Browsing Tag

controversial observations

Uncategorized November 18, 2011

The Danger of Being Orthodox

Note: the follow-up post on this subject is “What I’m Thinking When The Orthodox Make Headlines,” based on a query from one of my readers in the comments here.

When you’re identifiably Orthodox, you wear your religion on your sleeve.  Literally.  Either you’ve got a yarmulke or a long skirt but everything you do is a walking advertisement for or against your faith, and especially, your brand of your faith.

When you’re not part of a particular community, race, or culture, all “those people” appear alike to you.  You don’t know how to differentiate.  And Orthodoxy is no different.  So when “bad news about the Jews” hits the world, and in today’s tech society, it’s instant and viral, all Ortho-folk look bad.  Of course people are attracted to bad news like bees to honey.  Ever see a newspaper full of good news sell?

Controversial articles attract comments; car wrecks attract rubber-neckers; family drama attracts more family drama.  That’s how we are.

This week I attended two “very Orthodox” weddings.  As I looked around the room at the dancing, men and women each on their own side of the mechitza, black hats and all, I thought to myself:  I know almost everyone in this room.  They are good people, mostly.  Pretty much just trying to do their thing, raise good families, uphold basic values, make a decent living, and be faithful Jews.  Many are truly excellent people.  Exceptionally kind, humble, giving, forgiving, and busy dedicating their lives to helping others both organizationally and personally.  The emotions of joy, love and spirituality ran high in the room.

But then my brain switched to “outsider mode” (it does that often, with apparently no control on my part).  I wondered, if an outsider would walk in here, would they think us bizarre?  Odd?  Phobic?  Hateful?  Rude?

It’s painful.  And I’m not sure what to do about it.

What do you think?

Uncategorized November 14, 2011

Mussar

Tonight I taught a Mussar class. Mussar is the organized study of refining our character traits through Judaism.

It dawned on me: all the negativity in the world, and I do mean ALL, can be reversed by studying mussar in tandem with halacha – Jewish law.

Every single time someone is upset, offended, annoyed, enraged, sarcastic, cynical, or rude, it’s a mussar issue. Guaranteed. That means the one experiencing the negative emotions has something to work on.

Incredibly empowering… and burdensome. So much more fun to blame others.
(For a participant’s viewpoint, check out mussarforthemasses.com.)

Uncategorized November 10, 2011

Israel: Love and Frustration

A Facebook friend of mine who made aliyah last year (ie moved permanently to Israel) posted the following:

“I wish born and bred Israelis would understand that I can love Israel and be frustrated by it at the same time!”

Yes!!  True!! Me too.  I wish *I* would understand that.

On my recent trip I felt: intense love, frustration, nostalgia, guilt for moving away (we lived there for 5 years), relief for moving away, homesickness for Cleveland, homesickness for Jerusalem, cynicism at Israeli notions of service, and intense respect for their innovation, gumption, and sheer brilliance.

Hmmm.

You?

Uncategorized November 8, 2011

Are You in a Cult?? Or, Are You Trying to Make Me Orthodox??

Hi!  Welcome to our lovely cult, the Jewish Family Experience.  Here, we attempt to fulfill all the qualifications of a cult, including, but not limited to:

1. Disconnection from family members.
At JFX, we never encourage you to invite friends and family.  Nor are we interested in meeting your friends and family.  Our staff will not attend birthday parties or simchas of non-members.  We encourage solitude and disconnection, preferably by denigrating those in your lives that are non-members.

2. Brainwashing.
Call it education, or call it brainwashing.  Either way we are hugely successful in making people believe what we want them to believe.  Sort of like college. And motivational speakers.  And parenting.  And Madison Avenue.  In any case, we don’t tolerate questions, challenges, alternate views, atheists, or lay involvement.  Ever.  The less you think, the better.

3. Our own language.
While we attempt to converse in English, that’s just a front.  Often our underbelly of Hebrew and Yiddish vocab emerges.  Or, our more evolved members will use words in those languages.  That’s good, because it keeps us exclusive and unknowable: just the way we like it.

