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Undergraduate Honors heses
Honors Program
Spring 2014
Post-Holocaust American Judaism and the Jewish
Renewal Movement
Scot Meyers
University of Colorado Boulder
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PostHolocaust American Judaism and the Jewish Renewal Movement
Scott Kommel Meyers
Submitted to the Program in Jewish Studies
of the University of Colorado at Boulder
in partial fulfillment
of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts
David Shneer, Honors Thesis Advisor
April 8, 2014
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List of Abbreviations
Works by Arthur Green
HS
Hasidic Spirituality for a New Era: The Religious Writings of Hillel Zeitlin
RJ
Radical Judaism: Rethinking God and Tradition
Works by Zalman SchachterShalomi
DV
Davening: A Guide to Meaningful Jewish Prayer
FS
The First Step: A Guide for the New Jewish Spirit
HF
Wrapped in a Holy Flame: Teachings and Tales of the Hasidic Masters
HR
ףHigher Regions.” Reb Zalman Teaches
JWF Jewish with Feeling: A Guide to Meaningful Jewish Practice.
ML My Life in Jewish Renewal: A Memoir
PS
Paradigm Shift.
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PostHolocaust American Judaism and the Jewish Renewal Movement
The Jewish Renewal movement is perhaps best characterized by its apparent contradictions: its
eclectic blend of Hasidic mysticism and radical egalitarianism, its messianic utopianism alongside its
passionate belief in the separation of religion and state. The theology of the Jewish Renewal movement
engages in what can be termed a ףdialectic of Haskala,” a play on the Frankfurt School’s diagnosis of
the crisis of modernity in their influential The Dialectic of the Enlightenment. Traditional Judaism and
the Enlightenment dialectically transform and negate each other. Similarly, Rabbi Zalman
SchachterShalomi, the founder of Jewish Renewal, calls for ףspiritual democracy,” in which radical
Enlightenment ideas offer a corrective to parochial Hasidism, asserting the spiritual and political equality
of all people, regardless of religion, gender identity, or sexual orientation (FS 15). SchachterShalomi's
own autobiography captures this tension perfectly: ףMy father was a hasid who developed a great
interest in Western ways and ideas. He remained a devout Jew (he taught me to pray), but he also
steered my education toward a pluralistic path I went to yeshiva and at the same time attended a leftist
Zionist high school where I learned Latin and modern Hebrew. I danced the hora with Marxist Zionists
also celebrated the farewell to the Sabbath with Orthodox antiZionists” (FS 1).
First, I will begin with a brief history of Jewish Renewal. Jewish Renewal is a small yet influential
movement in contemporary American Judaism. Observers agree that the Jewish Renewal movement has
exerted ףan influence on American Judaism vastly out of proportion to its actual numbers” (Kaplan
267). As the founding generation of Jewish Renewal leaders are entering their twilight years, there is an
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increasing willingness to acknowledge their contributions to mainstream denominations. At the 80th
birthday celebration of Rabbi Arthur Waskow, an activistscholar associated with the Jewish Renewal
movement, Reform rabbi David Saperstein (named America’s most influential rabbi by Newsweek in
2009) said of Waskow, ףhe has had a profound impact on the Reform, Conservative and
Reconstructionist movements and it is time עand then some עthat he be acknowledged” (ףVideo”).
The hesitancy to recognize the contributions of the Jewish Renewal movement to American Judaism
may be partially political; Jewish Renewal is associated with 1960s counterculture and protest politics
(e.g. its support of drug use to attain spiritual experience, its ףquestionable” Israel politics, radical
environmentalism, racial justice advocacy, antiwar activism) which are not always well received in the
American mainstream, Jewish or otherwise.
Jewish Renewal emerged from the havurah movement of the late 1960’s (Kaplan 267). A
havurah (translation: ףfellowship”) is a gender egalitarian, nondenominational collective of Jewish
practitioners that emphasize a mystical interpretation of Judaism and place importance on heartfelt
prayer (Kaplan 266). SchachterShalomi and Rabbi Arthur Green, another important leader in Jewish
Renewal, were among the founding members of the first havurah in 1967, Havurat Shalom in
Cambridge, Massachusetts (HS xix). Havurot were created by young Jewish clergy and social activists
to fill a perceived vacuum of spirituality in the mainstream denominations of American Judaism. The
Reform and Conservative movements, the dominant forms of American Judaism, consciously broke
with religious mysticism as an outmoded superstition in their embrace of rational, Enlightenment values.
A diminishing of spirituality was the unintended consequence of eliminating mysticism from the
JewishAmerican curriculum; ףit is almost universally agreed that young American Jews found their
religious education to be incredibly uninspiring” (Kaplan 263). Although Jewish Renewal and the
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havurah movement share many of the same participants and ףmuch of their basic thinking is
complementary if not identical,” the two movements began to diverge in the early 1980s (Kaplan 269).
Their differences mostly revolved around the issue of leadership, when Jewish Renewal opted for
charismatic leaders (e.g. SchachterShalomi, Shlomo Carlebach, Waskow, etc.) while the havurah
movement preferred to remain closer to the egalitarian spirit of decentralized power and consensus
driven decisionmaking (Kaplan 269).
The innovation of the havurah movement, which was inherited by Jewish Renewal, was that
Judaism did not have to abandon mysticism to embrace the rational, democratic values of the
Enlightenment. In many ways, this insight resembles the earlier neoHasidism of Y.L. Peretz, S. Ansky,
and Martin Buber, who sought ףto describe Hasidism as a humanistic, philosophical movement, seeking
social justice and benefiting the simple and ignorant as they told folktales and rejoiced in their worship of
God” (YIVO). This interpretation of Hasidism appealed to spiritually hungry JewishAmericans, many
of whom did not possess a high degree of Hebrew literacy or Jewish learning. The life work of
SchachterShalomi and his colleagues has been to reinject mystical experience into Judaism, which
Dana Evan Kaplan has called an effort to ףrespiritualize Judaism” (Kaplan 264). In SchachterShalomi’s
words ףJudaism today is oververbalized and underexperienced” (Kaplan 259).
SchachterShalomi, himself a refugee from Nazioccupied Europe who left on one of the last
boats from Marseilles, France, understood that many important teachers of Jewish spirituality had been
killed during the war, and that he was figuratively among ףthe last of the Mohicans of preHolocaust
Jewish mysticism” (JWF xvi). Owing to a constellation of influences, including the writings of wartime
neoHasidic thinker Hillel Zeitlin, SchachterShalomi and his colleagues sought to create a new
ףYavneh,” an institution that could rebuild Jewish learning and spirituality after the Holocaust, much like
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Rabbi Yohanan ben Zakkai had done at the time of the destruction of the Second Temple (HS xix).
Hillel Zeitlin, a Chabad Hasid who came under the influence of the Haskalah (ףJewish Enlightenment”)
while living in Warsaw during the early 20th century, sought to build a neoHasidic community called
ףYavneh” that could fuse lofty Jewish mysticism with universal social justice concerns. Zeitlin, who died
wearing tefillin and clutching the Zohar on a forced march to Treblinka in 1942, never lived to see his
dream of Yavneh come to fruition (HS 32).
SchachterShalomi and Green see their efforts as a continuation of Zeitlin’s project.
