Today's
Orthodox Judaism
With rising
numbers and increasingly stringent observance, Orthodoxy is a "great
success" story even as it faces challenges.
By Michael Kress
When Connecticut senator Joseph Lieberman became the
Democratic vice presidential candidate in 2000, the public suddenly turned its
attention on Orthodox Judaism, with pundits and journalists explaining the dos
and don'ts of Shabbat and dietary laws. But Lieberman himself eschewed the
label "Orthodox" in favor of the less denominational
"observant," and many within the Orthodox
community disliked the fact that Lieberman became, in the world's eyes, the
example of the Orthodox life.
Lieberman, in many ways, represents an Orthodox Judaism of
decades past, one which integrated more seamlessly than today's Orthodoxy with
mainstream, secular society. Orthodox Jews since the 1970s have grown greatly
in numbers, self-confidence, and public profile; at the same time, they have
shifted to the right socially and religiously, refusing to make what they see
as the compromises that their parents' and grandparents' generations made to
fit into American society.
The outward signs might be subtle but they are not
insignificant--the fact that Lieberman doesn't wear a yarmulke and that he
sometimes votes in the Senate on Shabbat, even if he does walk home afterward.
It is less likely that tomorrow's Orthodox politician will do likewise, a
tension that came to the fore when Lieberman was criticized by some Jews during
the campaign for drinking water during the Tisha B'Av fast.
'Haredization'
The Orthodox world often divides into two major categories,
generally referred to as haredi (or
sometimes, ultra-Orthodox) and centrist, or modern, Orthodox. But in recent
years, the line between haredi and Orthodox has blurred. Many Modern Orthodox
Jews are increasingly stringent in their adherence to Jewish law and express a
growing sense of alienation from the larger, secular culture. Some scholars
have even referred to the trend as the "haredization" of Orthodoxy,
and some believe that Modern Orthodoxy is essentially dead.
Orthodoxy today is more strictly observant and better
educated than at any point since before the destruction of Eastern European
Jewry during the Holocaust. Children in Orthodox families are maintaining and
increasing their allegiance to traditional Judaism and increasing numbers of
non-Orthodox Jews are finding themselves attracted to Orthodoxy.
Reasons for the Shift
The fact that Orthodox Judaism is, in the words of historian
Jonathan Sarna, the "great success story of late 20th-century American
Judaism" may seem surprising; a religion that believes in strict adherence
to rules and rituals thrives at a time when personal choice seems to reign as
the cultural norm. But traditional religious values can be said to be the great
success story of many major religious groups since the 1970s; witness the
phenomenal rise of evangelical Christianity and Mormonism as examples. In
Judaism, the Reform movement, long so averse to tradition that the wearing of
yarmulkes was officially barred from some synagogues, has itself embraced a
more traditional path of observance.
The shift to the right is a
product of many factors. Traditional religious groups tend to be more
aggressive--and successful--in proselytizing for new members. While Orthodox
Judaism rejects proselytizing non-Jews, it does embrace kiruv, the concept of working to convince non-observant Jews to
adopt a more traditional lifestyle. Through organizations like the National
Council of Synagogue Youth (NCSY), Chabad Lubavitch, Aish HaTorah, and others,
many non-Orthodox Jews have been brought into the Orthodox fold in recent
decades.
In addition, the rise of
conservative religion is likely a reaction against the increased permissiveness
and anything-goes attitude of secular culture. Boundaries and rules attracted
many people today just as the removal of such behavioral limits attrracted the
youth of the '60s and '70s.
Orthodoxy also has higher
birthrates than other Jewish communities; sends a much-higher percentage of its
children to Jewish day schools; has a much lower intermarriage rate (and
children of intermarriages have a higher likelihood of being uninvolved in
Jewish life); and generally have a much higher rate of participation in Jewish
life--all factors that help to strengthen Orthodox communities and make it attractive
for non-Orthodox Jews to join.
And the Orthodox Jewish
lifestyle is easier than ever before. The affluence most Jews have
achieved--together with changing societal norms--makes working on Shabbat less
of a necessity. The plethora of kosher food in supermarkets worldwide eases
observance of the dietary laws, and the growth of kosher restaurants in many
cities reduces the inclination among many Orthodox Jews to eat in non-kosher
establishments. Religious book and CD publishing is thriving and an industry of
Jewish-items producers seems to make observance ever-simpler, with innovations
such as a snap-together sukkah,
Shabbat-friendly kitchen appliances, and Passover-kosher food from pizza to
granola bars to hamburger buns.
