It seems like a new development, but of course it has been under way for some time: a wave of extreme assimilationism, much in the form of anti-Israel agitation, in non-Orthodox American synagogues. I am writing from Brownstone Brooklyn where this neo-Hellenism seems particularly rampant.
First, there is the extreme form, (still) relatively rare: “brit shalom.”
Here is a frequently-heard witticism at a brit (or bris), a circumcision ceremony: iz shver tsu zeyn a yid, it’s hard to be a Jew. But now there are people who have found a way around the problem: let’s not do it, the circumcision, let’s just say we did. This “non-cutting naming ceremony for Jewish boys” is disingenuously called Brit Shalom, provided by the “Jews Against Circumcision.“ We are told that there are 216 “celebrants” who will (for a fee) perform the service, among them 132 rabbis, or at least people who say they are.
As it happens, two of these “celebrants” — David Mivasair of Vancouver and Brat Rosen of Chicago — enjoy considerable public attention because of their leadership positions in the radical anti-Israel group Jewish Voice for Peace. Both men hold ordination from the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, home of the bulk of anti-Israel rabbis. But despite each man’s vigorous protestation, there is doubt about the extent to which either can be called Jewish at all. While Mivasair had his nominally Jewish congregation in Vancouver, he also, at the same time, held the title of Chaplain at the United Church of Canada. Rosen, while Rabbi of Tzedek Chicago, is also, simultaneously, the Midwest Regional Director of the Quakers’ American Friends Service Committee,
An explicit embrace of non-Jewish religion, though rare among self-described Jews, is not confined to men like Mivasair and Rosen who affiliate with Christian groups. The late Zalman Schachter-Shalomi, one of the fathers of the Jewish Renewal movement, was also a practitioner of both Buddhism and Sufism. At the time of his death he held the (modestly named) World Wisdom Chair at the (Buddhist) Naropa Institute of Colorado, and, if that weren’t enough, he was also described as a Sufi shaikh, whatever that means.