Category Archives: Current Events

Fighting in the Dark

     The miracle of Chanuka was astonishing for a number of reasons, but especially because “the few vanquished the many.” The Maccabim prevailed against overwhelming odds. Yehuda’s forces never numbered more than a few thousand, and in the climactic battle he mustered 10,000 soldiers against 60,000 Syrians – and still defeated the enemy.

      The Maccabim were greatly outnumbered, even though they operated in their home territory (where usually the insurgents have a numerical advantage) because they were a minority force even among Jews. It wasn’t just a case of the Hellenist Jews predominating, although that was also true. It was also because most Jews adopted a wait-and-see attitude, in large part because this was the first time the Jews fought while not under the protective guidance of a prophet, and Chanuka is the only festival that post-dates the Bible. In every other war – the prophets led the way: Moshe, Yehoshua, most of the Judges, David, etc. Even when the Jews were not victorious – usually because they disobeyed the prophet or due to other sins – he was at least in the background and a useful resource.

      But now, Jews were in the dark, literally. Faced with the occupation of our land by the world power, who knew what to do and which paradigm to follow? How could they decide, and what guarantee did they have that the decision was correct ? These questions plagued the Jews of that era, as indeed they trouble us today. To fight, to compromise, to surrender ? To look for allies, or to fight alone ? To seek the support of the majority who may not be imbued with a national or Torah spirit, or to go it alone – a few radicals leading a bunch of sluggards ? How do we decide ? How did they decide ? In Rav Shlomo Aviner’s phrase, what is the proper balance between faith and realism ?

    That question really frames the issue, and in a sense, defines the challenge of Chanuka. Realism dictated that the Maccabim could not defeat the mighty Syrian empire, that the few could not defeat the many – that all the advantages lay with the conqueror, the most powerful empire in the world. But realism would also dictate that the Jews would never leave Egypt, and never conquer the land of Israel, that David could not slay Goliath (it was possible, but the smart money was still on Goliath), never return to the land of Israel, and not be able to retain it today with the international community allied against Jewish nationalism.

     Often, a non-Jew gives us a clearer insight than we could derive ourselves. The famous Italian philosopher, Giambattista Vico, wrote the first philosophy of history in the early 1700’s, called the “New Science about the Common Nature of Nations.” His theory was that nations are like individuals – nations go through infancy, youth, mature, grow old, decay and disappear. All nations suffer this fate, and it is easier to track the ebb and flow of nations than of individuals, whose choices can take them out of the realm of the predictable.  But Vico acknowledged, in 1725, that one nation does not fit the pattern – the Jews. The Jews, he wrote, were an “exceptional people,” who are the beneficiaries of “extraordinary help from the true G-d.” Jewish history is moved by holy forces, not simply political ones.

      And that is the lesson of Chanuka and the motivation of the majestic men of Modiin. It is the idea, post-Biblical times, on which we thrive or stumble. It is easy to have faith when everything is spelled out in the Torah, and the word of G-d reaches us through his prophets – and we know clearly why we win when we win, and why we lose when we lose. That faith is a theoretical one. Yehuda knew what we needed was practical faith, taking that notion out of the books on the shelves of the Bet Midrash – out of the realm of the theoretical and implementing it in our world view, our conduct – as individuals and as a nation. Our realism includes faith; that is to say, it must include awareness of our exceptionalism. We may ignore that too frequently, but we ignore it at our peril.

      This was the miracle of Chanuka, and the eternal lesson of Chanuka in every generation – that we never despair, that even at the darkest moments the miracle of light is near, and we look for the mysterious cruse of oil that suddenly materializes, and heralds the immanence of G-d.

       As a military victory, the triumph of Chanuka was short-lived. But as a clarion call to faith,  to the hand of G-d that is as real to us as anything material, to be active in defense of Torah and the land of Israel – then the wars of the Chashmonaim inspire us until today – in their dedication, in their tenacity, in their faith, and in the miracles they experienced, in those days in this season.

Whither Modern Orthodoxy?