SchachterShalomi writes, ףArthur Green gathered another kind of Yavneh in Cambridge and founded
the matrix, the first of many havurot, Havurat Shalom. It too was another fractal, a gestalting of Zeitlin’s
Yavneh. I was fortunate to be able to participate in that amazing first year...the emergence of Jewish
Renewal since that time is deeply connected to what happened there, as it is to Zeitlin’s dreams of
Yavneh” (HS xix).
Beyond participating in havurot, SchachterShalomi went on to found his own organization in
Philadelphia, the B’nai Or Religious Fellowship (b’nai or: ףchildren of light” or ףsons of light”) (ML
181). Eager to leave the conservative atmosphere of Winnipeg, where he had been teaching at the
University of Manitoba, SchachterShalomi became interested in moving to Philadelphia after Green
started teaching Judaic Studies at the University of Pennsylvania in the mid1970s (ML 181). In 1975,
SchachterShalomi enthusiastically accepted a professorship at Temple University and moved to
Philadelphia (ML 182). Philadelphia’s Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, where eventually
SchachterShalomi was also on faculty and Green served as president, became a ףvanguard of the
neohasidic movement that is usually labeled under the moniker of Jewish Renewal” (Magid 57). With
its progressive Jewish community, Philadelphia proved to be fertile soil for SchachterShalomi to ףtrain
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rabbis and other leaders who would bring Jewish Renewal into the world” (ML 183).
B’nai Or created an urban retreat center in a house on Emblem Street in Philadelphia, where
devoted practitioners lived and others visited to study and pray (Kaplan 275). In 1985, members of
B’nai Or voted to change the organization’s name to P’nai Or (ףFaces of Light”), as the word b’nai
(trans: ףsons of”) felt exclusionary to the women participants (Kaplan 278). Politically active with
humanistic sensibilities, many remarked that P’nai Or resembled Reconstructionism in its orientation, in
that it presented ףJudaism as a humanmade folk culture” (Kaplan 278). It is probably no coincidence
that several major leaders of the Jewish Renewal movement (e.g. Green, SchachterShalomi, Waskow)
have held teaching or administrative positions at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College. In his essay
ףNeoHasidism and Reconstructionism,” SchachterShalomi acknowledges his intellectual debt to the
Reconstructionist movement (PS 131).
In 1995, P’nai Or merged with the Shalom Center, another organization of Jewish spiritual
progressives founded by Arthur Waskow, to form ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal (Kaplan 270).
ALEPH is a core institution for what is today known as the Jewish Renewal movement, and it runs a
campusless seminary that trains rabbis, pastors, and cantors. Students in the ALEPH program
participate in annual retreats, teleconference learning, and relationships with a personal mentor, often
while pursuing an advanced degree in Jewish Studies at an accredited university (Aleph.org). The
curriculum at ALEPH is deeply informed by liberal values and a Hasidic interpretation of kabbalah.
Through meditation and prayer techniques practitioners in Jewish Renewal are initiated into
spiritual experience. Following Jonathan Garb, a leading scholar of modern Jewish mysticism, the Jewish
Renewal movement focuses on ףmystical techniques and ecstasy, sometimes even as an alternative to
halakhic Judaism” (Garb 80). While respect for halakhic liturgy is maintained (at least outwardly), there
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is an expressed recognition that ףtrue prayer is the bursting forth of the soul to God” and that one should
pray to God in the language that one feels the most comfortable in (DV xi). In other words, true prayer
exceeds the boundaries of formulaic liturgy. Such ideas have their antecedents into the antinomian
streams of Hasidism, perhaps most obviously in Rabbi Nachman of Breslov (A. Kaplan 309).
Jewish Renewal is spiritually eclectic, as demonstrated by its ףreadiness to absorb nonJewish
traditions as a source of mystical inspiration” (Garb 80). SchachterShalomi’s close ties with Buddhist,
Sufi, and Native American reflect this, and at any given Jewish Renewal service one may encounter a
number of practices that have a nonJewish origin (Fishman 182). ףWhile there are differences between
Jewish and nonJewish approaches to mysticism in specific methods, observances, and rituals,”
SchachterShalomi writes, ףthere are no differences in the impact of the experiences themselves. When
it comes to what I call the ‘heartstuff,’ all approaches overlap” (FS 10). Later on, I will examine the
unique tension between Jewish and nonJewish influences within SchachterShalomi’s movement.
Next, I will give a brief literature review of academic research relating to the Jewish Renewal
movement. As Jewish Renewal is a relatively recent religious movement, there is a limited body of
academic literature that addresses it. Important examples of scholarly work concerning Jewish Renewal
include Shaul Magid’s American Post Judaism: Identity and Renewal in a Post Ethnic Society
(Bloomington: Indiana UP, 2013), Jonathan Garb’s The Chosen Will Become Herds: Studies in
TwentiethCentury Kabbalah (New Haven: Yale UP, 2009), and Dana Evan Kaplan’s
Contemporary American Judaism: Transformation and Renewal (New York: Columbia UP,
2009).
In American PostJudaism, Magid undertakes the first ever booklength scholarly analysis of
the Jewish Renewal movement. As a participantobserver within the Jewish Renewal movement for the
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last several decades, Magid is able to write with a rare level of detail about the movement and its
leaders. Nonetheless, he vigilantly maintains a critical lens and connects his writing about Jewish
Renewal to broader issues within the field of Jewish/Religious Studies. Magid’s basic assertion is that
the Jewish Renewal movement was pathbreaking in its anticipation of the sweeping changes that
American Judaism is currently undergoing, i.e. new notions of Jewish peoplehood and a shifting
relationship to the Holocaust and the state of Israel. He sees Jewish Renewal as a response to
ףpostethnic America” (a term borrowed from the historian David Hollinger) in which ףthe ethnic bond is
broken or dissolves into a multiethnic/multiracial mix” (Magid 1). Despite Magid’s insistence on the
idea of a postethnic America, I seek to explain Jewish Renewal as a response to the crisis of modernity
after the Holocaust.
In The Chosen Will Become Herds, Jonathan Garb gives a thorough analysis of the
development of recent Jewish mysticism and its political implications for the state of Israel and the global
Jewish community. Garb offers a persuasive explanation for the resurgence of religion despite the best
efforts of Western secular society: ףThe erosion of the rationalist narrative facilitated the emergence of a
variety of religious phenomena that did not obey the dictates of rationality” (Garb 101). I endorse
Garb’s assertion that a crisis in the rationalist, Enlightenment metanarrative is driving the renewed vigor
of religion in the last several decades. I also agree with his observation that information technology and
transnational population flow help to create a ףglobal village” that is slowly dissolving ףbarriers between
regions and religions” (Garb 6). While Garb is an Israeli scholar who focuses mostly on his home
country, he makes several important references to Jewish Renewal leaders within the United States. He
calls SchachterShalomi ףan outstanding figure of the neoHasidic movement” and discusses his
relationship to Buddhism and the New Age (Garb 79). Shlomo Carlebach receives an extended
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treatment as his influence was felt in Israel perhaps even more than it was in the United States. Garb
places Jewish Renewal and NeoHasidism within the context of other major religious trends, such as
New Age spirituality and religious Zionism, arguing they are various responses to the weakening of the
Enlightenment narrative in the wake of the World Wars.