4. Charismatic leader.
This is easy for us, since all Rabbis or teachers that are successful fit the bill.  Check.

Now that our cult-status is well-established, all that needs to be determined is: are we a DESTRUCTIVE cult, or just a garden-variety cult?  Methinks the latter, but I’m probably the last person to determine that.  After all, the cult leader denying destructive-cult-status is hardly convincing.  Thing is, finding out what defines a destructive cult is elusive and subjective.  It can be as broadly defined as “emotional harm” which varies depends on what you consider harmful.  So I can’t properly establish this.

Our next question is the goal of our cult.  Are we trying to make you Orthodox?  The answer is, of course, yes.  Why else would we be engaged in Jewish education if not to radically reform our members (pun intended)??  We want everyone to be exactly like us.  That’s because we’re judgmental and critical.  If you’ve met us, you know exactly what I’m talking about.

Also, we’re fortunate in that we have the special capability of “making” people into a new denomination.  As you may know, this is very easy.  People, and particularly Jews, and most notably, married ones with jobs, kids, and homes in the ‘burbs, are open and vulnerable to new and unfamiliar ideas, especially when they involve change – even more so when they involve denying oneself favorite foods (cheeseburgers) or activities (gossiping).  We can “make” people Orthodox, Reform, or Conservative – and this special power is useful.  We thank our members for being easy fodder for this manipulation, for not resisting our wiles, and for never resisting change or challenging our lifestyles.

When we see that you are not becoming Orthodox, we drop you like a hot potato.  Of what use are you to us?  You are an embarrassment; a neon reminder of our cult failure.  And don’t think it’s good enough to be a believer on the inside.  Until and unless everyone can tell, you are a black mark on our organization.  This includes a black hat, wig, original Hebrew or preferably Yiddish name to be used at all times, double-digit children, or aliyah.  Such changes initiated inside of six months are rewarded with cult upgrades (extra cholent at kiddush).

We are fortunate that our cult has been hugely successful.  Apparently, the vast majority of Jews are simply weak, stupid, naive, and unopinionated.  This is very, very good.

MWAAHAAAAAAA!

Uncategorized September 19, 2011

Kabbalistic Emails

I have a problem with forwarded mushy emails that you have to scroll down pages of strangers’ email addresses to read.  Seriously, I can’t handle them.  Especially the ones that masquerade as Jewish.

I know that the people who forward them, and specifically, who forward them to me, have only the best intentions and most wonderful sense of spirit when doing so, and far be it from me to kill a spiritual moment, but I must set the record straight.

God is not walking through your house.

Probably nothing will happen in five minutes.

If you delete this email, nothing will happen to you.

And this is not based on kabbalah.

For good fortune, health, and the rest, whisper a prayer and try your best to put forth normal effort.

Thank you and have a nice day.

Uncategorized August 29, 2011

Why Can’t Orthodox Women be Rabbis?

Received this from a friend of an acquaintance of my husband’s.
I don’t know the questioner, but I do know she is a woman who has been doing some extensive learning about classical Judaism.
The questioner is referencing the recent controversy around ordaining Orthodox women rabbis and what title might be used therein.
The email is printed with all errors.  Since I don’t know the questioner, I didn’t want to alter her words at all.
“First of all – what is the big fuss about a woman having a title?? Maybe
it’s because I grew up secular and am a grad student, but in my mind if a
woman does the same learning, she should at least be able to have some sort
of title attesting to that. It would be like me going to grad school and not
graduating with a degree. It looks like there are a few “orthodox” female
rabbi type people (Shlomo Carlebach ordained a couple I believe), and I
don’t see what the big deal is. They aren’t leading men in prayer, or doing
the minyan thing, they studied a long time, and they got some kind of
smicha…..why the controversy? Does it say in the Torah woman can’t be
religious leaders?
“I spoke about this with Leah once and she said “well there are female
religious leaders, they are just called Rebbetzins” and also “why do women
need a title? just being learned is good enough to do lots in the
community”….yes BUT first of all, a Rebbetzin is married to a Rabbi and
gets that title through the her relationship not of her own learning merits.
Not to say there aren’t great rebbetzins out there, but it is not a title
given due to completion of a rigorous program of study, nor is it something
the wife of a business man has ( no matter how learned she is). For the
second issue, I guess I just don’t understand why they wouldn’t be given a
title of some sort – they did the learning, they put in the work, why deny
them acknowledgment of that? Sure men learn without becoming Rabbi’s, but if
she wants to work with people and be a religious leader full time why not
let her have a title that makes her work easier?
“Personally, I would be stoked to learn from a woman, especially the whole
bedika cloth thing and whatnot – she would be the natural person for that I
would think. I have an acquaintance down here that is a girl rabbi ( not
orthodox obviously ;), she is soooooooo freaking awesome – she has had this
amazing life – daughter of a rabbi from a long line of rabbi’s, highly
educated, used to be an electrical engineer, sky diver, all around cool
lady, and super educated on jewish stuff….well educated to the extent she
found teachers to teach her. I just wish there were women teachers like that
in orthodox judaism. Anyways, if you can help me understand all this I would
be very grateful.
“I know I am writing with lots of crazy questions – but I love Judaism and am
soooo grateful to you guys for teaching us!!!! Just trying to understand
things that aren’t making sense 🙂

