Jerusalem Post
 
 
National Zoo
Wednesday  Apr 04, 2012  
 



American Jews prefer  Muslims to the Christian right
 
 
Yesterday I wrote an _article_ 
(http://www.jpost.com/USPresidentialrace/Article.aspx?id=264709)   about a new 
survey by the Public Religion Research 
Institute on Jewish attitudes  towards the 2012 presidential race and how 
issues such as Iran and Israel factor  in. But there’s some other interesting 
information to be gleaned (keeping in  mind that it’s an Internet-based survey 
with a 5% margin of error which had to  heavily re-weight the Orthodox and 
unaffiliated to get a proportion reflective  of the national Jewish 
population).
 
For one thing, Jews have warmer feelings towards Muslims and Mormons than  
the Christian right. None of the groups cracked the warm feelings half of 
the  favorability scale, where 100 equals very warm feelings and 0 equals very 
cold  feelings. But Mormons came close with an average score of 47 out of 
100 points  and Muslims behind that at 41 out of 100 points. Jews rated the 
Christian right  at an average of just 21 out of 100.
 
Assessing Israel’s problems using a different type of scale, another  
religious group – the ultra-Orthodox – and its control of religious life in the 
 
Jewish state was seen as a major problem by 53% of those surveyed and a 
minor  problem by 36%. Iran and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict got the 
highest  ratings, with the latter seen by the most people as a major problem 
(90%) 
and  the former seen as a major problem by 83% of those surveyed.
 
The poll also yielded some generational divides on the importance of  
different Jewish experiences. For older Jews (60-plus years), 68% see the  
Holocaust as very important; for younger Jews (18-39) only 41% do. For older  
Jews, being a religious minority in America is seen as very important by 36%; 
it 
 is viewed similarly by just 24% of younger Jews. And the immigrant 
experience is  very important for 39% of older Jews but only 19% of younger 
Jews.
 
And just in time for Passover, the survey asked the pollees a few questions 
 about the Jewish holidays. Queried on what was the most important Jewish 
holiday  to them personally, Yom Kippur won with 43% of the vote, with 
Passover next at  25%. Hanukkah and Rosh Hashanah each claimed 10%. And 
contacted 
as they were in  the thick of the run-up to Passover, 68% of US Jews said 
they planned to attend  a seder. Twenty-seven percent said they were skipping.
 
To tie it back to the political questions that dominated the earlier part  
of the survey, the pollsters split the numbers by party affiliation. Only 22 
 percent of Democrats won’t be breaking matza on Friday night, compared to 
36% of  Republicans. If you need something to ponder as you count the 
minutes until the  food is served at your seder, try squaring that figure with 
the 
notion that the  Orthodox are considered to be more Republican-leaning than 
the rest of the  American Jewish population.
 
- Hilary Leila Krieger

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