A
major schism is looming between the two largest Jewish
communities in the world, those in Israel and the United
States. Together they constitute some 85 per cent of the
world’s Jews. For a number of political, religious and
sociological reasons, they are drifting apart.
It
isn’t the first time this has happened in the long history
of the Jewish people. After all, arguably the most
significant split occurred almost two millennia ago, between
the followers of Jesus and those who rejected him as the
messiah.
In
our time, the future of world Jewry will likely be shaped by
these two largest populations, and by the relationship
between them. For that reason alone, the waning of
attachment to Israel among American Jews, especially but not
exclusively younger American Jews, has rightly become a
matter of concern.
Some
blame the growing estrangement on Israel, others on the
American Jewish community.
Today,
while most American Jews embrace a political theology of
prophetic Judaism and exhibit consider themselves
cosmopolitans, they see in Israel an ethno-national state”
moving in an increasingly illiberal direction.
Others
point the finger at American Jewry, noting the loosening of
once-powerful communal bonds, as evidenced by the high rates
of intermarriage and the move away from Jewish religious
affiliation, as well as the erosion of communal memory,
especially of the Holocaust era and the history of the state
of Israel itself.
Increasingly,
writes Professor Daniel Gordis of Shalem College in
Jerusalem, author of the 2016 book Israel: A Concise History
of a Nation Reborn, the orientation of many American Jews
toward Israel is one neither of instinctive loyalty nor of
pride but of indifference, embarrassment, or hostility.
The
findings of a 2013 Pew Center study, A Portrait of Jewish
Americans, confirms this: While nearly 40 per cent of
American Jews aged sixty-five or older continue to feel
“very attached” to Israel, only 25 per cent of
eighteen-to-twenty-nine-year-olds feel the same way.
At
the opposite pole, of those not “very attached” to Israel,
the gap is even wider, with twice as many younger as older
Jews claiming that status.
Political
views are another important variable. Half of Republican
Jewish respondents describe themselves as “very attached” to
Israel, but only a quarter of Jewish Democrats do so. On the
other hand, while only two per cent of Jewish Republicans
describe themselves as “not at all attached” to Israel,
among Jewish Democrats the number is fully five times
higher.
Along
the religious spectrum, the same holds true: while 77 per
cent of Modern Orthodox Jews describe themselves as “very
attached” to Israel, on the left, the comparable figures are
drastically lower: only 24 per cent for Reform Jews and 16
percent for those claiming no denominational affiliation.
The
Reform movement, in particular, is a blend of liberal
theology and progressive politics; one wag parodied it as
“the Democratic Party with holidays thrown in.”
In
brief, concludes Gordis, the group growing most disconnected
from Israel is composed of younger, politically more
left-leaning, and religiously less traditionalist American
Jews.
For
them, not just Israel’s policies, but its very essence is
objectionable. As opposed to American universalism, ethnic
particularism is at the core of Israel’s very reason for
being. And the public square, rather than being religious
neutral, is in Israel suffused with Judaism, something even
most non-observant Israeli Jews accept.
Farther
on the left, intersectionality is the dogma of the
progressive left. In theory, it’s the notion that every form
of social oppression is linked to every other social
oppression.
You
might imagine that the Jewish people, age-old victims of
anti-Semitism, might also be seen as victims.
You
would be wrong. Why? Because of Israel, which progressives
see only as a vehicle for oppression of the Palestinians.
”For
progressive American Jews,” observed Barry Weiss in the June
27 New York Times, intersectionality forces a choice. “Do
you side with the oppressed or with the oppressor?”
Global
Strategy Group fielded an online national survey of Jewish
college students at 282 different colleges from Sept. 23 to
Oct. 31, 2016.
The research found that 57 per cent of Jewish college students support the Jewish state, but that is a decline of fully a third from 84 per cent in 2010.
So
the chasm will continue to widen. After all, as the
American-born Israeli novelist Hillel Halkin reminds us, the
two populations live in different worlds, speak different
languages, face different problems, have different life
experiences, and adhere to different values.
For
Israelis, their Jewishness, notes the secular Israeli author
A.B. Yehoshua, is something fixed and permanent, not
something transient and only mobilized when convenient,
increasingly the case for American Jews.
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