Tuesday, March 19th | 9 Adar II 5784

Subscribe
June 19, 2018 6:26 am
1

Conservative Jews Stand Up to Anti-Israel Rhetoric

× [contact-form-7 404 "Not Found"]

avatar by Elizabeth Kratz / JNS.org

Opinion

IfNotNow protesters outside the 2017 AIPAC conference in Washington, DC. Photo: IfNotNow via Wikimedia Commons.

JNS.org – Members and alumni of the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism (USCJ) are the latest targets of IfNotNow, an organization that seeks to promote sympathy for the Palestinian narrative by encouraging fellow Jews to oppose the Israeli “occupation.”

USCJ’s official camping arm, the National Ramah Commission, recently issued a statement noting that while their Israel education includes room for differing opinions, it does not welcome anti-Zionism or subversion of Israel’s right to self-determination.

Rabbi Mitchell Cohen, national director of Camp Ramah, acknowledged that Ramah’s Israel-education programming does have nuance, and provides balance on the Israeli and Palestinian narratives, which was the initial request of IfNotNow.

“But what we will not accept at camp is this anti-Israel rhetoric that more radical organizations profess, particularly on university campuses,” he said. “There is a significant difference between being supportive of Israel yet critical of some of its policies on one hand, and on the other denying its right to exist as a Jewish state. The latter we do not and would never permit at camp.”

The USJC has 600 member synagogues across the country, two rabbinical schools — the Jewish Theological Seminary (JTS) in New York and the American Jewish University in Los Angeles — as well as a youth division, United Synagogue Youth (USY). There is significant crossover between attendees of Camp Ramah and USY, and many members of Conservative synagogues’ rabbinic staff grew up attending Ramah, USY, or both.

USJC CEO Rabbi Steven Wernick provided the following statement to JNS: “In USY, USCJ’s youth movement, we educate teens about Israel through a multiplicity of views and critical thinking skills. We do not judge how people get involved or with what institutions, however; at our core we are Zionists and therefore do not invite or endorse anti-Israel educational messages.”

A statement from the office of JTS Chancellor Arnold Eisen was similarly supportive. “JTS strongly supports the Ramah leadership and the importance of Zionism and the love of Israel as part of Ramah’s core mission,” the statement said.

Arnie Draiman, a USY staff member and educator for more than 40 years, said that he too shares Cohen’s view on rhetoric that crosses the line.

“I have no problem with discussing ‘all sides’ of any issue,” he said. “I do have a serious problem with inviting a group or person who is blatantly an extremist — and yes, I get to define that any way I want, on both sides of the political spectrum — to ‘teach’ about an issue in such a way that makes it more than just an informational lecture. Using an example: If someone from the KKK, a neo-Nazi [group], or JStreet was to speak to a USY or Ramah group for 45 minutes to explain their group and what they do, I might, under certain circumstances, allow it. But no way would I allow them to conduct a full, three-day seminar program espousing their views.”

Draiman also noted an issue with IfNotNow’s training sessions, which reportedly have attracted Ramah camp staff members from multiple camp movements and taught them how to teach “the occupation” subversively if the camps do not allow it overtly. “Anything done which is not transparent is wrong. If you have to ‘infiltrate,’ then there’s a problem,” Draiman said.

Rabbi Faith Cantor, a JTS-ordained rabbi, a former camper, and staff member at Camp Ramah in California and in the Poconos, also noted her vigorous support of Ramah’s red-line policy.

“I believe that Ramah is 100 percent a Zionistic camp and always should be. Israel education is not black and white, it is nuanced, and if we want our kids to get to college campuses and not be ‘sucked into’ BDS and anti-Israel programming, we have to do a better job teaching nuance,” she said. But she emphasized that nuance does not include anti-Israel propaganda.

Cantor noted on her last trip to Israel that she met with “top educator of Ramah Israel” Betsalel Steinhart and learned from him that “Ramah can and will” teach nuance.

“For me, listening to Betsalel teach with nuance was the highlight of the trip. The same way we can’t give our kids pediatric Judaism, which we know does not work, we can’t whittle down Israel to maps and Jewish holy sites. We need to teach a full narrative that supports Israel’s right to exist and protect herself.”

Josh Shuman, a former staff member at Camp Ramah of Wisconsin, said via Facebook that he met his wife at Camp Ramah, and that the camp “certainly fulfilled my love of Judaism, Jewish life, and, yes, making aliyah.”

He said, “Should USY invite speakers against Israel? Absolutely not! Should it allow critiques of Israel? Yes. Should it encourage members as members to go to anti-Israel rallies, demonstrations? Not on USY time.”

Phil Haggardy, a USY alum who is active at his synagogue in the San Fernando Valley in metropolitan Los Angeles, and also spent time at Camp Ramah in California on weekend retreats, said that Cohen’s statement was solid. “Any group that uses language like, ‘We are trying to end the 51-year occupation,’ isn’t any group that should be at a Jewish camp. Certainly not one associated with the Conservative movement. They aren’t trying to teach history or offer a different viewpoint, they are trying to destroy Israel, just like the BDS movement.”

The opinions presented by Algemeiner bloggers are solely theirs and do not represent those of The Algemeiner, its publishers or editors. If you would like to share your views with a blog post on The Algemeiner, please be in touch through our Contact page.

Share this Story: Share On Facebook Share On Twitter

Let your voice be heard!

Join the Algemeiner

Algemeiner.com

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.