OY
TO THE WORLD!
Chabad
menorah is lit during a ceremony in front of the White House.
CHANUKAH
FEATURE
Public menorah displays testament to the growing acceptance of Chabad
JTA Tuesday, 13 December 2005
By Chanan Tigay
NEW YORK—When it comes to displaying menorahs
in public places, what a difference a decade makes.
This Chanukah, Chabad-Lubavitch plans to light more than 11,000 large
public menorahs—a Jewish religious symbol—from Bangkok
to Miami Beach.
Those lighting the Chanukah candles won’t come strictly from
the ranks of America’s Chabad chasidim; leaders of Jewish organizations
across the spectrum, eager to take part in the public celebration
of the Festival of Lights, will also be lighting Chabad’s candles.
The growing acceptance of the Chabad menorahs is just one example
of a broader trend: As Chabad spreads throughout the United States
and the world, America’s mainstream Jewish community is increasingly
willing to embrace the movement, whereas in the past many Jewish organizations
preferred to keep it at arms length.
“I think there’s less fear and more openness on the parts
of both Chabad and the broader community to support all who can reach
and touch Jews,” says John Ruskay, executive vice president
and CEO of the UJA-Federation of New York. “That translates
at the moment less programmatically and more in terms of communication
and tone. It will be very interesting to see how this proceeds in
the future.”
Chabad, though, says the recent past offers some indication of how
far things have come—and where they may be headed.
“Chabad has not changed that much in a generation,” says
Rabbi Levi Shemtov, director of the Washington office of the American
Friends of Lubavitch. “The organized Jewish community has gone
from being indifferent or harsh to being much more welcoming.”
Rabbi Berel Shemtov, who has been director of Chabad-Lubavitch in
Michigan for some five decades, has had front row seats to the long
progression.
“Fifty years ago, to build a Conservative or Reform temple,
you were able to get millions of dollars. For Chabad this would not
be possible,” he says. “Today, Chabad is getting bigger
support than the others. People realize how important Chabad is.”
Public menorah display now accepted
Chabad insiders and observers cite several developments that highlight
the change:
• Jewish federations around the country are funding Chabad projects,
inviting Chabad rabbis to sit on their boards and committees and including
Chabad synagogues in their listings of local places to pray.
• With each passing year, more U.S. Chabad houses become dues-based
congregations—like most mainstream Jewish congregations—running
on membership payments rather than simply on donations.
• Most Jewish groups no longer sue to prevent Chabad from erecting
public menorahs.
• Chabad continues to secure support from Jews outside the movement,
even non-Orthodox Jews like Harvard law school professor Alan Dershowitz.
Dershowitz said he was dubious when he heard several years ago that
Chabad intended to open a center at Harvard.
“My idea was: Siberia—that’s nothing; Central Africa—that’s
a breeze. Chabad at Harvard? Impossible,” Dershowitz said last
month at Chabad’s annual convention of emissaries in New York.
“How could that ever happen? Kids come to Harvard to rebel against
their parents, to rebel against religion, to look for other ways,
to look for more liberal attitudes. Could Chabad possibly ever succeed
at Harvard?”
But succeed it has, Dershowitz says, quickly becoming a thriving center
for Jewish students to meet, eat, discuss—but not necessarily
to pray.
This past Rosh Hashanah, Phil Kaplan and his surfing buddies attended
services at a Chabad shul in Orange County, Calif.
Kaplan, at 39 years old a major giver to the Jewish Federation of
Orange County and the vice president of its annual campaign, is not
a particularly observant Jew—but he prays with Chabad and gives
them money.
“It seems like a lot more of the people we know are attending
services with Chabad. I’m talking about mainstream people; I
barely know any Orthodox people,” Kaplan says. “In my
opinion, it’s because Chabad is very open and accessible. Despite
the fact theat the practice here is Orthodox, they make Judaism very
accessible. With Chabad you can find your level and there’s
encouragement.”
Many of Chabad’s new programs are being underwritten by George
Rohr, a modern Orthodox businessman and philanthropist from New York.
The movement says its annual budget comes in at more than $1 billion,
much of it raised by emissaries in the field for their own programming.
Those familiar with Chabad cite several reasons for its growing acceptance
in America. First, Chabad has made extraordinary efforts to reach
out to Jews of every stripe, some of whom have grown to embrace the
movement.
Dancing Rabbis and Mitzvah
Mobiles
“In the market of outreach, Chabad looms large,” says
Samuel Heilman, a sociology professor at Queens College.
Dancing rabbis on Chabad fund-raising telethons have given the movement
a public face, as have the movement’s mitzvah mobiles and the
army of young Chabadniks who spend days out on city sidewalks asking
passers-by if they’d like to put on tefillin or sit in a mobile
sukkah and shake a lulav.
In addition, when Chabad emissaries land in a new place, they quickly
make contact with local Jewish newspapers to introduce themselves
and pitch stories.
Over the years, Passover and Chanukah stories about Chabad have become
the norm in many such papers, introducing Jews around the country
to the movement. Chabad has made efforts to gain a foothold in areas
where more mainstream Jewish organizations have typically reigned,
areas like college campuses. Chabad now has about 100 emissaries at
U.S. colleges and universities.
The major player in Jewish campus life has long been Hillel: The Foundation
for Jewish Campus Life. When Chabad came on the campus scene, the
two groups were often seen as rivals vying for the allegiance of the
same students. But today, Chabad “is definitely being embraced
by Hillel,” says Avraham Infeld, Hillel’ president.
“Hillel has a commitment to ensure that more and more students
have meaningful Jewish experiences,” Infeld says. “Chabad
is one of those agents on campus that provide meaningful Jewish experiences.
To us
they are a partner not a competitor. We don’t agree ideologically
on everything, but we have high respect for them and their work.”
Still others say that Chabad’s growth has coincided with a general
resurgence in the Orthodox community.
“I think that Chabad and much of Orthodoxy have come of age,”
Heilman says. “Orthodoxy in general is much more a part of the
discussion. Within that, there’s been a recognition that Orthodoxy
is not just one thing.”
Tribal Squabbles
Part of the reason Jewish groups were wary of Chabad was the impression
that the movement was not out simply to offer Jews positive Jewish
experiences, but wanted to make unobservant Jews Chabad adherents.
Chabad rejects this notion, although its officials do acknowledge
that they wouldn’t mind if those who come in contact with them
take on more Jewish rituals.
Also dogging Chabad throughout the years has been strident opposition
to the movement’s messianist wing, whose adherents believe that
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the movement’s late charismatic
leader who died 11 years ago, is the messiah.
The prevalence of such messianists is the subject of debate: Some
Chabad opponents say that the majority of Chabad Chasidim are messianists
in this vein. Top Chabad officials insist it’s a dwindling minority.
David Berger, a history professor at Brooklyn College, says Chabad’s
spread is an “acute danger to authentic Judaism.”
The author of The Rebbe, The Messiah and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference,
Berger says the messianism means that “some of the core beliefs
of the Jewish religion have been abolished” and that the “theological
distinctions between Judaism and Christianity have been erased. I
consider this to be a historic catastrophe.”
But Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, a leading figure in the worldwide Chabad
movement, dismisses such arguments, insisting that the level of messianism
in Chabad is “very overstated.”
“It’s just used by some people to confuse others,”
he says. Meanwhile, as Chabad begins to prepare its enormous menorahs
for display, Krinsky boasts of Chabad’s successes.
“I think Chanukah has become one of the most widely celebrated
holidays by Jews in the world today—probably singularly because
of the Chabad effort,” he says.