    The utter shrillness of the response to my “Rabbinical News” of last week evoked these conclusions:

1)      Liberals, Voltaire should have said, will defend to the death your right to agree with them. The dismissive contempt found in certain “Modern” Orthodox circles for any person  – certainly Rabbi – who doesn’t toe the official or progressive line should give us all pause. That triggers a…

2)      Defensiveness in which closed minds refuse to re-consider or look again at anything. This is not that uncommon; a piece I wrote a few months ago critical of aspects of Haredi society garnered me some Haredi criticism – and praise as well. See : https://rabbipruzansky.com/2009/08/26/haredi-follies/

3)      Many people are confused about the notion of Mesora. Bet Shammai’s opinions were certainly part of the Mesora, although we generally don’t pasken like them. To cite, therefore, individual opinions (some rejected long ago) as support for innovations today is tacky, and outside the framework of halachic methodology. Let us not conflate creativity and cleverness. One can certainly find individual opinions – creatively interpreted – to support almost any desire that a person has, but desires should not fuel the halachic process. For example, given a few minutes, I could “justify” eating milk right after meat; cheating on taxes; reinstituting pilagshim (concubines – and alleviate the singles’ problem somewhat), venerating a dead Messiah and a host of other practices that would sound bizarre and are outside the four ells of halacha and the norms of Jewish life. And I am neither Houdini nor his Rabbi-father. But it is not scholarship to pick your target and draw a bulls’ eye around it, nor is that a legitimate part of the Mesora.

4)      The labeling of Jews by Jews is abhorrent, and the open distaste – even anger – that some “Modern” Orthodox feel for some Haredim/Yeshivish Jews (and vice versa) is worse. That is why I refuse to label myself, or the community in which I live and work, and prefer to keep learning Torah and having an open mind about issues. I cringe when Modern Orthodox Jews are criticized, and when Haredim are criticized.

5)      I ran to the archives and dug up an article I wrote for our shul (CBY) bulletin in July 2000, more than nine years ago. It is remarkably consistent with what I wrote last week (to detractors, clearly I have shown no “growth” in nine years!), and I re-print here as it remains timely.  It was entitled: “Whither Modern Orthodoxy,” and it was written while I was leading a tour of Spain, hence the Spanish Jewry reference at the end.

 ESSAY:

     “Is it not time to call halt to these wars (between the Orthodox, Conservative and Reform) and learn to live with one another in peace and respect, even if we have profound differences? Now that centuries have passed since the formation of these divisions, perhaps we can come to terms with reality and a way to at least tolerate one another for the sake of the continuation of Judaism”.

     “My sense of what is happening in the Jewish world tells me that there are signs of such a change. Reform has begun to learn a new respect for aspects of tradition it formally rejected. Modern Orthodox circles have closer to the understanding of development within Judaism that has characterized Conservative Judaism.”

       “The willingness of the Israeli government with the agreement of at least one chief rabbi and the silence of the other, to give the Masorti movement a place at the Kotel for prayer is a sign of progress. More and more Modern Orthodox circles are beginning to see that they are not so far from the Conservative movement – both are based on halacha, although they arrive at different conclusions.” (Italics mine)

     So writes Reuven Hammer, one of the leaders of the Masorti (Conservative) movement, in a June edition of the Jerusalem Post. To be sure, his declaration that Conservative Judaism is faithful to halacha is an old canard, demonstrably false, and quite unremarkable. It is his assertion that Modern Orthodoxy is moving closer to the methodology of Conservatism and even is “not so far from the Conservative movement” that is cause for analysis, if not outright alarm. Regardless whether or not his claim is true, why would he think such a thing? What is happening in our world that would lead a Conservative spokesman to rejoice in the blurred distinction between “Modern” Orthodoxy and Conservative Judaism, long recognized by all shades of Orthodoxy as deviationist, non-halachic “stream” of Judaism?

      Conservative “psak” deviates from traditional Judaism in a number of essential ways (including a new “interpretation” of the mesorah from Sinai), but primarily in its focus – in the first instance – on a particular, desired result. Traditionally, halacha is process oriented, not result-oriented. The decisor analyzes the question, determines the central point at issue, and investigates the halachic precedents. The result emerges only after the process has been faithfully completed.

     The Conservatives begin the process with a desired result in mind (abolishing the mechitza, permitting cohanim to marry divorcees, counting women in the minyan, etc.) They are quite adept at manipulating the halacha to achieve that result, twisting and turning the words of our sages until they are “saying” what the Conservatives want them to say. And where that is impossible – even distortion has its limits – the Conservatives will simply assert that “times have changed, “the Rabbis were biased or insensitive”, or they are “irrelevant in these progressive times”.