In Contemporary American Judaism, Dana Evan Kaplan offers a balanced and
comprehensive history of American Judaism since 1945. Jewish Renewal leaders such as
SchachterShalomi, Waskow, and Carlebach are featured prominently in Kaplan’s book, particularly in
the chapters ףThe Reengagement with Spirituality,” ףRadical Responses to the Suburban Experience,”
and ףThe Popularization of Jewish Mystical Outreach.” Not only does Kaplan describe Judaism in
postwar America, but he depicts a Judaism that is uniquely American. Among other things, Kaplan
argues that the turbulence of the 1960s and dissatisfaction with suburban materialistic values led many
JewishAmericans to seek refuge in emerging subcultures, notably within Jewish Renewal and the baal
teshuva movement (newly Orthodox Jews). Kaplan writes ףJewish Renewal and the baal teshuva
movement thus differed enormously in the type of individual who was attracted to them[כbut] what
they shared in common was that both saw the suburban Judaism of their youth as superficial and lacking
in spirituality” (Kaplan 266). He claims that Jewish Renewal is an effort to ףrespiritualize” American
Judaism, an assessment that I argue in favor of in the following pages (Kaplan 264).
The Theology of Jewish Renewal
Scholars have described the Jewish Renewal movement, and the kabbalistic theology it emerges
from, as ףpanentheistic” (Magid 99). According to the Oxford Dictionary of World Religions,
panentheism is a theological view that says ףthe world exists in God (all reality is part of the being of
God); but God is not exhausted by world; the divine is both transcendent and immanent” (Bowker
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730). As kabbalists, the rabbis of Jewish Renewal reckon God's transcendence as ein sof (
ףinfinity”) and God's immanence as shekhinah (
ein sof is often interpreted as ein (
,
, ףDivine Presence”). Even more radically, God as
, ףnothingness”). Thus, Rabbi Zalman SchachterShalomi is able to
say with pious sincerity that ףif there is a God, He doesn't exist” (Rubenstein 230). In his book ףRadical
Judaism”, the Jewish Renewal theologian and philosopher Arthur Green recalls questioning his mentor
Abraham Joshua Heschel about radical theology, a movement that speaks of "the death of God."
Heschel said, "Radical theology is very important...but it has to begin with the teachings of the later
Hasidic masters" (RJ 14). Undoubtedly, the Jewish Renewal movement is neoHasidic, having extracted
orthodox Hasidism into a modern American context. But being born out of the 1960's American
counterculture, the Jewish Renewal movement is also influenced by imported Eastern religions, in
particular American Buddhism (Magid 70). The following section will trace the theological inheritance of
the Jewish Renewal movement, both as it is received through neoHasidism and also the more recent
influence of American Buddhism.
Hasidism descends from a lineage of Jewish mysticism referred to as the kabbalah. The
kabbalistic tradition began in thirteenth century Spain and Southern France, and its most important text
is the Zohar (Scholem 156). Written in medieval Aramaic, the Zohar takes place in 2nd century
Palestine, where Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai wanders around the Galilee and partakes in mystical
conversations with his companions. Ostensibly their mystical conversations revolve around the Torah,
but indeed the Torah is only a jumping off point for their creative imaginations (Matt 7).
Unselfconsciously, the rabbis in the Zohar (and later kabbalists), radically reinterpret the Torah to
substantiate their own mystical claims. For instance, the first words of Genesis are not read as "In the
beginning, God created..." (
). Instead, the Zohar gives its own interpretation: "With
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beginning, the unknown concealed one created the palace, a palace called God. The secret is: 'With
beginning, ____ created God'" (Matt 53). Through a creative rereading of Genesis, God (
,
Elohim) becomes the object and not the subject of creation. The implied subject of creation is the
ineffable ein sof ("infinity") which had to conceal itself to make room for finitude. In the Zohar's
kabbalistic theology, creation is revelation.
The circulation of kabbalistic texts was mainly restricted to religious elites in the western
Mediterranean until 1492, when Spain expelled its Jewish population (Scholem 244). Bringing the
kabbalah with them, many of those exiled Jews relocated to the eastern Mediterranean where they
joined preexisting Jewish communities (Matt 12). Notably, the Spanish expulsion was indirectly
responsible for the next flowering of Jewish mysticism in 16th century Ottomancontrolled Palestine
(Matt 13). At that time, a group of Spanish Jewish exiles formed a mystical fraternity in Safed, near the
Galilee, the original setting of the Zohar. It was in Safed that several rabbis began to offer a novel
interpretation of kabbalah. Two outstanding figures among them are Rabbi Moses Cordovero and
Rabbi Isaac Luria. Cordovero's masterful Pardes Rimonim (ףThe Pomegranate Orchard”) synthesized
kabbalah from the previous three centuries. His liturgical poem Lekha Dodi (ףCome my beloved”) is
still sung in synagogues throughout the world every Friday night (Matt 13). However, it was
Cordovero's student, Isaac Luria, who exerted the most profound influence on later Jewish mysticism
(Matt 14). Expanding on the Zoharic theme of creation from nothingness, Luria claimed that when
primordial infinity (
, ףein sof”) contracted within itself to form a void (
, ףein”), a cosmic
catastrophe transpired. The light of infinity filled vessels that God made within the void, but the light was
too intense and the vessels shattered violently, creating the broken world we now inhabit. Luria
articulated a complex system of ten sefirot (ףemanations”) composed of divine light mixed with broken
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vessels. Scholars such as Gershom Scholem have persuasively argued that Lurianic myth likely reflects a
tragic sense of brokenness that Spanish Jewish exiles felt after being forced to leave Spain, which they in
turn projected onto the cosmos (Scholem 244).
Luria’s sefirot have different qualities, such as Chesed ( ח, ףLove”), Gevurah (
ףStrength”), and Shekhina (
, ףDivine Feminine”). The broken sefirot in the mystical body of God
are rectified through a Jew’s performance of mitzvot (
kavvanah (
,
צ, ףcommandments”) with the correct
, ףintention”). The sparks of light trapped within the emanations of God can be returned
to their divine source, effecting a healing within the cosmos. Luria’s theological schema is particularly
relevant for my thesis in light of SchachterShalomi’s belief, reflective of a larger trend within
PostHolocaust American Judaism, that the Earth is a shattered emanation of God in need of healing
through the performance of mitzvot, uniquely construed (JWF 180).
Lurianic kabbalah underwent widespread popularization amongst Ashkenazim
(Yiddish/German speaking Jews) with the development of Hasidism in Eastern Europe during the 18th
century (Scholem 325). The founder of Hasidism was Israel Baal Shem Tov (ףMaster of the Good
Name”), a charismatic folk healer and mystic. Within a few generations of the Baal Shem Tov's death,
his movement had overtaken much of Eastern European Jewry (Scholem 324). SchachterShalomi puts
Hasidism's kabbalistic lineage more succinctly, ףthe teachings of the Baal Shem Tov are based on the
teachings of Rabbi Isaac Luria, which are based on the teachings of the Zohar” (PS 146). Not content
to allow the kabbalah to remain confined to circles of religious elites, the Baal Shem Tov sought to
popularize the kabbalah and make its teachings accessible to common Eastern European Jews, many of
whom were illiterate. Arthur Green writes that ףthe ensuing generations of Hasidic preachers, themselves
raised in the kabbalistic tradition, sought to strip it of what they saw as burdensome complexity and turn
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directly to the task of describing the experience of intimacy with God” (RJ 67). Thus, the esoteric
panentheism of Lurianic Kabbalah was made accessible in the popular teachings of Hasidism. Whereas
the Lurianic kabbalah of the Safed School demanded grueling study of arcane treatises, Hasidism simply
asked Jews to pray not merely out of obligation, but also with passionate mystical intentions.
