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The Modern Jewish World and Me – An Interactive Approach
to Examining Jewish Identity Today
Introducing the Rationale
We can make a case that, conceptually, there can be no such thing
as a Jew living a Jewish life in isolation: the Jew has always
lived within a community. Traditionally, Judaism has been seen
largely as a system for relating to God. In Judaism, this is done
primarily within the framework of the Jewish community. In order
to live a fully Jewish life, we need others around us for prayer,
study, keeping kashrut, and all the other aspects of life that
have traditionally defined Jewish existence. In essence, a Jew
needs this framework because it is only in this context that he/she
can live the life that he/she believes God demands. The Jewish
concept of life is based on certain individual values that only
become meaningful when expressed within a communal framework in
a fully three-dimensional way of life.
There are those who say that in the modern world, people in general
– and Jews specifically – are losing the capacity
for community. They say that the younger generation, in particular,
is losing its capacity to relate outwards towards the wider community.
It is said that the age of ideologies, of affirming social responsibilities,
has passed and that the young are turning inwards towards a new
narcissism. If these claims are really true, it is a very serious
matter.
We all need to connect to others: we always have and always will.
The human is a communal being always in need of others. Judaism
has always recognized this. From the very beginning, in our traditional
story of the Creation, we hear the words
(Beraishit 2:18) – it is not good for man to be alone. Togetherness
and community have always been part of the human story and, indeed,
of the entire Jewish story. The latter is based on a series of
evolutionary and revolutionary relationships, among the Jews,
and between them and their understanding of God. The Jews have
moved and evolved from a family community to a tribal one, and
from a tribal community to a national one. We suggest that a crucial
aspect of being Jewish has always concerned relationships.
Judaism and the evolving Jewish culture has always had at its center
the idea of real, three-dimensional people with real emotions
and needs. Other peoples developed concepts of gods that were
only remotely concerned with humanity. In those value systems,
the people’s role was usually to fill the gods’ needs
and answer their demands. The Jewish concept of God is different.
This can be seen clearly in the books of the prophets, who speak
for a God concerned with people.
However, Judaism has never countenanced narcissism, the individual’s
sole absorption with him- or herself. Judaism has always been
about people in relation to something else, something larger than
themselves. Some would suggest that the Jew is most truly a Jew
when he/she is relating to things larger than her- or himself.
Ultimately, a Jew may be truly called a Jew when he/she is part
of circles of belonging - to family, community, the nation and
the world of humanity. It is when the Jew consciously realizes
his/her place in the midst of these concentric circles of responsibility
uniting the individual with the world, that the inner nature of
the Jewish story can be fulfilled properly. A feeling of connection
with people is not a true relationship without an accompanying
feeling of responsibility for them. Relating to the world and
the cosmos in a responsible manner is a vital aspect of Judaism.
Introducing the Program
This premise underlies the present program. Step by step, we will
examine slowly the way in which we - as Jews specifically and
as human beings generally - relate to the larger circles of belonging
to and responsibility toward the community. Our starting point
will always be the individual, and our inquiry will always be
focused on an examination of the relationships that the individual
Jew constructs with the outside world. To this end, the program
will have two brief sections which will serve as “bookends”
to the entire project. The opening bookend, Introducing Relationships,
will examine the question of the individual alone and the need
for human relationships. The closing bookend, Relating to a
Wider World, will examine the relationship of the individual
Jew to the immediate world around, the wider outside world and
those who people it. Between these two bookends there will be
a series of four consecutive sections in which we will examine
questions relating to the larger Jewish context.
The first of the four sections, The Jewish Community and Me,
will examine the issues of relating to the world of the participant
within his/her own Jewish community. This will include an examination
of relationships with other Jews, with family and family stories,
and with community and community stories. We will attempt to introduce
the student to the world of the surrounding community and to examine
the connections felt with that world. There is a famous Rabbinic
idea, encapsulated in the words, –
all Jews are responsible for each other. We will examine this
phrase and its relevance to the lives of the participants.
The second of the four sections, From community to Nation -
Another Jewish Community and Me, will examine questions of
relating to other Jewish communities around the world. We will
examine issues of connection, belonging and responsibility in
relation to the other national Jewish community after we have
learned something of that community’s story and compared
it with the community story of the student. We will seek signs
of similarity and examine reasons for any differences. Above all,
however, we will examine the student’s reactions when faced
with another Jewish community. Is this really something foreign
to him/her, or does it in some way belong to him/her?