      Apparently, Reuven Hammer perceives that a certain segment of Modern Orthodoxy, a left-wing fringe, has adopted a halachic methodology similar to that of his own movement. “Solutions” to halachic or social problems are demanded, even if halachic process is thrown to the wind. “A user-friendly halacha is desired, anything not explicitly prohibited (and even some things which are) is permitted, and there is often a palpable discomfort with tradition. Individuals who flout halachic convention are labeled brave or courageous, rather than exposed as charlatans. And halacha never stands in the way of good time.

      Thus, there are “modern” orthodox communities where swimming and organized athletic competitions for adults are acceptable Shabbat activities. The wearing of tzizit by adult males is shunned, and tzniut generally takes a back-sear to the latest fashions. Liberties are taken with kashrut outside the home, and Talmud Torah often becomes a treasure – hunt for leniencies.

     Pandering to the spirit of the times, women’s “grievances” against the halacha have taken center stage. New forms of worship have been created, oblivious to its trivialization of halacha and potential harm to the community. Flippant “solutions” to the ancient and vexing agunah problem have been extolled as reflecting greatness and creativity, despite their dubiousness. The question, “when will the Rabbis free agunot?” recurs with increasing passion, and sometimes disrespect, an approach that would never surface with another professional question, such as, “when will the doctors cure cancer?”

      The whole notion of asking a she’elah (halachic question) has been undermined, as questioners seek out Rabbis who have been pre-selected to tell them what expect to hear. It is no wonder that I am unable to think of even one book of responsa produced in the 100 years of American Modern Orthodoxy.

       In a recent book by a self-described Orthodox feminist, the author writes why she chose to remain Orthodox despite the “problems”: “It is what I inherited and it belongs to me. I am committed to the ennobling elements of the religion: a vast, rich literature, a dramatic history and strong collective memory, a serious concern for ethics and justice, a dignified framework for daily living and an overriding sense of community. I have been enriched by constructing a Jewish identity, developing a Jewish consciousness, and sharing codes and languages with Jews around the world.”

     What is missing from this eloquent account of her Torah commitment? That the Torah is true, that it is G-d’s word, and that halacha is the reflection of His will. These basic foundations of Torah life are unstated, and thus the author reserves for herself the right to change the halacha wherever and whenever she finds “inequity” or aspects of Torah life that are not “ennobling” to her. What is lacking is the surrender of the heart and mind to G-d’s will, which is at the core of the Torah personality and the essence of Kabbalat Ol Malchut Shamayim (acceptance of the yoke of G-d’s kingship).

      Rather than learn what the Torah has to say, the fringe element tries to get the Torah to say what it wants to hear. Thus the expressed discontent with the roshei Yeshiva at so-called Modern Orthodox institutions when their decisions do not conform to the “popular” will. A colloquy I recently overheard: Someone asserted that “the Roshei Yeshiva are out of touch with the masses”, to which the (proper) response was: “perhaps the masses are out-of-touch with the Torah”.

       To be sure, most Modern Orthodox Jews do not subscribe to this distortion of their ideology at all and would recoil in horror at the suggestion that they are casually being lumped together with non-halachic streams. This group carries on the Modern Orthodoxy of prior generations on other continents: confronting and engaging modernity without fully embracing it. In doing so, they remain faithful to Halacha inside and outside the home, conduct themselves as Bnai and Bnot Torah, ask she’elot and genuinely seek Torah guidance. Their Shabbat is sacred and not a prelude to (or pale imitation of) Sunday, and their Torah study is genuine, sincere and spirited. They honor and appreciate Rabbis and Roshei Yeshiva, The women revel and excel in their Torah-designated roles, and are fulfilled and content with Torah and life itself, And this group – proud bearers of banner of Modern Orthodoxy – are perceived as obstacles to the “development” of Modern Orthodoxy by the fringe elements whose cause is championed by the secular “Jewish” media.

      Reuven Hammer has unwittingly sent a wake-up call to all of Modern Orthodoxy, and exposed the path of which many have chosen to tread – a path littered with thorns and thistles and which leads toward an abyss. Is he wrong? Has he overstated his case to rationalize his own heresies? Is his comparison of Conservatism and Modern Orthodoxy wishful thinking on his part? Or has he touched a raw nerve that should inspire all of us to gaze into our heart and minds, uncover our true inner world and open our souls to the truth of Torah?