Hasidism streamlined the complex Lurianic cosmology for mass consumption. In this vein,
Gershom Scholem writes that Hasidism represents ףan attempt to preserve those elements of kabbalism
capable of evoking a popular response” (Scholem 329). The ornate sefirotic ףtree of life” emanating
from God's nothingness is reduced to a dialectic between divine being and nothingness. Hasidism
ףcreates a theology that understands God as an eternal dialectical dance between presence and
transcendence, between the revealed and mysterious” (Green 69). Divine being and nothingness are not
merely intellectual concepts, but rather they deeply inform a Hasidic Jew's life and death. Consider the
following Hasidic tale told by Martin Buber about the dying Shneur Zalman of Lyadi (ףThe Rav” and
founder of the Chabad Lubavitch branch of Hasidism): ףOn a day shortly before his death, the Rav
asked his grandson: 'Do you see anything?' The boy looked at him in astonishment. Then the Rav said:
'All I can still see is the divine nothingness which gives life to the world” (Buber 271). The dying rabbi
communicates his mystical knowledge to his grandson, not surprising since Hasidism places great
emphasis on making its teachings accessible to common folk and children, unlike Luria and the erudite
Safed mystics. While Lurianic Kabbalah is filled with fairytalelike allegories that resonate deeply with
children (e.g. God scattered sparks of light throughout the world that are waiting to be redeemed), it
was not until Hasidism that these mystical tales, and the radical theology they contained, were deemed
fit for consumption beyond insulated circles of rabbinic elite.
NeoHasidism, American CounterCulture, and Eastern Religion
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The major founders of the Jewish Renewal movement, R. Zalman SchachterShalomi and R.
Shlomo Carlebach, received their religious education from the Chabad school of Hasidism. Chabad is
characterized by its combination of rigorous Lithuanianstyle Talmudic study with the spiritual intensity of
Hasidism (Fishkoff 14). After its leadership fled Europe for America, Chabad decided on a new means
of arousing messianic redemption in a postHolocaust worldעencouraging nonreligious Jews to
perform more mitzvot. Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the late leader of Chabad, pioneered religious
outreach campaigns in the 1950s that were motivated by his desire to revive a global Jewish community
nearly eradicated in the Holocaust (Fishkoff 49). Chabad is unique among Hasidic sects for its emphasis
on religious outreach towards nonpracticing Jews. For adherents of Chabad, any mitzvah performed
by a Jew has cosmic significance and could be ףthe key event that tips the scales of universal goodness
and ushers in the Messianic Age” (Fishkoff 49). Today, Chabad is one of the world’s most
welldeveloped and influential Jewish organizations, with thousands of official centers scattered across
the globe and in virtually every city where Jews reside (Fishkoff 12). However, in the late 1950's the
Chabad organizational apparatus was only in its nascent stages, and SchachterShalomi and Carlebach
were amongst their first rabbinic graduates to be tasked with performing religious outreach on college
campuses (Magid 50).
As their rabbinic careers continued into the 1960's, SchachterShalomi and Carlebach became
increasingly exposed to young Jews who were abandoning Judaism for Eastern contemplative practices,
such as Buddhist meditation, yoga, and tai chi. According to several studies, Jews constitute a significant
portion of nonAsian American practitioners of Buddhism (Gez 52). Observing the attraction of Jewish
spiritual seekers to Eastern religion, Carlebach and SchachterShalomi did not appear to be overly
troubled by the large number of Jewish Buddhists and Jewish yogis they encountered. Rather, quite the
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opposite was the case. SchachterShalomi writes, ףsometimes paths are blocked for us and others are
open. Once Reb Shlomo Carlebach...pointed out that for many Jews after the Holocaust, the path to
Judaism was blocked. Many Jews could not get close to God until they first took a detour through
Eastern religions" (HF 31). The reason the path to Judaism was blocked, according to Carlebach, was
that after the Holocaust Jewish teachers had become too angry, broken, and ףafflicted with the taint of
death” (ML 179). His comment about the ףtaint of death” is a reference to Jewish ritual purity laws that
prohibit kohanim (ףpriests”) from sustained contact with dead bodies (ML 179). Carlebach continues,
ףthen God in his great mercy sent us people from the Far East, people who were not contaminated by
the Holocaust, to teach us about God in the way we could let into our hearts” (ML 179). Carlebach's
investment in Eastern religion and American counterculture was so deep that at one point he claimed
that if his rabbi, Menachem Mendel Schneerson of Chabad, attended Woodstock in the summer of '69
and met Swami Datchidanada, a great tikkun (ףcosmic healing”) would have occurred (Garb 80).
While quite happy to absorb the wisdom of Eastern religion, SchachterShalomi and Carlebach
also felt an urgent need to share the mystical teachings of Judaism in order to return young Jews to their
ancestral religion. Steeped in the mystical tradition of Chabad Hasidism, they were well prepared to
make a Jewish reply to Buddhism and other Eastern religions becoming popular amongst American
Jews during the 1960's. For his part, SchachterShalomi emphasizes the affinity between kabbalistic
nothingness and Buddhist emptiness (Sanskrit: ףshunyata”). In Buddhism, because all phenomena are
interdependent and impermanent, everything is said to be empty of substantial existence (Garfield 51).
In the kabbalah, since all things emanate from the nothingness of God, nothing is said to truly exist
except God (Schneerson 72). Rodger Kamenetz, present at a meeting between SchachterShalomi and
the Dalai Lama, writes "as the Dalai Lama carefully phrased it, there is 'a point of similarity' between the
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kabbalistic ain sof and the Buddhist shunyata. It would be exaggerating to say they are identical. The
kabbalistic approach says that God is No Thing. But it still affirms an absolute existence even if
ineffable. In the Buddhist approach, all existence is empty because none of it has inherent reality, or
absolute reality in itself” (Kamenetz 86). By demonstrating that Judaism has mystical teachings on par
with Buddhism, Carlebach and SchachterShalomi invited Jews immersed in 1960s American
counterculture to return to Jewish practice. For many young Jews, the path of Buddhism unintentionally
led them to Jewish mysticism, a ףdetour” desperately needed in a postHolocaust world.
PostHolocaust American Judaism and the Jewish Renewal Movement
Yet even before the Holocaust, freethinking Hasids have had a sustained interest in the
Enlightenment and Eastern religions, most notably in the case of Hillel Zeitlin and his milieu in interwar
Warsaw (HS 11). SchachterShalomi and Green both regard Zeitlin (18711942) as a major
predecessor for the Jewish Renewal movement. SchachterShalomi describes Zeitlin as a ףsaintly and
martyred teacher” whose mix of modern thought and Chabadstyle Hasidism parallels Jewish Renewal
(HS xix). In an article published in the Forward, Green writes that Zeitlin was ףthe leading neoHasidic
thinker in Eastern Europe before the Holocaust, [who] was for Hebrew and Yiddishreading Jews what
Martin Buber was for their more westernized Germanreading brethren: the person who rendered the
passionate religious life of Hasidism accessible to nonOrthodox Jews.” (Forward 2012). Green's
comparison of Zeitlin to Buber is interesting because it points to a possible affinity between Jewish
Renewal and an important generation of radical 20th century GermanJewish thinkers, of whom Martin
Buber, Franz Rosenzweig, Gershom Scholem, and Walter Benjamin are key figures. Not unlike Zeitlin
and his neoHasidic milieu in Warsaw, their German contemporaries also articulated an eclectic blend of
Jewish messianism and secular, revolutionary utopianism (Lowy 14).
