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Issues
of Our Days
Generic
Spirituality and ALEPH's Mission
by Susan Saxe
At
the shiur (teaching) with Reb Zalman and ALEPH leaders at the ALEPH
Leadership Conclave in Denver, January 2003, I responded to what
I think is a crucial thread in our discourse as Jewish renewal manifests
more strongly in the world and as it draws more and more on "second
generation" leaders and reaches out to new groups of people
whose point of entry into Judaism is through renewal but who have
not been and will not be impacted by direct contact with its founder,
Reb Zalman. The thread has to do with paradigm shift and structure--tradition,
forms, boundaries.
I observed
that "generic spirituality" religion stripped of
its cultural "baggage" naturally tends to attract new
baggage, new minhagim (customs), forms, values and expressions,
from the surrounding culture. The historical example I used was
Christianity. Early Christianity, as Reb Zalman has pointed out,
was "Judaism for export," a stripped down version of Judaism.
It was the core messianic message of love and redemption, but divorced
from the tribal markings (circumcision), dietary taboos (kashrut),
other special practices such as Shabbat observance. It was also
divorced (some would say liberated) from a whole body of halacha
(Jewish law) that governed everything from prayer to marital relations
to business dealings. And, as my teacher Uziel Weingarten has pointed
out, it was in its time an antidote to the Priestly strand of Torah
that dominated with a stress on ritual observance and a judging
G-d. The idea was to make Judaism palatable to the nations by removing
its particularity and lowering the entrance barriers. But it didn't
quite work that way.
Some
Christians like to say, "we have the Love and they (the Jews)
have the Law." But there is no love without law. Law (whether
in the form of externally imposed rules or internalized morality)
naturally attaches to Love, form to content, like DNA to RNA. The
early Christians supplanted the central, driving imperative of Judaism
to be a mentsch (fully self-realized person) in this world with
their overriding focus on the messianic hope for the coming of the
next. But when the forms of the Jewish tradition--ritual and lifestyle
practices based on a bedrock belief in the holiness of each human
as created in the divine image, and the overriding imperative to
pursue justice and compassion--was stripped away, it made room for
the accretion of forms and mores from the surrounding culture.
What
was the surrounding culture? The Roman Empire, a vast military power,
violent, patriarchal, ruling the known world through unrestrained
state terror. The result? This "daughter religion" of
Judaism grew into the Holy Roman Empire, a triumphalist juggernaut
careening through European history bringing with it the Crusades,
the Inquisition, slavery, imperialism and a 2000 year matricidal
frenzy culminating in the Holocaust. (None of this is to deny that
there were always some people manifesting the "love" piece
of the equation, but they could never gain sufficient critical mass
to become the governing power of the whole. This may be only partially
attributable to the phenomenon we are discussing and partially to
the inherent human condition. The purpose of this paper is not to
dissect this question.)
Moving
to the present day, "designer" or "generic"
religion is the modern equivalent. We are now seeing eastern religions
such as Hinduism and Buddhism stripped down for export to the west
as well as the popularizing and designerizing of Judaism and Christianity.
But take away the old forms and what will accrete will be the forms
of the surrounding culture. One look at western culture, particularly
American culture, will explain why we are seeing the commodification
of spirituality, a "spiritual marketplace"--and what its
shortcomings might be.
Case
in point From time to time there are discussions among the
chevre (our group of friends) about other organizations such as
the Kaballah Centers run by Phillip Berg that seem to be doing better
than we are financially. At the Leadership conclave, we even heard
the suggestion that we might thrive by imitating their marketing
techniques which include peddling designer water (supposedly charmed)
a clothing line, and who knows what else. I hope they were joking.
As
I said on our e-list and will say again and again no matter how
many times this comes up. If you want to know the validity of a
teacher's teaching, don't look at his popularity or material success--look
at the behavior of his students. Are they becoming more generous,
kind, modest, trustworthy, faithful in marriage, honest in business
?
They don't have to be perfect, but are they moving in the right
direction? If not, then the teacher is a fraud--dishonoring his
tradition and cheating his students.
I don't
care if Berg and others are rolling in money. If Madonna holds a
press conference announcing that she is giving millions to charity
and embarking on a campaign to abolish child labor because of his
influence, that's one thing. But if all she has learned from her
study of Kabbalah is to make soft core porn videos exploiting Jewish
symbols....yecch! A few years ago all the trendy stars were claiming
to have multiple personalities. Now it's Kaballah. Feh! We're not
in the business of pseudo-spiritual entertainment.
None
of this bears on how nice our brochures look or how responsible
we should be about financing our work. That is all fine as long
as we work within the ethical precepts of our tradition and keep
ourselves clearly focused on our real goal which is not to be popular
by following the trends of the moment. Neither does this mean that
we have to lock ourselves into the forms that no longer work as
the restorationists are doing. To me this is just another kind of
marketing take text literally, follow both halacha and minhag
(which they treat as if it were halacha) exactly as we tell you
and you get to believe that you've got it right and everyone else
has it wrong, and justify anything you do because G-d is on your
side.
What
we are about is paradigm shift, not marketing or "turning people
on" (nice as that is) or inventing things out of thin air.
We are much more than "Jews with drums," but that's all
we'll be unless we commit ourselves wholeheartedly to something
much deeper. We have been given an awesome legacy to live into.
We need to study, discuss and understand concepts like paradigm
shift and the psycho-halachic process as Reb Zalman has so brilliantly
articulated, and see to it that the rabbis and lay leaders we are
educating understand these as well and are deeply and seriously
rooted in the old as they weave it into the new. If newcomers enter
our circles and are put off by high standards, ethical positions,
regard for text or demonstrations of esteem for our teachers, our
job is to educate them, not modify ourselves so as not to offend.
It is also our job to model the values we teach so that they permeate
every aspect of our work. We may disagree about how best to do this,
but we need to be engaged in the conversation.
Jewish
renewal is about paradigm shift within Judaism, not about designer
Judaism for export either to disaffected Jews or to others. ALEPH's
mission should be to midwife the natural paradigm shift of Judaism
into the 21st century, keeping intact its connection to the unique
history of the Jewish people remaining faithful to the core texts,
values, and ethical tradition and honoring the teachers who are
its voice, heart and soul.
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