
An Israeli secular Jew comes to Germany and joins a church seminary to become a priest. Then, of all places in a Catholic seminary, his soul begins to yearn for Judaism. He begins to observe mitzvot, pray as Jews do and study Torah, all in secret. Then, his yearning for G”d and Torah becomes too strong to remain hidden in the church. To his surprise, Read the rest of this entry »
A Priest Returns to his Faith
November 24, 2013Media Reports from the Latest CER Conference
November 13, 2013
I just came back from the Berlin meeting of the Conference of European Rabbis, the twenty-eighth conference of the CER, marked ‘family, rabbi and community’, and marking a decade to the founding of the Conference of Orthodox Rabbis of Germany. At the top of the conference discussions are: the topic of Jewish rights in the continent – with an emphasis on ritual slaughter and circumcision, and practical ways to relieve the problem of agunos (abandoned wives). Read the rest of this entry »
Should we Circumcise the Children of Non-Members?
November 11, 2013
Sridim, the scholarly journal of the Conference of European Rabbis, just published my article on the question, whether Jewish Communities may abstain from helping non-members circumcise their sons.
Jewish communities provide many services and play a crucial role in furthering Jewish identity and adherence. All those programs and activities cost money, however. Different countries use different models to raise funds. In some European countries, first and foremost in Germany, funds are raised through a system of registration with and taxation by the state in favor of the designated faith community. Thus, Jews (and Catholics, Protestants and Muslims, etc.) in Germany are expected to register as Jews (or as belonging in their respective faith community) with the government, which will then proceed to add 8 or 9% on top of income taxes and pass that addition on to the designated community. The act of not joining or leaving the community, often for financial reasons, hurts the community and forces its remaining members to unfairly bear the burden of services. May such a community, in addition to denying non members reduced or free entry to concerts, lectures and sundry other events, also deny basic Jewish services, like the circumcision of newborn boys of non-members?
Our Public Letter on Open Orthodoxy
November 8, 2013
The following public letter appeared last week in Haaretz. It being behind a paywall, I am including here a picture of the same letter as it appeared yesterday in the American Yated Neeman. Read also my article why I signed this letter. Read the rest of this entry »
Why I Signed a Letter on Open Orthodoxy
November 8, 2013
The Jewish internet is ever more abuzz concerning the controversies surrounding Yeshivat Chovevei Torah and its affiliates forming the institutional backbone of Open Orthodoxy. Recently, after my esteemed acquiaintance, YCT president Rabbi Asher Lopatin complained in an op-ed to Haaretz, in which he arrogated to him and his movement support from [most of] Modern Orthodoxy, I joined a group of rabbis to co-author and sign a public letter, which was published there, as well. Why did I sign that letter, what are my concerns?
The Five Towns Jewish Times just published my op-ed delineating many of our concerns. My conclusion is: Read the rest of this entry »
Who Are the Model Interfaith Families Raising Kids in Both Faiths?
November 6, 2013
A JTA article joins the fray of those advocating greater acceptance of the intermarried, seeing the Jewish future in large part from among the interfaith families. To make its case, it features one interfaith family that decided to raise their kids in both parents’ tradition, Judaism and Episcopalian Christianity. The obvious question is, is this good for the Jewish kids, and can this be the way we win them back? Read the rest of this entry »
Another Reason for More Widespread Use of Halakhic Prenups
November 5, 2013
So lots of people have read and are commenting on a sad New York Post article about Gital Dodelson’s struggle over the last three years to obtain a get (Jewish religious divorce). That story shows that in our Western societies, where the power of beis din is limited to mediation and arbitration, it is a mightily good idea to further the use of halakhic prenups that aim to prevent many such cases of igun (“chaining” a woman, by her husband who refuses to grant her a get even though their relationship is essentially over). Evidently, all Orthodox rabbis would do well to promote the use of such prenups, be they from the Modern Orthodox or from the Ultra Orthodox communities. Read the rest of this entry »
I Made the Front Page…
October 21, 2013
… and it’s not on a WANTED poster (though it’s not a postage stamp, either), the abbreviated German version of my article on the recent Pew survey of American Jews was featured on the front page of the Jüdische Allgemeine. Thank you Editor in Chief Mr. Kauschke.
The Vatican’s Position on Shechita in Poland Prior to WWII
October 15, 2013
Recently, the Conference of Polish [Catholic] Bishops issued a statement in favor of protecting the right of the Jewish and Muslim communities to continue slaughtering large and small cattle in accordance with their religious traditions, without stunning the animals prior to slaughter. In this matter, they thus sided with the government, that the basic human right of free exercise of religion, including the right to eat in accordance to one’s moral-religious convictions, supersedes animal rights legislation when the two contradict each other.
This is a courageous and praiseworthy move, and it is not the first time that the Catholic Church has interceded on behalf of Jews’ right to practice shechita. As the letter below, which appears in the book Pius XII and the Jews, shows, when the Polish government in 1938 considered banning shechita, the then Secretary of State of the Vatican Cardinal Eugenio Pacelli undertook to lobby the Polish government to drop the proposed ban.
The identity of that secretary of state is particularly interesting, as the following year, on March 2nd, 1939, Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli was appointed pope and became known as Pius XII, the wartime pope who is generally taken to task for his silence during the Holocaust. Oh, people are not unidimensional. Read the rest of this entry »
Should we Give Up on Fighting Intermarriage?
October 10, 2013
Torahmusings.com has published an article of mine on intermarriage, Jewish identity and the findings of the most recent Pew Research Center survey on American Jews.
A teaser:
The Internet is abuzz over intermarriage and Jewish continuity but the focus is misplaced. The Pew Research Center recently published a survey of American Jews entitled “A Portrait of Jewish Americans” (link – PDF). The preceding weeks saw a flurry of articles arguing for and against accepting intermarriage, including a JTA article reporting on a recent convention of the largest Jewish Federation in the US, stressing what Jews everywhere have been noticing for decades, namely that intermarriage has become totally accepted in large segments of Jewish life … [CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL ARTICLE]
Posted by Arie Folger 