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Buber was a leftwing cultural Zionist who was famous for his work in existentialism and
introducing Hasidism to nonOrthodox Jews. His close friend Franz Rosenzweig founded the Freies
Jüdische Lehrhaus, an adult Jewish educational institute in Frankfurt, which attracted many important
Jewish intellectuals, and where Buber also assumed teaching responsibilities (Jay 89). Buber found
eager students among some members of the Frankfurt School, including Leo Lowenthal and Erich
Fromm, whereas Rosenzweig exerted an important influence on a young Walter Benjamin. (Handelman
17) (Jay 200).
Much scholarly writing has commented upon the elements of Jewish thought present within the
Critical Theory of the Frankfurt School, and there is likely some merit to the frequent assertion that
Critical Theory contains a ףmasked theology” (Habermas 4). Similar to Zeitlin, whom
SchachterShalomi refers to as ףthe mystic proletarian,” the Frankfurt School thinkers put forth their
own experimental blend of secular utopianism and Jewish messianism (HF 279) (Lowy 15). Walter
Benjamin’s inimitable messianic Marxism is perhaps the most outstanding example of this phenomenon.
Benjamin wrote that ףin the idea of classless society, Marx secularized the idea of a messianic time. And
that was a good thing” (Benjamin 401). Like the notion of a messianic era, Marx’s classless society acts
as transcendent critique of society. In this vein, Theodor Adorno, a longtime leader of the Frankfurt
School, claimed ףthe only philosophy which can be practiced responsibly in the face of despair is the
attempt to contemplate all things as they would present themselves from the standpoint of redemption;”
a remark that could equally describe utopian aspects of both Judaism and Marxism (Adorno 153).
In their landmark essay ףDialectic of Enlightenment,” critical theorists Theodor Adorno and Max
Horkheimer seek to undermine the dominance of natural science within modern thinking. They write,
ףfor the Enlightenment, anything which cannot be resolved into numbersכis illusion; modern positivism
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consigns it to poetry” (Horkheimer 4). Society undergoes ףatomization” and humans begin to operate
according the ףnatural” laws of the free market (Lukacs 91). The market, in turn, treats notions like
social welfare and ecological integrity as romantic fictions that have no place in the ףreal” world. The
zeal for rational calculation leads to the disenchantment of world, as morals lose their metaphysical
underpinning and give way to an ethic of rational selfinterest. Increasingly, things are seen in the cold
metallic light of industrial civilization. Such is the deep pessimism of the Frankfurt School, a collective of
mostly JewishGerman philosophers who first rose to prominence while working in exile during WWII.
Further problematizing the successes of the Enlightenment are the massive body counts of the
world wars, ףassembly line” genocide, and the invention of the atomic bomb. Not only did the advance
of human knowledge fail to prevent the catastrophes of the 20th century, scientific knowledge in fact
made those catastrophes possible. It is not simply that humans have access to a more efficient means of
barbarism, but rather the tendency towards violence is strengthened by a scientific worldview that turns
lives into things. Adorno and Horkheimer write, ףknowledge, which is power, knows no limits, either in
its enslavement of creation or in its deference to worldly masters” (Horkheimer 2). The same century
which saw man walk on the moon was the one that ףgenerated” more dead soldiers, more murdered
noncombatants, more torture, and more death from hunger than was ever thought possible (Habermas
45).
The Frankfurt School thinkers posit a mythic quality to the Enlightenment and an enlightened
quality to myth. Like science, myths seek to ףnarrate, record, [and] explain,” albeit with a less
sophisticated intellectual method (Horkheimer 5). Patriarchal religion in particular anticipates the
Enlightenment with its valorization of spirit over matter and man over nature (women are conflated with
nature in the patriarchal worldview). The estrangement from nature in patriarchal religion eventually gives
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rise to the Enlightenment; ףin their mastery of nature, the creative God and the ordering mind are alike.
Man’s likeness to God consists in sovereignty over existence, in the lordly gaze, in the command”
(Horkheimer 6). The Enlightenment’s scientific gaze only knows what it can predict and control. All else
is fiction.
The Enlightenment’s credo that the spread of secular reason and science would guide human
society into a universal and permanent peace found its greatest refutation in the fallout of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki and in the crematoria of Nazi concentration camps. SchachterShalomi identifies both the
Holocaust and looming threat of nuclear warfare as events that demand ףentirely new ways of thinking,
theological as well as practical” (JWF 150). It becomes unmistakable that ףrationality,” as construed by
the old paradigm, is incapable of offering a code of ethics to guide society. Even if nuclear holocaust
seems less likely after the end of the Cold War, the catastrophe of humancaused climate change gives
urgency to the need for a new paradigm. SchachterShalomi writes, ףtoday it seems that this planeticide
may not happen all at once, but little by little. This is no more comforting” (JWF 151).
The decline of the Enlightenment's philosophical prestige results in a resurgence of religion. In
the language of Critical Theory, Habermas writes that ףthe sociopsychological costs of a rationalization
restricted to cognitiveinstrumental dimension [i.e. the human costs of transforming the worker into a
commodity] costs externalized by society and shifted to individuals appear in different guises,
ranging from clinically treated mental illnesses through neuroses, educational and motivational problems,
to the protest actions of aesthetically inspired countercultures, [and] religious youth sects” (Habermas
369). Indeed, the Jewish Renewal movement is an outgrowth of 1960s havurot, which were, following
Habermas, countercultural religious youth groups inspired by a neoHasidic aesthetic and ethos. Samuel
H. Dresner names the ףexhaustion of modernity” as responsible for the return of religion, that is, ףthe
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failure first of technology and then of ‘culture’ (literatureartmusic) as substitutes for religion”
(Heschel 5). The increased popularity of Hasidism amongst nonorthodox Jews, romantically depicted
as an alternative to the materialistic values of capitalism, can thus be explained by the failure of
modernity to produce systems of meaning durable enough to withstand the alienating effects of industrial
capitalism.
If the Frankfurt School thinkers diagnosed the illness of modernity as the disenchantment of the
world due to rampant commodification, the rabbis of Jewish Renewal audaciously prescribe a cure.
Their prescription is the respiritualization of the world through the performance of mitzvot, uniquely
construed. By sanctifying the world through mitzvot, the rabbis of Jewish Renewal resist the
commodification intrinsic to industrial society. Yet by deferring to science and the Enlightenment on
important issues like ecology and governance, the Jewish Renewal movement seeks to avoid the pitfalls
of reactionary religion, such as authoritarian theocracy or scientific denialism.