      Spanish Jewry, perhaps the first Modern Orthodox Jews, became fully integrated in the culture and society of medieval Spain. They foundered and eventually disintegrated in a wave laxity of observance, forced and unforced conversions, massacres and expulsions. Only we can determine whether we will behold a similar decline, or tenaciously grasp the tree of life in the way which has sustained the Jewish people until today.     END

     Again, that was written in July 2000. The more things change, the more they remain they same. And what will be of Torah, and the Jewish people ?

The News of “Rabbinical News”

Well, who would’ve thought that ?

My piece on “Rabbinical News,” the implications of a new rabbinical organization, drew an avalanche of a response. I average 2000 hits a month. That column generated 2000 hits in a day. The question is: why? And what does it say about philosophical and halachic discourse in the Jewish world today ?

The torrent of comments was also fascinating. There were a significant number of favorable responses, and a number of people with reasonable, and reasonably-stated, disagreements. And then there was the invective, usually in the short-hand of the simple-minded: “anti-women, hates women, ugly, Neanderthal,” and the like. And the comments focused mostly on one issue: not my contemplations on the differences between Roshei Yeshiva and pulpit Rabbis, nor on halachic methodology, or even much about homosexuals or converts; it was almost exclusively a polemic – on both sides – about women’s issues.

Some might think that the exaggerated interest in my musings stemmed from the titillation of having Rabbis disagree, and in public no less. While that might be true, I found it hard to accept. Rabbis – like people generally, and like members of any profession – will often disagree about matters great and small. It need not be personalized, nor should one ever conclude that a disagreement means that the “other side” is necessarily wrong, or therefore “bad people” who should not be allowed in civil society.

A “machloket,” I assume, was not always perceived the way it is today. Abaye and Rava (yeah, yeah, no one is Abaye and Rava here) did not engender the support of partisan factions in their several thousand areas of conflict. (Typical conversation on the Babylonian blogs in the 4th century CE: “Supporters of Rava: ‘Have you heard? Our master Rava says that when a married woman is accused of infidelity by only one witness, and does not deny it, the one witness is still not believed. But Abaya says that the solitary witness is believed! [Kiddushin 66a] He must be anti-woman, that troglodyte!’” Typical ? Somehow, I don’t think so.)

The hostile reaction here was so visceral that I could only conclude that, contrary to traditional halachic methodology, people are emotionally vested in a certain outcome. Like the rabid sports fan who supports his favorite team and wants them to win at all costs – even if they cheat, even if the umpire or referee blows a call [“a win is a win”] – one group of polemicists wants its side to win. They have little interest in halachic process, but rather a passionate desire for a particular result. I have thought, on occasion, that what passes for “Modern Orthodox” scholarship these days is often the search for the one obscure opinion, rishon or acharon, who will permit the interested to do what they have already decided they are going to do. But that is gamesmanship. I, too, am often in the position of having a particular desire frustrated by the halacha’s conclusion of “no, you can’t” or “yes, you must,” and, to my thinking, that is the essence of the subservience to G-d that is expected of the religious personality.

Just like not “everything” should be instinctively prohibited, so too not “everything” can be permitted, our sincere, heartfelt desire for same notwithstanding. When people are quick to pejoratively label their ideological adversaries, then we have left the realm of Torah discourse and entered a world of closed minds and tunnel vision. Part of the venom (and I underscore that many of those who disagreed were quite polite, and I do not refer to them at all) came, I think, because such views from a “Charedi” can be easily dismissed, but not so readily from a non-Charedi. In truth (and can there be anything more trite and self-serving than what follows here ?), I try not to pigeonhole myself as Charedi, modern, yeshivish, centrist, etc. I try to call ‘em as I see ‘em, and so do not neatly fit in any category – laudatory of the strengths and critical of the weaknesses of each group, as I see ‘em, and myself as well. And each group plays an instrument in the great orchestra of Klal Yisrael; we just have to ensure that everyone is playing from the same sheet music.

I reiterate what I consider the central aspect of the article: “The real dividing line in Jewish life today is between those who are happy with the mesora and those unhappy with the mesora.” I have always been surrounded by men and women – family, friends and teachers (both male and female) – who are content with the Mesora, and surely that has influenced my views. But just like the Torah should not be used as “a spade with which to dig” – a tool to satisfy our wishes and desires – so too it should not be used as “a crown to aggrandize oneself” – to feel superior to those who struggle with aspects of the Mesora that fly in the face of the cultural winds that swirl around us. We are each at a different place on the continuum to complete “Kabbalat Ol Malchut Shamayim” and we would do well to encourage each other – build each other up by having honest discussions motivated by love of Torah and the Jewish people – and not attempt to belittle dissenting opinions and those who hold them.

