, Hillel programs for college students, and all
levels of educational programming, from preschool to seniors, designed to
encourage participation in Jewish life. Jewish philanthropists are increasingly
offering substantial financing for initiatives to strengthen and develop
institutions and initiatives with the potential to make significant
contributions to “Jewish continuity.” The UJA Federation of New York, for
example, supports a Jewish Continuity Commission that aims to encourage
existing Jewish institutions to become more compelling settings for Jewish
living and learning by funding innovative continuity-based proposals.
What is the prescription for a healthy future? What communal activities and responses will
promote Jewish continuity? What choices should individual Jews be making to
ensure that their grandchildren will be Jewish? While the answers vary
according to denomination, level of traditionalism, interpretation of
statistics, and personal experience, the questions remain at the forefront of
the agenda of the contemporary Jewish community.