In language that resonates deeply with the Critical Theory, SchachterShalomi writes that the
alienation of modern life is caused by an excess of ףcommodity time,” which operates according to ףthe
demands of running an efficient marketplace” (JWF 36). SchachterShalomi suggests that the mitzvah
of Shabbat can serve as an antidote to the constant commodification of time and labor. Shabbat, he
writes, is ףa way of living more in tune with our own deepest needswell as those of our family and
[our] entire community” (JWF 37). Furthermore, SchachterShalomi observes that Shabbat can
connect us to the primordial ףdawn of creation” when God created the world in six days and on the the
seventh day ‘ףshavat vayinafash, God rested and was refreshed’ (Exodus 31:17)” (JWF 38). The
periodic cessation of labor on Shabbat is an imitatio Dei; ףWe see God laboring and recognize and
honor the value of labor. And we witness God ceasing all work and taking time to rest and reensoul”
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(JWF 38). Observance of Shabbat is, as the theorist of religion Mircea Eliade puts it, ףprimordial
mythical time made present[כit] represents the reactualization of a sacred event that took place in a
mythical past, ‘in the beginning’” (Eliade 68). Myth is still necessary in the modern world,
SchachterShalomi asserts, because when ףman [is] cut off from vital myths [he] is devoid of life and
energy” (Magid 182). Shabbat sanctifies the rhythm of the calendar week by injecting spiritual life into
the otherwise soulless world of commodity.
SchachterShalomi states the need to creatively reread Jewish law in the service of universal
redemption. For instance, in his discussion of the commandment to keep Shabbat, the day of rest
becomes not just a Godgiven commandment but also the inalienable right of workers to enjoy a day off
once a week (SchachterShalomi 73). The shmitah, the sabbath year in which "the Earth has complete
rest" and all debts are forgiven, is both a mitzvah and also a radical tikkun for the destructiveness of
postindustrial society (JWF 156). SchachterShalomi writes ףin this postindustrial world we need to
make a conscious decision to define times in which we will try to move in tandem with the cycles of
mother nature. Otherwise we will spend all our days fighting her” (JWF 38). For SchachterShalomi,
the organic time of the Jewish calendar is a way for inhabitants of postindustrial society to move with the
cycles of mother nature. In his book Paradigm Shift, SchachterShalomi writes that there was once a
time when ףour economy took a weekly Sabbath. Now we push merchandise 7 days a week and 24
hours a day. Such a treatment of our financial lifeblood leads to fevers. Even regarding the economy we
need to think organically” (PS 293).
Organic time is a crucial concept for SchachterShalomi, reflecting his strongly held
environmentalist commitments. He says ףmore than I want to talk about avodat hashem, serving God, I
want to talk about serving the Earth. In fact we can find places in Torah where the two imperatives
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clearly merge” (JWF 152). While retaining Jewish praxis, SchachterShalomi accords ultimate concern
to the Earth and its wellbeing, otherwise he fears soon there may no longer be a world to practice
Judaism in. Creatively rereading kabbalistic theology, SchachterShalomi considers the Earth a
shattered emanation of God, in need of rectification via the performance of mizvot, particularly those
with environmentalist applications (JWF 180). Special attention is given to the Shabbat, during which
production entirely ceases every seven days, and the Shmitah, when ףthe Earth shall have complete
rest” every seven years. The Shabbat and the Shmitah are critical interruptions of ףcommodity time”
with revitalizing ףorganic time,” healing the body, soul, and Earth. Although the Shmitah year was
originally practiced only in the "Land of Israel," SchachterShalomi asks "how can we expand our
understanding of 'the Land' to include the planet that all faiths share?" (JWF 156) SchachterShalomi is
not without precedent in extending commandments related to the Land of Israel to other lands. His
Chabad rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, declared that the task for "the last generation of the
exile and the first generation of the redemption" was "to make the land of other nations into the land of
Israel" (Wolfson 133). A classic Chabad motto is ףMake Eretz Israel here,” i.e. make everywhere the
Land of Israel (Garb 65).
SchachterShalomi applies halakhah towards universal redemption with his concept of
ecokosher, which combines Jewish dietary law with wider ecological concerns. He writes "ecokashrut
is concerned not only with the origin of the things consumedwhat animal the meat came from, say, or
what dishes the meat was consumed inbut also with the results of consumption, such as the
environmental and human toll of our actions." (JWF 158). He intellectually problematizes kashrut in the
21st century with the example of disposable dishes (JWF 157). Disposable plates are ideal from a
halakhic perspective because "no suspicion exists that they've touched trafe food," but from an
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ecological perspective "they are disastrous" as they contribute to overflowing landfills (JWF 157).
Rather than abandon Jewish dietary law for a universal standard of ethical food consumption (e.g.
environmentally friendly, organic, fair trade, etc.) SchachterShalomi insists on combining Jewish law
and universal ethics to form his notion of ecokosher. This novel stance arises from his personal
experience of arriving at global universality through Jewish particularity. He writes "In a world where
such universalist spirituality is possible, why be Jewish? So many of my values connect me to nature, to
the planet, to compassion for all living beings, that my Judaism at times feels like a confinement unless
I begin to see that my Jewish values are the very ones that produced my universal concern" (JWF xvi).
His spiritual experiences in Hasidism produced an interest in the mysticism of other religions, while his
experience as a stateless person during the Holocaust produced his concern for displaced persons
across the world, so understandably SchachterShalomi is loath to leave his Jewish identity behind.
SchachterShalomi includes his Jewish identity even when he transcends it, as in his notion of
ecokosher, which is simultaneously Jewish and global in its orientation.
In order to mediate the tension between global universality and Jewish particularity,
SchachterShalomi seizes upon the Earth photographed from outer space as the ףthe most potent
religious icon” of our time (JWF 152). He claims that the image serves as a clarion call, ףbeckoning us
to rise beyond social, cultural, or religious formulations of ‘us versus them’” (JWF 152). The
representations of mass media typically lack the uniqueness and authenticity attributed to religious icons,
but the sight of the exuberant, blue Earth within the dark vacuum of space provokes awe, a kind of
mysterium tremendum akin to religious experience. Besides its breathtaking beauty, the Earth viewed
from space allows for the recognition of a global community with shared risks and rewards: ףon the one
hand we have the threat of Earth’s destruction, whether cataclysmic or gradual; on the other, we have
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the halting emergence of planetary cooperation, countries putting their heads together to control crime
and disease, mediate conflict, and protect the environment. Strengthening this wholeEarth cooperation
is to me the most urgent and important way we have of serving God, the holiest and most pressing
invitation of our time” (JWF 152).
“If You Are So Universal Why Be Jewish?”
SchachterShalomi acknowledges the intellectual challenge of remaining Jewish while being
committed to universality. He rhetorically asks "If you are so universal why be Jewish?" (390 Kaplan).
In response, SchachterShalomi stresses the wisdom and interconnectedness of all the world's religious
traditions. He asserts that Jews have the special responsibility of cultivating a vibrant Judaism so that the
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world can have a healthy spiritual ecology. Known for borrowing scientific images to describe
theological concepts, SchachterShalomi's theology derives inspiration from the Gaia hypothesis, which
claims that the Earth is one organism constituted of various interdependent ecosystems. Likewise, the
various world wisdom traditions all function as distinct but interdependent organs within the organism of
the global human psyche, according to SchachterShalomi. He wants Judaism to be a healthy organ
functioning in the global spiritual body. SchachterShalomi calls triumphalism, the belief that a religion is
superior and should triumph over all others, a ףcancerous attitude” within the global spiritual body.
