At a meeting among Jewish leaders twenty years ago, the billionaire and longtime president of the World Jewish Congress, Edgar Bronfman reportedly expressed a common fear among the Jewish elite that young Jews becoming too comfortably assimilated needed to be goaded into reconnecting with their Jewish identity by whatever means necessary:
The point is, we have a crisis and I dont care how we go about getting young people involved in their Jewishness, Bronfman stated at a STAR [Synagogue Tranformation and Reform] meeting in Chicago
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.Going through my 20-year-old notes, I am struck at how often Jewish lay and religious leaders voiced a fear that an end to anti-Semitism would further erode the tenuous connection young people had to Judaism. Ironically, the rise in Jewish activism in response to anti-Semitism could be an opportunity to find a place for them.
In 2019, while our institutions are hashing out the same arguments, American Jews are faced with an altogether different existential crisis: the rise of American anti-Semitism. Now is the perfect time to truly reckon with what it means to be a Jew and who gets counted as a member of the tribe because people who never thought about their Judaism before are now constantly reminded of it by anti-Semites.
Poster Comment:
With leaders like theirs there will be no end to Antisemitism. I have always thought of Judaism as a criminal conspiracy.