Dear Friend,
I don’t know you, and you don’t know me.  But it sounds like you are right up my alley: curious, passionate, respectful, and honest.  I would like to respond to your questions, partially from a place of philosophy, but also from a place of personal experience.  I’m not asking you to like or agree with my ideas.  In fact, if you grew up secular in America in the past 40 years, it would be shocking for you to even be able to stretch yourself to hear me out.  All I ask is intellectual honesty to see that this position has validity.
You ask, “What is wrong with a woman having a title?”  The answer is, nothing, as long as it fits.  So should a woman be called, “Rabbi”?  Let us discover what a Rabbi is.  I am a mom; are you?  The title “Mom” is quite specific.  It refers to a woman who has either biologically given birth to or fostered or adopted a child and is usually raising him or her.  If a man biologically birthed a child (problematic verb right there) or fostered or adopted, is he a mom?  No, he is not a mom.  He can never be a mom.  He can be a dad, an uncle, a friend, but he can never be a mom.  A Rabbi, by definition, is a man.  How do we know this?
The Torah, yes, that very Torah that women want to hold, march with, read from publicly, study, and teach, has some very deep lessons about men and women.  These lessons are both timeless and timely which means that sometimes they may not sync with the trends of the day, but by the same token they will never, ever become obsolete.  In thousands of years of Jewish history, the Torah is still practiced and observed faithfully.
The Torah states that men and women have different spheres of spiritual influence.  A man’s sphere of influence is in the external, public world, and a woman’s sphere of influence is in the internal, private world.  This concept is alluded to in the kabbalistic, mystical sources; in the Talmud, in the midrash and the like.  This is the oral law, not the written law (the Talmud and its attendant commentaries).  But everything in the Talmud, et al, has a hook and a source in the written law.
The notion that men and women are hardwired differently is no secret to us married folk.  But in the world of spirituality, people somehow fail to understand that there are laws of physics.  Judaism is not just a warm and fuzzy blanket, full of feel-good moments.  It’s not just haroset and matza balls.  Just as science, physics, and the USA have laws, Jewish spirituality has laws.  If you follow the laws you can reach a most exalted spiritual place.
The notion of external/internal spheres of influence affects both how men or women are influenced, and how they influence.  We see this difference in our very biological anatomy.  A man’s anatomy, his life force, is external and visible.  A woman’s anatomy is internal and private.  She accepts within her body the life giving force, nurtures it within, and creates life thereby.  This is not an accident.  All spiritual realities have their parallel in the physical world.
My friend, the Torah, yes, once again I reiterate, that very same Torah that everyone wants to hold, march with, read from, study, and teach, tells us that a man will find his main spirituality through public and external service, and that a woman will find her main spirituality through private and internal service.  What this means in practical terms in 2011 is that the public place of Judaism, the synagogue, is the place that men will shine, and the private place of Judaism, the home, is the place that women will shine.
Is one better than the other?  What’s better, funner, cooler, more prestigious: to shine at the synagogue or to shine at home?
Do you see that the very question is flawed, my friend?  Our goal is not fun, coolness, or prestige.  It’s spirituality. What better place to discover our set of instructions for spirituality than the very Torah we seek to disseminate?  Do you see the problem here?  The problem is not that women are lesser for shining in the private domain, the problem rather is that no one values the private domain simply because PRIVATE THINGS ARE NOT VALUED.
In our society, what glitters matters; secrets are freely shared; the moms, teachers, and other unsung heroes are simply under-appreciated and underpaid; and no one wants to be behind-the-scenes.  This is a serious indictment, not of Judaism or Orthodoxy, but merely of where our society’s values have run amok.
Say you have a loving relationship with a friend.  The two of you are at a dinner party and you start recounting the funny story of your flat tire, and your friend rudely interrupts you.  This is completely out of character; you’re stymied.  But you trust her, and she trusts you, so you are certain there is a good reason and that all will be revealed.
See, God and the Torah are my good friends.  In their company, I have always felt respected, valued, and appreciated as a Jewish woman.  Valued for my intellect and valued for my ideas.  Valued for having seven kids and valued for being a teacher of Torah.  If God is denying me the title “Rabbi,” well, I trust Him.  He’s never steered me wrong.  I know it can’t be disrespect or denigration, because that would be entirely out of character and wouldn’t jive with anything else that I know about Judaism.
My friend, I study as much Torah as I can.  I teach Torah and counsel couples in crisis.  I love God and try to bring others to love Him as well.  For all intents and purposes my job quite closely parallels that of a Rabbi.  But if you’re not the mom, you’re not the mom.  You can call yourself a mom and you can cook and clean and change diapers and volunteer at the preschool and do all the things that moms do, but if you’re the dad, you’re not the mom.
So what is my title?  Some call me Rebbetzin.  I think that’s a funny title, because there are so many women more learned than I.  I don’t want a title.  I don’t need a title.  Guess what?  Any Rabbi becoming one for the title and prestige ought find a new job.  Glory-seeking and the rabbinate ought to be allergic to one another.
And too, I want to always remember that the God that I am supposedly serving in this whole endeavor has arranged things such that the internal, private sphere is my primary spiritual path.  I pray that I never forget.
With love,
Ruchi
Uncategorized August 26, 2011