Triumphalist religions are like cancerous cells that ףwant to spread themselves so much that they will
consume all the other cells in order to glorify that which is them” (JWF 185). While
SchachterShalomi's Gaian analogy for the world’s religions is wholly his own, the organismic analogy
has a long precedent within the kabbalah. For instance, the system of sefirot are described as the
mystical organism of God (Scholem 214). Referring to the frequent usage of the first person plural within
Jewish liturgy (e.g. the oftrepeated phrase ף
”, ףOur God, Ruler of the Universe”) the
ArtScroll siddur, the de facto prayer book of American Orthodoxy, explains that prayers are
ףformulated in the plural because the Jewish people are like a single body and each one of us is like one
of its organs” (119a ArtScroll). The ArtScroll siddur elaborates that ףwe [Jewish people] are
responsible for one another, for the good or evil of every Jew affects us all” (119a ArtScroll). The
following section will examine the ways in which ArtScroll’s particularist sentiments regarding the Jewish
spiritual body (indicative of a larger trend within Orthodox Judaism) are considered good but not good
enough by the theologians of the Jewish Renewal movement.
For SchachterShalomi, the Judaism that is being cultivated today cannot be the same one that
was nearly destroyed in the Holocaust. The oldparadigm of Judaism, with its tribal orientation, must be
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reinterpreted in the service of universal redemption. Referring to the preHolocaust Torah, he writes,
"ethically and morally, our weakness was not enough righteousness towards goyim [nonJews]... Prior
to the Holocaust, the Torah of the Jew had proliferated into the most minute levels of life. But the Jewish
Torah of the goy, by and large, did not have any specific action directives. Those that it did have were
ambiguous and selfcontradictory. We, who were charged with responsibility of reproving our neighbor
when we saw him involved in a sinful act, had excluded the goy from our reproach. The goy was given
the same level of consideration as the compulsive beast: no amount of rational reeducation could help
him" (PS 64). SchachterShalomi seeks to include nonJews into Israel's lofty messianic destiny by
extending the directives of Jewish law beyond the boundaries of the ethnic Jewish community. More
radically, SchachterShalomi says the prewar Torah was not capable of fulfilling its messianic purpose
because it was not universal enough. He continues, "Jews are responsible not only for themselves but
also for goyim. Their responsibility as the chosen people (chosen to be responsible and to be a kingdom
of priests) must work paradoxically to eliminate their own chosenness by delegation of the responsibility
to others who will also become God's chosen people Germans, Arabs and Russians included. And
here halakhah [Jewish law] enters the picture" (PS 65).
There are several ways in which the rabbis of Jewish Renewal attempt to widen Judaism’s
scope past the ethnocentric sphere. Their most basic assertion is that Judaism has some teachings that
can be of value to nonJews, and that Jewish teachers have an obligation to share them with the larger
world. This sentiment is expressed in SchachterShalomi’s belief that there are ףparticular strengths that
Judaism has to offer the world” (JWF 189). In particular, he names the Jewish relationship to time,
kashrut, and Torah study as precious inheritances that can be shared with the world (JWF 189).
Another unique discovery of the Jewish people, and the cause of the Dalai Lama’s interest in Judaism, is
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the ability to keep a people’s spiritual and cultural heritage alive while in diaspora. Describing his 1989
meeting with the exiled Tibetan leader, SchachterShalomi writes that ףthe Dalai Lama’s question to the
Jews was simple. ‘Tell me your secret,’ he said, ‘the secret of Jewish spiritual survival in exile’” (JWF
183). Beyond offering spiritual wisdom to Gentiles, the need to share Torah with nonJews is an ethical
imperative of the utmost urgency, perhaps on the order of life or death. SchachterShalomi writes,
ףWhat Jewish guilt is there in Auschwitz?...In short, the Holocaust was partially caused by Jews who
did not think it worthwhile, or even possible to reprove the Germans [emphasis his]” (PS 64). The
Torah becomes a means to prevent future Holocausts, regardless of the victims’ ethnic or religious
origins.
Carlebach also states the need for a new Torah after the Holocaust. Consider the following
anecdote recorded in Rodger Kamenetz's Jew in the Lotus: "’You know,’ Rabbi Carlebach said,
‘imagine, God forbid, our father's house burns downand I'm moving into somebody else's house? No.
I help my father to rebuild the house. After the six million we had nothing. No yeshivas, no spiritual
leadership, no rebbes. All those people who hit it big in other religions, they could be rebbes. They have
big neshamas [souls]. Sure it's easy to go away, it's hard to rebuild, but you can't permit them to do that.
It shows lack of character. What's going on? Why don't they ask God, "What do you want me be?"
(Kamenetz 262). Earlier we encountered Carlebach as someone who was eager to absorb the wisdom
of Eastern religions, but here he advocates for a spiritual project that is unmistakably Jewish. It seems
that Carlebach is willing to borrow tools from his neighbor to rebuild the house of Judaism, but he insists
that the structure being built is Jewish. However, like SchachterShalomi, Carlebach believes that the
Judaism being rebuilt after the Holocaust cannot be the same one that was almost annihilated during the
war. While discussing the biblical verse "sing to God a new song" (Psalms 33:3, 96:1), Carlebach is
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quoted as saying "How could it be...that with all the Torah that was being studied and with all the great
luminaries in Europe, this tragic event [the Holocaust] could have occurred?" (Magid 224). Carlebach's
answer is provocative: "'Perhaps,' he said, "the Torah being studied there was not good enough.
Perhaps we need a new Torah" (Magid 224). Carlebach's comments are intended to be theological and
not historical. In no way does he blame Jews for the Holocaust or absolve Germans of their guilt. Rather
he attempts to transform the Holocaust into a theologically productive moment in order to honor those
who perished. Only in a world without the stain of genocide can the memories of the six million victims
be considered redeemed, and Carlebach preached a Judaism that relentlessly sought to overcome
hatred with compassion. It is unclear what exactly Carlebach believed the new Torah should be,
although it certainly included the mystical teachings of the Baal Shem Tov, whose example Carlebach
"emulated consciously and unconsciously throughout his life" (Magid 234). Carlebach's Torah was a
Hasidism revitalized by contact with Eastern religions and steeped in 1960's American counterculture,
an eclectic blend of the ancient and the avantegarde.
After the assertion that Jewish theology must be renovated towards more inclusivity after the
Holocaust, the rabbis of Jewish Renewal have more mystical means to expand the relevance of Judaism
to nonJews. As a devout kabbalist, SchachterShalomi subscribes to the notion of reincarnation.
Within Judaism, SchachterShalomi is far from alone in believing in reincarnation. It is a belief held by
many Hasidic sects, including the Chabad school from which SchachterShalomi and Carlebach
emerge. In Chabad, when a nonJew yearns to convert to Judaism, it is often thought that the wouldbe
convert is a Jewish soul that has had the misfortune of reincarnating into a nonJewish body
(Chabad.org). Likewise, SchachterShalomi is entirely open to the possibility that Jewish souls
sometimes reincarnate into nonJewish bodies. In his book Paradigm Shift, SchachterShalomi writes
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ףeven if I had not believed in reincarnation as a result of my study of Kabbalah I would have begun to
believe in its reality for reasons of fact. My reputation as one interested in spiritual phenomena has
attracted people who confided in me about memories of having lived during the Holocaust years in their
past life cycle” (PS 71).