Then, indeed, the Torah will be “a tree of life for those who grasp it” and the source of all good and happiness for us and the world.

Rabbinical News

     The sun shone brighter not long ago, and all earthlings had more pep in their step, with the news that a new rabbinical organization was launched – the International Rabbinic Fellowship. Ostensibly, it was formed in order to counter what they perceive as the too-dominant influence of Roshei Yeshiva in psak (Jewish legal decision-making) and communal life. In reality, it is an organization with a narrow agenda – to push the envelope of halacha so wide that it can accommodate the demands of feminists, homosexuals, and other assorted causes blowing in the cultural winds, and in a way that it senses that neither the Rabbinical Council of America nor the “right-wing” Yeshiva world will, properly, ever tolerate.

     Ordinarily, the founding of a new rabbinical organization would not be an occasion for comment, or even much general interest, as Jews are well known for organizations that are either redundant or promote – even just for vanity – the interests of one person. And since not all doctors belong to the AMA, not all lawyers belong to the ABA, and not all seasoned citizens belong to the AARP, why should all Orthodox Rabbis belong to any of the current five, six or seven existing rabbinical organizations ? If in the rest of Jewish communal life, the slightest difference in tinge, color or philosophy warrants a new organization (with overhead costs, officers, fund-raising, dinners, etc.), why should Rabbis be different ? Indeed, everyone knows (although few admit) that the quest for “unity” in Jewish life usually means “agree with ME or I will go my own way” (and everyone is a ME to himself). As such, the formation of any new organization is rather unsurprising.

     There is an interest, though, in highlighting the stated objectives of this new organization, if only out of a desire to propagate the Torah truth and safeguard the Mesora, as I see it. If several dozen Rabbis find fault with the ideological direction of the more than 1000 member RCA, not to mention the thousands of Orthodox Rabbis who are considered as part of the right-wing world, it is legitimate to inquire as to the nature of the disagreements, and whether they contain any substance.

     Clearly, they find the influence of the “Roshei Yeshiva” as stultifying – certainly those in the Yeshiva world but perhaps even most at Yeshiva University. They are perceived – probably justifiably – as resistant to the “changes” in Jewish life, first made by the Conservative movement in the last century but now embraced as a legitimate expression of “Torah” by proponents of this new organization. Actually, the rivalry between Roshei Yeshiva and shul (or town) Rabbis is not new, but was a staple of Jewish communal life in Eastern Europe. There, the balance of power favored the town Rabbis – and not the Roshei Yeshiva – as the town Rabbis were considered both scholars and pragmatists, and were more actively involved in people’s lives. Indeed, in Europe, it was considered more prestigious to be a town Rabbi than a Rosh Yeshiva.

     Today, the balance of power has shifted somewhat, and Roshei Yeshiva are, if not more respected (I have no complaints in that regard), then at least widely construed as more reliable and consistent interpreters of halacha. This is perhaps an over-generalization, and is shaped by three distinct phenomena: one, many people do not have a Rosh Yeshiva, and for them their Rabbi remains the exclusive address for Torah advice and guidance (that is a good part of my job); two, many students who spend years learning with a particular teacher develop a warm personal relationship with him, which is quite natural and understandable; three, Roshei Yeshiva generally train the pulpit Rabbis, and the burden of proof is on the Rabbi to justify why  he deviated from his teacher’s path.

     It is not my place to judge the relative Torah scholarship of Roshei Yeshiva vs. pulpit Rabbis, as there are many pulpit Rabbis (and Roshei Yeshiva) who are fine, outstanding Talmidei Chachamim. To be a pulpit Rabbi or a Rosh Yeshiva requires a different set of skills. Because pulpit Rabbis live in the grass roots, their decisions are often rooted in a greater awareness of communal concerns; conversely, Roshei Yeshiva can be in an “ivory tower,” unaware of how their decisions will affect a community beyond the individual who questioned them. Even to suggest that the world of Roshei Yeshiva is monolithic, or that their decisions are necessarily correct, would be misleading. And no one is infallible.