I’m In a Relationship

If you freak out easily, stop reading now.

Every now and then, missionaries come a-knockin’ on my door.  And I feel like telling them:  Hey.  I’m not looking for new relationships.  I’m already in a relationship.  With God.

It’s a long-term relationship.  It started before my conscious memory began, and will continue after I die.

It’s a mutual relationship.  I talk to Him (via prayer, both formal and spontaneous) and He talks to me (via Torah study).  I make promises to Him, and He makes promises to me.  I believe in Him, and He believes in me.

It’s an unconditional relationship: in good times and bad times, in sickness and in health, for richer and for poorer.  Even in death we will not part.

Quick, take a sheet of paper.  Draw four circles on it – one for Judaism, one for family, one for work, and one for any hobbies that take up time in your life.  Draw the biggest circle for the most important relationship in your life, and subsequently smaller circles as the relationships diminish in importance.

My relationship with God is the biggest.

My next circle is my family.  My next is JFX, the Jewish Family Experience, and smaller circles include hobbies like music and writing.  My long-term relationship with God is the umbrella that shades all of these.  It colors how I spend my time, when I get a babysitter, how I express my feelings.

Why am I telling you this?  It’s not to be hokey or weird or in-your-face, but rather to explain to you what I think ought to characterize an “Orthodox” or certainly a “religious” Jew.  This relationship motivates pretty much everything I do.  It’s not only Baptists who have God in their heart and their mind every day.  It’s OK for Jews to as well.  Yet most do not feel comfortable with being “out” about this relationship.  In my opinion, THIS is what it means to be an observant Jew.  Observant, not only of the mitzvos/mitzvot/mitzvas, but observant of one’s relationship to God.  THIS is what the word “Orthodox” can’t possibly express.

Make the following observation:  When you are in a long-term relationship with a human, you can’t just do the right thing.  You have to feel the relationship.  And if you don’t, you at least have to be working on it.  Else it will die.  This is the spirit of Judaism.  But if you just feel the love, but don’t do the things that must be done in a relationship, you have the spirit only.  That’s where the letter of the law is missing.  This, too, is an incomplete relationship, and one that is unsustainable.  Feelings alone cannot perpetuate a relationship.  And a relationship with a Higher Being is no different.

And if you feel freaked out… well, I warned you.

What do you think, fellow Jews?  Is it weird to think about these things?  Does it feel funny, foreign, uncomfortable?  Is it important to be thinking about these things?  How many Jews, do you think, are even thinking about the relationship?  And if you are in the relationship, are you comfortable with it?  Talking about it?  How much and to whom?