The third of the four sections, From Nation to World - The Jewish
World and Me, will examine questions of belonging to a truly
international Jewish community. Why should Jews be responsible
for each other throughout the Jewish world? What does it mean
to be part of a Jewish world? What is the nature of this Jewish
world? What issues does it raise? Once again, we will deal with
issues of connection, belonging and responsibility. In what way
is the individual student part of a wider world? To what extent
is this a necessary part of Jewish consciousness? What are the
implications of this wider connection? What is the nature of the
responsibility that Jews are meant to have for each other? Are
there limits to this responsibility?
The last of the four sections, From Jewish World to Jewish State
- Israel and Me, deals with the relationship between the individual
Jew and the Jews in the State of Israel. This section will open
with an attempt to assess the place of Israel in the Jewish world,
within both its historical and contemporary contexts. In addition,
it will examine the part that Israel plays in the life of the
student and the student’s community. In addition, we will
attempt to present to the student some of the complex issues with
which the State of Israel is contending. We will examine the student’s
reactions, inviting him/her to take a stand on many of the troubling
issues that are part and parcel of the reality of the Jewish State.
Introducing the Educational Approach
The program is thus about two things: learning and feeling. It
concerns examining new realities and analyzing your attitudes
and responses to the new knowledge gained. The students will be
asked constantly to evaluate the new information that they are
learning and take a stand on the issues that this raises. From
a pedagogical point of view, this involves both a clarification
of values and new knowledge. The idea behind the program is that
the student must not only learn about the surrounding Jewish world
but also be invited - indeed pushed - to take a stand. It is our
hope that the student - and indeed the teacher - will come out
of the program having examined a number of basic issues that are
essential in the development of a value-driven Jewish world-view.
In this program, then, the student, the individual, will always
be at the center as he/she examines and learns about the different
circles of community that surround him/her and ultimately takes
a stand. This program is about the circles of the modern Jewish
world and, indeed, the world as a whole. In a world in which individual
youth seem increasingly to be shrugging off wider social responsibilities
and retreating into the world of the self, we hope that this program
will be able to challenge the student to open up to the surrounding
world.
Introducing the Educational Bias
One thing should be clear: the author and those responsible for
the program come to their task with ‘unclean’ hands.
We are not truly objective and make no claims to be so. We believe
in wider Jewish responsibilities and wider social responsibilities.
We believe that a world in which we care about each other is a
better place than one in which we do not. We believe that a world
of communal connections is infinitely preferable to a world without
them. We believe, with the second chapter of Beraishit, that people
need relationships, and that isolation and alienation from the
community are potentially harmful for the individual. However,
although we will present the student with a series of challenges
that we hope will result in an affirmation of Jewish identity
based on a connection with the wider circles of Jewish responsibility,
there is a need to respect the student’s right to take an
opposing stand. Such a stand will have to be defended against
ideas and concepts that seek to challenge it; ultimately, however,
if a program such as this is to have real value for the student,
our belief is that each one must develop his/her own opinion.
Introducing Ways of Using the Program
We have deliberately included a large amount of material. We do
not expect everyone to complete the entire program; however, with
its four circles, preceded by introductory activities and followed
by concluding activities, we believe that this is the right way
to proceed. We strongly suggest that some materials and activities
should be used from each section. Individual schools may prefer
to emphasize a particular section; in this case, they are likely
to take more activities from that part. Some of the activities
are linked to preceding ones. If you decide to take later activities
but not the earlier ones, you should make sure to fill in the
gaps. We have tried to use a full range of creative techniques
for the various activities. Many of the exercises are complex,
involving several stages. These can all be reduced, however. You
may want to use only part of an activity; alternatively, you may
find an idea that you wish to change or adapt in order to suit
your classroom. All of these methods are legitimate, of course.
You, and you alone, will decide finally how to use this material.
The only thing we ask is that you read the booklet thoroughly
before deciding how to tailor the material to your own needs.
This is enough of an introduction: it is time to start connecting
to the community.
Activities
(Access to activities is possible only from inside the
related background section)
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