    But the pulpit Rabbi is also subject to pressures that the Rosh Yeshiva is not, and therefore Roshei Yeshiva today have become – fairly or not – perceived as more coherent defenders of the Mesora against the onslaught of modern cultures and its insatiable demands on halacha and minhag Yisrael. Undoubtedly, that underlies the discomfort (distaste ?) this new organization feels toward the authority of the “Roshei Yeshiva” who have not been forthcoming on issues of importance to them.

     Three examples suffice: the nascent movement among some liberal-Orthodox Rabbis to find a place for practicing homosexuals in Orthodox life, usually by embracing the politicized conclusions of academics that homosexuality is innate, and it is therefore wrong – even immoral – to term homosexuality an abomination or homosexuals sinners. I’ll address that another time, but the attempt to accept homosexuality as a legitimate lifestyle, and even support the legalization of homosexual marriage, may be an expression of sensitivity and compassion on some level but is clearly driven by the popular culture. That itself erodes the respect that these Rabbis think should be theirs, and increases in inverse proportion the ire they feel towards the “Roshei Yeshiva.” That is to say, they lose credibility as representatives of Torah when they adopt such trendy views, and founding five or ten new organizations will not change that one iota. Simply put, the mass of Torah-faithful Klal Yisrael will not stand for it.

     Secondly, “liberal” Orthodox Rabbis call for relaxed standards for converts, and dissent from the standards promulgated several years ago by the RCA. They would rather revert to the practices of the recent past, where Rabbis were often compelled to look away from insincerity, or pretend that halachic commitment existed where it patently did not. See http://www.jewishpress.com/pageroute.do/30621 . But an individual Rabbi retains the autonomy to pronounce a particular restaurant kosher or not, based on standards that others can accept or reject; he does not have the right to dictate to the nation of Israel who will properly be termed a citizen. (I refer here not to the State of Israel but to the Jewish people. Membership in the Jewish people is not determined by the predilections of individual rabbis but by generally-accepted standards. Nor was the State of Israel endowed with the authority to declare “who is a Jew;” they can only decide “who is an Israeli.”)

     The third issue is that (now) century-old bugaboo of women’s rights and feminism. I have no doubt that the International Rabbinic Fellowship will find a way to admit women as members, and as Rabbis, and thereby in the short-term necessitate a change in their name (already!) to International Rabbinic Fellowship and Galship (IRFG).

     More seriously, I sense their inner turmoil. They would like to ordain women as rabbis, but fear the obvious repercussions. Similarly, they must chafe at the mechitza, women’s inadmissibility as witnesses, judges, or in a minyan, or the restrictions on women in public prayer, or the very notion that the Torah ideal is based on a division of roles and responsibilities between men and women (analogous to the division between kohanim, leviim and yisraelim). They recognize the “mechitza” as a political statement – a clear sign of Orthodoxy in a synagogue, as lack of a mechitza is a clear sign of non-Orthodoxy. So they are stuck – emotionally, intellectually, halachically and spiritually – and therefore bristle at organizations – RCA, Young Israel, Aguda – that do not give them cover or succor, and at people – “Roshei Yeshiva” – whose authority, popularity and credibility they resent, and crave for themselves. It must be hard to explain these encroachments on the altar of egalitarianism to their constituents who have learned to expect flexibility-on-demand in halacha.

      So they skirt the issues, and implausibly think they can introduce gimmicks for women (sheva brachot in English, serve as Rabbis without the title, etc.) that do not really satiate the demand for equality, and are themselves rationalized by cherry-picking halachic sources and ignoring the mesora. Women’s prayer groups and the Yoetzet movement (the latter, more understandable in Israel where the Rabbinate is largely dysfunctional) are just two examples of the straight line one can draw from the Reform ordination of women in the early 1970’s and the Conservative ordination in the 1980’s until today. What changed ? Why did Orthodoxy vehemently oppose those ordinations then, and a few support it today ? Were we sexist, male chauvinists then, and more enlightened today ? Did it take thirty years to find the sources to rationalize it ? Not at all. The secular world changed, and for those whose halachic foundations shift with every change in the secular world, their world had to change as well.

    In brief, one has to line up a number of halachic ducks in a row (permitting women to learn Torah she-be-al peh, sing in public, speak before male audiences, decide matters of Jewish law, et al – each one somewhat controversial, some more controversial than others) in order to entertain these changes. The outcome is predetermined, because the psak is not based on an honest appraisal of sources but on finding the supportive sources and ignoring the rest. And then one has to wantonly discount Minhag Yisrael.

