Jewish  Ideas Daily
 
 
The Turning of the Torah Tide
By _Diana Muir Appelbaum_ 
(http://www.jewishideasdaily.com/author/diana-muir-appelbaum)  • Tuesday, 
December 4,  2012

 
“Torah Judaism today retains more of its youth than at any time since the  
Haskalah.” Historian Marc Shapiro made this remark in a recent talk on  
intellectual trends within 19th-century Orthodoxy. Can he possibly be correct?  
In a word, yes.  
A generation ago, American Orthodoxy was the province of immigrants and the 
 elderly. Observant Jews simply expected that many, perhaps most, children 
would  leave Shabbat behind when they grew up. When Fiddler on the Roof 
opened  on Broadway in 1964, it struck just the right note of nostalgia for a 
lost world  of Sabbaths and Torah—a world to some degree imported to the Lower 
East Side,  where actor Zero Mostel grew up, but one that he had long left 
behind, as had  the Jews in the audience that watched him play Tevye.  
Europe was not so different. In Sholem Aleichem’s stories, Tevye and his 
wife  Golda watch helplessly as their eldest daughter marries a boy they have 
not  chosen, the next daughter marries a Jewish Marxist, and the third a 
bookish  Christian. The Christian bridegroom was a slight exaggeration; 
intermarriage was  rare. But Jewish girls and boys fell in love with secular 
ideas 
and left  Orthodoxy behind.  
The career of Moses Mendelssohn, a self-taught German-Jewish philosopher 
born  in 1729, marks the beginning of the Haskalah, or Jewish Enlightenment.  
Mendelssohn lived at a time and in a place where Western Europeans had begun 
to  admit Jews to their intellectual and even social circles. By the late 
19th  century, the Haskalah had reached even the backward Russian village  
where Tevye and his wife Golda lived.  
One European state after another granted civil rights to Jews, and new  
horizons opened. Jews could attend university, enter the professions, and  
conduct business without legal restrictions. This was not true in the Russian  
Empire, where the world’s largest Jewish community lived in crushing poverty  
under anti-Semitic legal restrictions; but even the poorest could dream of  
emigrating to the New World, joining the Zionist movement and rebuilding 
the  ancient Jewish state, or becoming Marxists and turning the world into a 
worker’s  paradise. Large numbers of European Jews dreamed even bigger, 
joining utopian  movements that advocated pan-Europeanism, Esperanto as a 
universal language,  pacifism, and the creation of a world in which differences 
of 
race and ethnicity  ceased to matter.  
In this heady atmosphere, only a minority chose Torah. One way to measure 
the  number of Jews falling away from tradition is to see how Jews voted in 
the  pre-World War I Austro-Hungarian Empire and in Europe’s inter-war 
democracies.  In one election in which Jewish parties competed, the 1922 vote 
for 
the lower  house of the Polish Parliament, secular Zionist parties won 19 
seats, Mizrachi’s  religious Zionists five, Agudath Israel six, and other 
Jewish parties four. But  these totals overstate the religious vote, because 
the 
Jewish Socialist  movement—the Bund—and the smaller but still substantial 
Jewish Communist  movement ran not as Jewish parties but as part of the 
general Socialist and  Communist lists. Yet the Bund was probably the largest 
Jewish political movement  in Poland at that time.  
There were many elections, and the combined vote for Agudah, Mizrachi, and  
smaller religious parties was usually smaller than the Jewish vote for 
secular  Zionists, Socialists and Communists. Before intense inter-war 
anti-Semitism  boosted the popularity of Zionism, large numbers also voted for 
Jewish 
parties  that were neither religious, Zionist, nor Marxist (including the 
Folks Party,  the Jewish Merchants Party, and the Integrationist Party), and 
others voted for  wholly non-Jewish parties and candidates. Fewer than a 
quarter of inter-war  Jewish voters made Torah enough of a priority to vote for 
a religious party.  
Commitment to Torah can also be measured by the types of schools in which  
Jews enrolled their children. In late 1930s Poland, around 100,000 children  
attended religious primary schools affiliated with Agudah and Mizrachi; but 
more  than 400,000 attended secular primary schools. This number includes 
secular  Zionist schools, but the great majority of Jewish children attended 
Polish  public schools. Most of these children’s parents had grown up in  
Sabbath-observant homes, yet more than four out of five were enrolled in 
secular  schools.  
In the two centuries that followed Moses Mendelssohn’s embrace of the  
Enlightenment, Torah-oriented parents and communities tried every imaginable  
approach to producing Torah-oriented youth: isolation from the general 
culture,  combining Torah with secular study, and teaching Jewish subjects to 
the  
exclusion of secular subjects. The young continued to leave. In 1917, the  
Orthodox Agudath Israel approved the small chain of Beis Yaakov schools for  
girls, founded by Sarah Schenirer in Krakow, out of something close to  
desperation, after a ruling by a leading scholar of the generation—Rabbi 
Yisrael 
 Meir Ha-Kohen Kagan, the Hafetz Hayim—deemed the times so extraordinary 
that it  was permissible to teach Torah to girls. The “tide of heresy is 
rising  vigorously,” he judged, and it was necessary to “rescue as many Jewish 
girls as  can be rescued.”  
European Jews continued to secularize when they immigrated to the United  
States. Not until 1981 did the Greater New York Jewish Population Study find 
the  first quantitative evidence that the “tide of heresy” might be 
receding. Among  people brought up by Sabbath-observant parents, the survey 
found, 
Jews born  after 1945 were far more likely to be observant than Jews born 
before 1945.  Among Ashkenazi Jews brought up in Sabbath-observant homes, 
those who had come  of age since 1966 were more likely to continue to keep the 
Sabbath than at any  time since the Haskalah.  
What changed? Many things changed, of course, but one suspects that the key 
 event was the founding of the State of Israel. Since 1948, American Jews 
have  grown up in a country and a world where Jews and—despite its political  
troubles—Israel are widely admired and respected, an experience previously  
enjoyed by no Jewish community for millennia. Jews are no longer scorned as 
 members of a despised race, a people without a land. Hebrew has become a 
living  language spoken by Jews in a successful, modern country. The images 
of Jews  being forced to wear yellow stars, spat upon in the streets, and 
murdered with  no chance to defend themselves have been replaced by images of 
Israeli soldiers  facing down invading armies.  
For young Jews coming of age in America after 1966, Jewish tradition has 
felt  like something worth their commitment.  
_Diana Muir  Appelbaum_ (http://www.dianamuirappelbaum.com/)  is an 
American author and historian. She is at work on a  book tentatively entitled 
Nationhood: The Foundation of Democracy.

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