Stringency
Orthodox Jews are today
reviving customs and laws that had been virtually forgotten for decades except
among haredim. Increasing numbers of married women in Orthodox communities are
covering their hair--either with hats or wigs--a Jewish law that was hardly
observed among most Modern Orthodox women since the days of the shtetl in
Europe. Kosher restaurants and caterers often need to pay for multiple
kosher-certification certificates, each from an agency or rabbi with somewhat
different standards, to convince all customers of their acceptability.
The shift is in culture
and not just halakhic (Jewish law)
observance. After high school, many Orthodox teens spend a year studying in
yeshiva in Israel, and increasingly, one year is turning into two, three, or
even more. When they return, these are expressing ever-deeper discomfort with
secular college life--socially because of the culture of sexual permissiveness
and intellectually because of their discomfort with academic teachings on
subjects like the Bible and the nature and history of religion.
Politically, too, the
Orthodox world increasingly supports conservative policies on such issues as
school-choice (vouchers) and public funding of faith-based charities. When it
comes to Israel, the trend is perhaps more pronounced, with American Orthodox
Jews overwhelmingly advocating right-wing Israeli policies and candidates, some
of them far to the right of what mainstream Israelis, even conservative ones,
would themselves support.
The mantra of Modern
Orthodoxy was for generations expressed in the motto of Yeshiva
University--Torah u'Madda. The phrase literally means "Torah and
science," but is used to convey the parallel values of Jewish observance
alongside engagement with the secular world. Today, though, Orthodox Jews live
in world where the balance has tipped heavily in favor of Torah over madda--and
in which many people have redefined "madda" as support for making
one's livelihood in the secular world,
not culturally or intellectually engaging with it.
The Challenge of Feminism
As the world has changed
since the 1970s--the success of feminism, the rise of the gay rights movement,
laxer sexual norms--Orthodoxy has, with mixed success, tried by and large to
insulate itself from such evolutions. The greatest controversies, though, have
taken place over questions of women's roles in Orthodox religious life.
In Orthodox prayer
services, men and women are separated by a curtain or low wall, with only men
allowed to lead services and read or bless the Torah. Women are exempt from many
mitzvot (commandments) and cannot become
rabbis. In some Orthodox communities, women do not study Talmud.
But feminism--combined
with stronger Jewish education for Orthodox girls--has left many Orthodox women
(and men) dissatisfied with traditional gender roles and restrictions. Being
Orthodox, they retain their adherence to halakhah but have sought change within
the limits of Jewish law--sometimes via creative re-interpretations--and also
seek shifts in Jewish culture and attitude. This has resulted in bitter
disputes over women's issues.
The debate threatens to
split Jewish communities while at the same time creating new opportunities for
female religious participation. More synagogues are holding women-only prayer
groups, allowing the Torah processional to pass through the women's section, or
taking other steps to increase women's religious participation. And as these
synagogues take these steps, they inevitably face bitter condemnation from
within and without, driving a wedge between them and the mainstream Orthodox
community.
For conservatives in
Orthodoxy, allowing changes in women's religious role is an unacceptable
surrender to the broader secular culture; halakhah and Orthodox culture are
seen by them as a bulwark against the outside world and its seemingly
ever-shifting values. In the eyes of Orthodox feminists, though, Jewish
tradition has always engaged and been influenced by prevailing intellectual and
cultural norms, strong enough to incorporate them without compromising its core
values or laws. To feminists, the change in women's status in the secular world
is a monumental and permanent shift that must be reflected in Jewish life and
observance; to conservatives, Jewish life and observance must be unchanging and
unaffected by the cultural winds around it. Bridging that gap is
difficult--possibly impossible--and reflects a profound difference in how the
two sides view Judaism and its place in the world.
In the near future, Orthodoxy can expect to see continued
growth and vibrancy. As more Jews become attracted to it, and as Orthodox
communities retain their higher-than-average birth rates, Orthodoxy can also
expect to become an increasingly large percentage of the total number of Jews.
And it can also expect to continue the debates over Orthodox Jews' place in the
modern world and the place of modern notions such as feminism in Orthodox
Judaism.
Michael Kress is the editor-in-chief of
MyJewishLearning.com and writes frequently in the media about religion and
spirituality.