2016-06-30
What a country! What a time to be alive! If you're a rabbi, that is.

Last week, virtually all the rabbis in America enjoyed their 15 minutes of fame. With the announcement that a Sabbath-observant Orthodox Jew had been nominated to be Al Gore's running mate, every major network scrambled to get a rabbi on the air to talk about what Senator Lieberman could and could not do on the Sabbath. The desperation was so great that a friend of mine who asserts himself to be an agnostic but happens to work for a Jewish website was drafted onto TV to discuss how Lieberman's observance would affect national policy. (His insights: The military would now purchase jets wholesale, and we would declare a new national holiday: Jewish Mother's Day--celebrated with the ritual donning of two sweaters by every good American son and daughter, at the height of the mid-August heat.) While I myself am apolitical, I am as jubilant about Joe Lieberman's nomination as any Jew in America. Moreover, I have had occasion to meet Senator Lieberman and found him to be an exceptional man of humility, wisdom, and grace.

As the euphoria settles, a sobering analysis does reveal the potential for the Lieberman nomination to create as much difficulty and dilemma within the Jewish community as it does delight. The nomination of an observant Jew may throw the two major American Jewish groups--the non-Orthodox, that is, Reform and Conservative, and Orthodoxy--into crisis.

The quandary for the non-Orthodox is obvious. Reform and Conservative Judaism, together comprising the overwhelming majority of affiliated American Jews, are largely based on a single, underlying premise, namely, that Judaism must adapt to the times if it is to remain relevant. Reform came into being in early 19th-century Germany largely as a response to Jewish political emancipation. Its leaders believed passionately that unless Judaism submitted to the inevitability of historical development and shed some of its more unpalatable and antiquated practices, the consequences would be devastating. Strict adherence to traditional rabbinical interpretation might stunt the development, and perhaps even the survival, of the Jewish people, and would certainly prevent their full integration into modern society. Judaism would continue to die a lonely death of ghettoization.

But then along comes Joseph Lieberman, an observant and Orthodox Jew who has officially reached the highest political plateau of any Jew in American history, and suddenly the idea that Jews must make compromises in their rituals in order to be fully integrated into mainstream culture seems to have been incontrovertibly refuted. This is especially true considering that Lieberman was chosen by Al Gore not in spite of his religious dedication but because of it. The night of the nomination, Senator Gore's aides made a point of telling the media that Al and Tipper had shared a kosher meal with Joe and Hadassah. Lieberman's moralizing on the Senate floor about the Lewinsky affair, together with his strong condemnation of Hollywood excess and his colleagues' description of him as "the rabbi" and "conscience" of the Senate, are a large part of why he was picked for the ticket.

But lest we immediately embrace the flip side of this argument and assume that Orthodox Judaism therefore stands only to benefit from Senator Lieberman's much-enhanced profile, it should be noted that the challenges for Orthodoxy are even greater. Senator Lieberman has long grappled with the tugs of religion and office, making respectful compromises when he felt he must. Case in point: He voted 75 times in the Senate on Saturday (a technical violation of the Sabbath), but walked five miles to do so (an unmitigated and highly commendable sanctification of G-d's law). Lieberman functions politically on Saturday only when he must do so to protect the interests and well-being of his many constituents--a desire very much in alignment with the life-affirming heart of the Sabbath. But while Orthodox rabbis would support his decision to violate the Sabbath when life stands in direct threat, many will disagree that he has a right to do so when questions of lesser consequence are at stake. For instance, would Lieberman be allowed to fly to a NATO meeting on the Sabbath when there is no direct threat of war, because he is indirectly protecting life by safeguarding American military preparedness? And what if he wins the election and must make a speech--microphone and all--on January 20, 2001, which just happens to fall on a Saturday?

Committed religious observance and the exigencies of politics and government make strange--and to some Orthodox minds, untenable--bedfellows, and the decisions that Senator Lieberman has made, and the measures he will continue to take to achieve his sometimes delicate balancing act, can be expected to stir up controversy among Orthodox representatives. Now that Lieberman has been unofficially crowned the most famous representative of Orthodox Judaism in the world, will the Orthodox rabbinate feel the need to publicly criticize or contradict some of the compromises he may feel himself forced to make? Will Orthodoxy develop a discomfort equal to our current state of elation at Lieberman's nomination, in fear that it may lead more and more Orthodox Jews to emulate Lieberman's standard of observance, participating in civic and government functions on the Sabbath that they might otherwise have avoided but that don't constitute a strict, technical violation of the Sabbath? For example, will we witness an entourage of Orthodox Jews walking to the inauguration-eve balls on Friday night, with the justification that if Vice President-elect Lieberman is present, then they can be there as well?

But, despite the possibility that Lieberman's nomination will bring as much confusion as clarity and as much unease as unity to the Jewish population (and we haven't even addressed all those Jews who fear that the nomination will bring anti-Semites out of the woodwork), I feel that it is essential that the Jewish community view it as an unqualified blessing.

For it affords the Jewish people the final realization of their ancient, biblical mandate to serve as a light unto the nations. The radiance and beauty of Judaism has been historically blighted, first by forced ghettoization and persecution, and later by assimilation on the one hand and self-imposed insularity on the other. The Lieberman nomination finally brings a spotlight onto the Jewish faith itself.

I have had the good fortune of discussing religion on American television and radio, but nearly always as a Jewish response to Christianity. The past week has therefore been like living inside a dream. On every channel, the Jewish Sabbath was discussed and debated, along with kosher food and the Jewish festivals. The Jewish religion was finally invited to the table as an equal and influential participant in the values and thought of the American nation. Our emphasis on family and community were brought into sharp focus, as were our beliefs in loyalty and service to this great, G-d-fearing country.

And that is good for the Jews. And it is good for America.

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