Jrosemary wrote:
Thanks for your thoughtful reply!
My pleasure. It's an interesting question - and I'm glad I'm not in charge of finding a solution.
cnorman18 wrote:
As far as I can see, the Orthodox already constitute a separate religion in many ways; we recognize them as Jews, but they often don't recognize us. On my own conversion, I have gotten reads both ways from the Orthodox; since I converted with both milah and mikvah, some say I am a Jew; since I converted in a non-Orthodox shul, some say I am not. Since I don't hang out with the Orthodox, I don't much care. I think that they are more or less out of this debate, since their position is not generally amenable to compromise.
I see your point--but I won't call them a separate religion. We all stood at Sinai together. And I think the concerns the various Orthodox groups bring to the table should be part of the discussion when it comes to determining how one becomes Jewish.
Of course I agree. My point was that they have essentially declared
themselves a separate religion by denying that the rest of us are sufficiently Jewish. I would certainly affirm them as Jews and my brothers and sisters. The problem is that they don't so affirm ME.
I would love to take Orthodox views into account here, but I can't see how that could happen. There's no dialogue possible there. The only option I have ever seen them offer on any issue is total capitulation to their standards, or else leave the table.
Not to mention the fact that patrilineal descent is not the only area where the Orthodox presume to set the standards for everyone else. The specific issue upon which I am said not to be Jewish is
kashrut; I had
milah and
mikvah, but never committed to obey ALL of the
mitzvot, most notably that one.
How does one negotiate a compromise with someone whose standards are absolutely rigid and immovable, and accepts NO compromise whatever?
Any compromise or solution the rest of us come up with will be rejected by the Orthodox, or at least many Orthodox,
a priori. That's a given. How do we include them in the conversation?
cnorman wrote:
It's my understanding that within Israel and for purposes of marriage, only Orthodox conversions are accepted (and not even all of those); but for purposes of aliyah (immigration to Israel, for you goyim), according to Israeli law and court decisions, conversion in any branch makes you Jewish and able to invoke the Law of Return.
My understanding is that you'd have a problem making aliyah to Israel without being born to a Jewish mother or converting to a particular type of Orthodox Judaism. However, let's shelf that until one of us goes through the trouble of checking with the Israeli embassy.
I actually did a few years ago, and that's what I was told. That was about ten years ago, though, and perhaps the standard has changed.
cnorman wrote:
. . . it seems to me reasonable to retain the requirement of formal conversion for a person whose father (but not mother) is Jewish and who has been "raised Jewish"; but to eliminate the requirement of formal study and require only a pro forma nod to the ritual requirements.
It would be a technical, i.e. ritual, conversion that recognizes and affirms one's prior personal commitment to Judaism and that one already shares in its cultural heritage, as opposed to one's having to be educated in and initiated into them.
I would consider it analogous to the hatafat dam brit or "drop of blood circumcision" required in my case. Since I was already circumcised, the whole procedure was not required, but only a nod to ritual; this situation seems to me to be exactly similar. In this situation, one is de facto already Jewish; this ought to be recognized and affirmed, and it seems appropriate to do so in a public, formal ceremony where one is rendered Jewish de jure, just as my circumcision was rendered ritually acceptable. That even seems like a solid precedent for what amounts to a minor change in halakhah.
Hmmm. Do you mean a new ritual, or the traditional rituals minus the study period?
The latter.
If you're a patralineal Reform Jew who's been going to synagogue your whole life, and then you want to marry a Conservative Jew, you do have to get a mikvah (and, if you're male, a circumcision or symbolic drop of blood if you're already circumcised.) But you don't have to go through the usual study period that someone with little previous experience with Judaism would have to undergo. That's up to the discretion of your rabbi and beit din.
That's exactly the sort of thing I'm proposing. There's no reason to teach someone things they already know; we can simply acknowledge the knowledge and commitment that's already in place and fulfill the ritual requirements. Seems simple and reasonable to me.
cnorman wrote:
The current situation, where a person is recognized as Jewish by one liberal branch and not by another, seems guaranteed to cause problems.
For instance: A Conservative Jewish man marries a Reform Jewish woman, and it is discovered after the fact that her mother was of patrilineal descent and never converted. What is the status of this couple's children? If one of their sons marries a Gentile woman and raises his children Jewish, are they?
If we are to retain the principle that belief is not what makes one Jewish, it seems to me clear that they aren't. Abandoning the requirement of formal conversion if one is not born to a Jewish mother would appear to be simply changing the standard to the Christian model; anyone who professes to be a Jew is one. If we do that, the community loses control of its own identity and there is nothing to prevent Gentile Christians from claiming to be "Messianic Jews." They do that now, but at least we have grounds to reject that claim.