Another important way that Jewish Renewal theologians expand Judaism beyond the confines of
the ethnic Jewish community is through the common folk etymology of the word ףIsrael.” As Jacob
received the name ףIsrael” after wrestling with an angel of God, the word ףIsrael” is thought by many to
literally mean ףGodwrestler.” In Radical Judaism, Arthur Green writes that ףIsrael, ‘wrestler with
God,’ is too big a name to belong to a single people. We need to find a way to share it with others,
welcoming them to feel like participants in this legacy, without ourselves being threatened, without
feeling that we will lose our uniqueness” (RJ 139). For Green, membership in Israel is not limited to just
those who are halakhically Jewish (although he recognizes the importance of that category). The central
narrative of Israel’s exodus from Egypt is sublimated into the more universal theme of liberation from
bondage. Regarding the revelation at Sinai, Green looks to an antinomian Hasidic interpretation from
Rabbi Mendel of Rymanow, which holds that ףGod’s revelation is without or beyond specific content”
(RJ 90). Only the infinite letter aleph in the word anokhi (ףI am”) was uttered by the divine voice, ףall
the rest was revealed through Moses” (RJ 90). Through R. Mendel of Rymanow’s midrash, Green
dispenses with the binding nature of the 613 mitzvot, as they are but a temporal and finite expression of
God’s infinite revelation. For Green, anyone who wrestles with God (read: ultimate reality) and seeks to
know true freedom can be termed Israel. Nonetheless, Green is wary of ףspiritual imperialism” and
refrains from foisting the label ףIsrael” onto every seeker or activist he feels fellowship with, ףeven
though I may experience them as Israel” (RJ 138). In this vein, Magid writes, ףit is not clear to me
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whether a Jew who identifies as a Jew by purely ethnic criteria would be part of Green’s Israel” (Magid
105). Indeed, Green does not resolve this tension in his writing. He recognizes the spiritual significance
of the ethnic Jewish community because ףwithout that distinctive identity, who would remain as bearers
of our hardlearned values into next and future generations?” (RJ 133). But on the other hand, Green
writes, ףI sometimes find us erring on the side of too much insecurity about our own existence,
distracting ourselves from our ultimate goal, that of being and building God’s mishkan in the world” (RJ
133). The Jewish community’s ultimate concern cannot be limited to its own survival, Green says, as
that would distract from Israel’s messianic purpose of arousing universal redemption. In both Green and
SchachterShalomi’s appeal for a more outward looking Judaism, it is possible to hear echoes of Rabbi
Hillel’s famous saying: ףif I am not for myself, then who will be? And if I am only for myself, then what
am I? And if not now, when?” (Pirkei Avot). Jewish Renewal theologians might rephrase Hillel’s
statement to say: ףif Jews are not for themselves, then who will be? And if Jews are only for themselves,
then what are they? And if not now, when?”
Green’s discussion of Israel as a theological notion alludes to another kind of Israel: the state of
Israel and the political movement that gave birth to it, Zionism. In the late nineteenth century, there was
widespread Jewish disillusionment with the ףthe Western cult of progress that envisaged a continual
improvement of humanity necessarily improving the status of Jews” (Ohana 9). Zionism arose as a
national liberation movement after violent European antiSemitism proved unrelenting despite the claims
of the Age of Reason. No longer could the fate of the Jewish people be yoked to the project of
universal emancipation, as the Haskala had hoped. At its most elementary, Zionism sought to create a
Jewish society in the ףLand of Israel”, i.e. Palestine, considered to be the ancestral homeland of the
Jewish people. Not a monolithic movement, the term ףZionism” can refer to a diverse set of ideologies,
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some openly opposed to each other. Cultural Zionism, for instance, is not preoccupied with statehood
but seeks to foster solidarity amongst a dispersed Jewish people through the revival of spoken Hebrew,
with a ףspiritual center” in the Land of Israel. Political Zionism, on the other hand, holds that the survival
of the Jewish people depends on the existence of a nationstate in Israel with sovereignty resting in
Jewish hands. The triumph of political Zionism after the creation of the State of Israel, according to
David BenGurion, was in the birth of ףa new Jew” who had ףcompletely emerged from the distorted
environment of the diaspora and its painful complexes” (Cohen 1).
Political Zionism conflicts with SchachterShalomi and the Jewish Renewal movement in several
ways. First, Jewish Renewal does not ascribe any higher degree of Jewishnesss to Jews living in Israel
than those in the diaspora. Instead, the theology of Jewish Renewal offers a positive evaluation of
diaspora. Jews are dispersed throughout the world because ףsparks of holiness are scattered
everywhere...waiting for Jews to discover them, uplift them, and restore them to their source” (RJ 150).
The dispersion of the Jewish people is for the sake of tikkun olam, healing the world. Green calls this
view ףa diasporist Judaism,” saying ףfor us diaspora Jews, having lived this way for so many centuries,
our wandering is not to be taken lightly. It is an essential part of the experience and legacy of Israel” (RJ
150). BenGurion’s notion that a Jew can only be ףa hundred percent Jewish and a hundred percent
human” in a particular place, the Land of Israel, is entirely foreign to the Jewish Renewal movement
(Cohen 1).
For SchachterSchachter and Green, Judaism is a religion that primarily accesses the sacred
through time and not space. Following Abraham Joshua Heschel, who was an important mentor to both
SchachterShalomi and Green, they assert that since the Second Temple was destroyed, ףwe [Jews] no
longer have access to God in space but we do have access to God in time. Jews live more in time than
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they live in space” (HR 6:12). SchachterShalomi elaborates, ףwe replaced that temple in space with
what Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel imagined as a holy temple in time, a temple in which to build and
sustain a connection with the Infinite, a temple that we consecrate by conscious acts of will. That temple
is the Sabbath.” (JWF 45). Through the observation of the Sabbath, the participants in Jewish Renewal
cultivate sacredness regardless of physical location. Interestingly, Zionists (be they secular or religious)
whose Jewish identity revolves around a physical place, i.e. the Western Wall, Judea and Samaria, etc.
are essentially unrecognizable as observant Jews from the perspective of diasporist Judaism. As Green
asserts, ףIsrael” as a religious category is diasporist Judaism. Shneer and Aviv have observed the
historical irony that the creation of the State of Israel has had the unintended consequence of negating
Judaism for many Israelis (Aviv 133).
Whereas Zionism responds to the crisis of modernity with a turn towards nationalism, Jewish
Renewal remains decidedly global in its orientation. ףIn this sense,” Magid writes, ףRenewal is an
alternative to Zionism in that it is a Diaspora phenomenon focused on the renewal of Judaism as a world
religion as opposed to the reconstitution of Judaism as the backbone of a nationalist movement” (Magid
128). Green and SchachterShalomi see Jewish Renewal's task as (re)spritualizing the world by
shepherding Hasidism into modernity. A universalized reading of Hasidism is needed in a world riddled
with ethnic conflict and ecological destruction, Green writes, since "the most essential truth I glean from
Hasidic teachings, the unity and holiness of all life, even all existence, is one the world most urgently
needs to hear" (RJ 8). Green claims that sharing the neoHasidic message is urgent in these tumultuous
times because ףwithout marshaling the power of the religious and mythic imagination, we will not be able
to make the turn we must in order to exist” (RJ 8). By sanctifying existence in a postindustrial society
where nothing is sacred, PostHolocaust American Judaism, as expressed by the Jewish Renewal
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movement, rebelliously offers a remedy to the spiritual and ecological sickness of modernity by
universalizing Jewish theology to make redemption not just a Jewish issue, but a universal concern.
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