    Some of my dearest colleagues who endorsed either (or both) women’s prayer groups or yoatzot (I didn’t) now find themselves on the horns of a dilemma. Each move raised expectations, each move fostered the idea that we were revising the traditional role of women in Jewish life, or entirely abandoning it as both antiquated and repugnant – and so each move just encouraged the next one and the one after that.

     We can always play with halacha in an attempt to devise new roles. A husband is as capable of lighting Shabbat candles as his wife is, and usually less harried. How uplifting it would be if men went to the mikveh monthly, as well as women. Nothing wrong with that; some men go every day. We can also find a way to eat milk right after meat; we don’t, because that has no lobby. We also don’t, because that is not our tradition. The Torah – not liberal society – also determines our values, not just our practices.

     The real dividing line in Jewish life today is between those who are happy with the mesora and those unhappy with the mesora. Kabbalat Ol Malchut Shamayim (acceptance of the yoke of G-d’s kingship) demands that we accept the mesora even if we deem ourselves “more enlightened;” otherwise, we – like Nadav and Avihu before us – are worshipping ourselves, and not the Almighty. And isn’t that the ultimate reality of Western man today – self-worship ? If I am unhappy with the Mesora, it is because of something within me that needs rectification. I have to bend to the Torah’s will, and not bend the Torah to suit my will. Those who live with grievances against the Torah must recognize that on some level, as Moshe once said to his flock, “…your complaints are not against us, but against G-d” (Sh’mot 16:8).

     The feminist movement ravaged the American family, with skyrocketing rates of divorce that have only recently begun to level off, with a majority of children born out-of-wedlock, and with the continuing unreliability of the home as the transmitter of values. The Jewish world has suffered from this as well, and we should not look to repeat the mistakes from which American society is already retreating.

      Sometimes, the answer to a she’ela is “no” – like the answer a wise parent has to give to a child on occasion.  Any organization founded on the principle that a leniency can always be found to justify what we want to do (women, converts, homosexuals, Shabbat, you name it) will attract like-minded, tenuously-committed Jews but will soon be an anachronism, leaving only the questions: how much damage can it do to Jewish life ? How many well-meaning Jews will be misled into thinking that the Torah is a ball of wax that can be shaped any way they want in order to satisfy their needs ? How will pulpit Rabbis retain the respect of Torah Jews ? And how long before the Torah world rejects these notions, and this new organization merges with some form of Conservative Judaism that posited the same approach in the last century, with devastating results for Jewish life ?

     The reality is that men are the transmitters of the Mesora, and therefore entrusted with responsibilities of psak and leadership. Man’s nature is such that he will not regularly seek out a female teacher of any sort – and certainly not Torah – and those who doubt this should behold the steep decline in male attendance at female-led temples. Any attempt to tamper with the Mesora will not succeed, and the very framework of this new organization will be self-marginalizing. The “Roshei Yeshiva” will reject it, and so will most of the RCA, and the Yeshiva world, and the educated young people of today – men and women – and the religious world in Israel. It will be a curiosity, like Edah that came and went. And the second reality is that women are partners in transmitting the Mesora, but with a different role, different responsibilities, and, yes, different skill sets to help them fulfill their role. Their contributions are indispensable, their growth in Torah is a marvelous development – but neither should lead to a diminution or elimination of their traditional role on which the Jewish family depends, literally, for its survival.

     Should these individuals be purged from the RCA ? I am not enamored of purges, and the RCA can certainly accommodate a wide range of thinking, something natural to the study of Torah in any event. But anyone who thinks that a particular rabbinical organization no longer suits them should probably resign; I know I would. The saddest aspect is that many of the individuals involved – I am not familiar with all of them – are very talented teachers and leaders, with much to offer the Jewish people. Indeed, their greatest weakness might be a boundless love of every Jew that precludes them from inflicting on Jews the slightest pain – even the pain that comes from hearing the word “no.” With Jewish identity under attack (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/24/books/24jews.html?pagewanted=2&em) and the target of the most vulgar distortions and lies, we need all Jews and especially all Rabbis to strengthen the Torah and not to dilute it. We need clarity and consistency – from generation to generation. There needs to be the expectation that halacha will not change because of interest-group politics.

     In America, everyone has the right to found an organization that propounds any philosophy. And everyone has the right – sometimes the obligation – to challenge that organization, to defend what is pure and holy, to expose (where possible) hidden motivations, and to underscore the beauty of our mesora – the tree of life of Torah, for those who want to grasp it.