I disagree that this is an issue of belief. You can belong to a Reform or Reconstructionist synagogue as a patralineal Jew and be an atheist. The question is: how do you become a member of the people Israel? I think all branches of Judaism agree that belief doesn't make you a member. There's no creed to which you need to assent . . . we all have this crazy idea that there's something else that holds us together as a people. Regardless of our bloodlines, regardless of whether we agree with the 13 principles of Maimonides, we're all somehow the children of Abraham and Sarah.
Agreed. But Reform temples have already abandoned halakhah by declaring patrilineal descent sufficient to make one a member of the tribe. How different is that from saying "I'm Jewish because I think I am and say I am"? In the example I gave, in one generation you will be recognizing people as Jewish who are halakhically Jews on
neither side.
There is also the issue which no one talks about, which is the most probable origin of the requirement of matrilineal descent in the first place; how do we guarantee that the alleged Jewish father is, in fact, the child's father at all? The identity of the mother is not in doubt; but barring a DNA analysis, the identity of the father absolutely is.
Not to put too fine a point on it, but the most faithful wife in the best marriage I had ever seen cheated on her husband. I know that for a fact, because she cheated with me. If it had happened when we were younger, one of her children could have been mine - and if it could happen in that marriage, it could happen in any.
(For the record, I don't defend that affair; I acknowledge it as wrong and immoral. But I don't regret it, either. The reasons for that are my own.)
This is going to get messy no matter what way we look at it. I'll give you the Orthodox nightmare, which is similar to the example you gave: a woman belongs to a Reform congregation as a patralineal Jew. After she's dead and after people have forgotten that she was patralineal, her great-great-granddaughter (straight through the maternal line) marries an Orthodox guy, lives an Orthodox life and raises lovely Orthodox children. Nobody realizes that these kids aren't halachally Jewish, so nobody dunks them in the mikvah.
Heck, for the Orthodox nightmare, the original woman doesn't even have to be a patralineal Jew. She could be a non-Orthodox convert. In fact, that works for the Conservative nightmare. A convert to Reform Judaism who never had a mikvah has a great-great granddaughter through the maternal line who marries a Conservative guy. . . if anyone finds out, would we Conservative Jews consider their children halachically Jewish? Technically, no.
But doesn't that seem like a disconnect somehow?
The problem with all these scenarios is that Jewish law does not recognize
intent in these situations, nor is there a statute of limitations. If you are given pork and told that it's kosher beef, and you eat it, have you violated the commandment? Of course you have. Which principle makes your question here a bit of a paradox -
Regardless of halacha, can we really say that these kids aren't Jewish?
Since halakhah determines whether one is Jewish or not, how does that question make sense except by assuming that halakhah is not
really the standard? And if it is not halakhah, what remains except - well, belief?
Regardless of halakhah, they believe they are Jewish, therefore they are. Isn't that the
de facto standard here?
If a pogrom comes, believe me, they'll be targets.
True; and that's why it's hard for those who aren't especially concerned with halakhah otherwise to get bent about this.
On the other hand, when have we acknowledged the standards of our enemies as valid? People of Jewish descent who had been Christians for generations died in the camps alongside us, and we acknowledge their suffering on our account and affirm them as dying for the glory of the Name; but that does not mean they were Jews.
Here's another question: say you go to a friend's house to help them make a minyan. Maybe it's a shiva visit; maybe it's just someone who likes to have a regular weekday minyan. Whatever.
You're the tenth Jew. Everybody's thrilled to see you. Looking around the room, however, you see three people there that you know from a Reform synagogue. All three of them are patralineal Jews. Would you refuse to say Kaddish with them?
I think I would defer to their own judgment. Since I am a Jew by conversion only, with no Jews at all among my blood ancestors - and since some Jews don't acknowledge me as such - I don't feel much like imposing my own beliefs or standards on others. I personally thought that God heard my prayers before I was Jewish, and I am not willing to declare that he won't hear that one.
We can roll our eyes and say that none of this would come up if the darned Reform and Reconstructionist folks would just have some kind of conversion/affirmation ceremony for patralineal Jews. But, meanwhile, how do we handle this?
Beats me. The abbreviated conversion process and brief ceremony seems like a simple and sensible solution to me, and frankly I can't think of a reason to resist that solution other than a kind of pridefully defiant attitude; "We don't HAVE to care what you think!"
As to how we handle it till a compromise is reached - in the traditional manner, of course. We argue.