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Will American Jews abandon the Democratic Party? – The Christian Post

Posted By on September 28, 2021

By Michael Brown, CP Op-Ed Contributor | Friday, September 24, 2021Orthodox Jews walk through the neighborhood on December 31, 2019 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. A coalition of religious and civil rights leaders were holding a #SafetyInSolidarity rally in Grand Army Plaza to speak out against recent anti-Semitic attacks. | Getty Images/Stephanie Keith

After House Democrats, under pressure from their radical left wing, voted to remove Israels defensive Iron Dome funding from its budget, a Christian friend messaged me saying, Overwhelming Jewish support for the Democratic party is hard to comprehend.

Given the fact that the Democrat Party has been less and less friendly to Israel in recent years, and given President Obamas icy relationship with Prime Minister Netanyahu, what explains the deep solidarity between Democrats and Jews?

Before answering that question, I should note that the Jerusalem Post reported that, The Iron Dome may ultimately receive the American funding it needs after progressive pressure led Democratic Party leadership in the House of Representatives to remove it from a broader bill, and then vowed to propose the aid as its own bill within days. Indeed, on Thursday, the House didpass a stand-alone $1 billion measurefor Israel's Iron Dome. Still, in the words of theJerusalem Post, "that doesnt mean that the drama surrounding it is over.

Tuesdays events in the House should ring alarm bells in Jerusalem that more trouble with the Squad is on the way, even as public statements by Israeli officials tried to minimize the problem.

Yet Jewish support for the Democrats remains strong, with some exit polls giving President Biden roughly 70-75% of the Jewish vote, a number that has held fairly steady, with limited fluctuation, since the late 1920s. Why?

One reason that has often been given is that there is a prophetic ethic in Judaism that leans left, thus siding with the rights of those who are perceived to be oppressed. This would include racial minorities, women, gays, transgenders, and others.

While there appears to be some truth to this, the fact is that most American Jews are fairly secular, with limited familiarity with Judaism. Can this really explain such voting patterns? And why is it that, generally speaking, Jews in different parts of the world tend to lean centrist or right, quite the opposite of things here in the USA?

According to political scientist and professor Kenneth Wald, there is another anomaly when it comes to American Jewish voting. He explained that we expect most affluent people to favor the party of the right. As a group, even allowing for individual differences, American Jews rank at or near the top on most measures of social class education, income, occupational prestige, and such. That makes their commitment to the Democratic Party and liberal values puzzling.

What, then, explains the strong leftward leaning of American Jews?

For Prof. Wald and others, the answer is simple: American Jewish voting patterns have to do with the uniqueness of the American context. The U.S. Constitution follows a classic liberal model in separating citizenship and religion. Rather than rooting citizenship in blood or religion, the American system eliminates ethnic particularity as a condition for full membership in the political community.

This arrangement resonates powerfully with American Jews for practical reasons it gives them a chance to participate as equals in a way they had not experienced elsewhere and it differs radically from their historical experience as, at best, a tolerated minority whose status often changed on the whims of rulers.

And although there was a time when American Jews voted Republican in higher numbers, once the Republican party became more closely aligned with evangelical Christians, Jews moved quickly to the Democrats.

As Wald explains, When, however, the Republican party reached out to white Protestant evangelicals, who eventually came to constitute the partys base, Jews reacted negatively because they perceived a threat to the liberal regime. Evangelicals, with their God talk, insistence on a Christian America, and general willingness to deny fundamental liberties to some minorities on religious grounds, struck many American Jews as a fundamental danger to core values of the polity. Accordingly, Jewish support for Democratic presidential nominees rose from roughly two-thirds to three-fourths in the 1990s and thereafter. (For further discussion about Jews and FDRs New Deal, along with Jewish concerns during the tenure of LBJ, see here.)

This also explains why, the more that Israeli leadership moves to the right, both politically and religiously, the less solidarity liberal American Jews feel with Israel, despite its importance to them. Many evangelical Christians are actually surprised to learn that they appear to feel more loyalty to Israel than do their American Jewish friends.

As for the growing number of Orthodox Jews that identify as Republican, up from 57% in 2013 to 75% today, one headline declared, In voting, Orthodox Jews are looking more like evangelicals.

As the story reported, Among Orthodox Jewish Trump voters, Israel, Iran, and terrorism were among the top concerns cited in a survey by Nishma Research, a Connecticut-based polling firm. Among Orthodox Jewish Biden voters, the coronavirus pandemic, bringing the country together' and health care were the top three issues. (I might ask here how that vote for Biden to deal effectively with COVID and to bring the country together is looking right now.)

This indicates, then, that American Jews are more divided by ideology than they are united by religious faith, since there is a massive gulf between traditional Judaism and liberal Judaism, just as there is between conservative Christianity and liberal Christianity.

In this light, it will be interesting to see what voting patterns emerge if traditional Jews continue to grow in number while the number of liberal Jews continues to drop. (See, already, this prediction from 2016.) And this, in turn, would likely result in growing voting solidarity between Orthodox Jews and Christian conservatives.

Isnt this why so many evangelical Christians are fans of Modern Orthodox voices like Ben Shapiro while men like Rabbi Daniel Lapin, himself Orthodox, spend most of their time speaking to Christian audiences? The plot thickens.

Dr. Michael Brown(www.askdrbrown.org) is the host of the nationally syndicatedLine of Fireradio program. His latest book isRevival Or We Die: A Great Awakening Is Our Only Hope.Connect with him onFacebook,Twitter, orYouTube.

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Will American Jews abandon the Democratic Party? - The Christian Post

Op-Ed: Jew Haters In Congress Have To Be Scorned, Reviled And …

Posted By on September 28, 2021

Reps. Ayanna Pressley, Ilhan Omar, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and Rashida Tlaib speak with reporters during a press conference on July 15, 2019. Photo credit: C-SPAN.

BOCA RATON, FL When referring to any group as a squad, one immediately conjures up a militaristic fighting unit, never a bunch of friends or social group. So, the designation of a clump of radical Congressional Leftists, women of color no less, as, The Squad, should capture our attention and sound an alarm. The roster of this sordid, powerful group of overt Jew haters include Congresswomen, Ilhan Omar, Rashida Tlaib, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Ayanna Pressley and Pramila Jayapal. All of them, supposedly fringe Democrats, whose overt radical views seem to be rapidly seeping into their partys mainstream policies, have a deeply rooted hatred of Israel and will do all in their clearly evident blossoming power to bring the Jewish State to its knees. They did just that this past Tuesday in seeing to it that the dollar support in appropriations to help replenish Israels quickly depleting Iron Dome arsenal was shamelessly deleted from a House measure vote. Their power over their party is shocking.

In a quick response to an alarmed publics response to this omission, House Democrat Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Rosa DeLauro, a Connecticut Democrat, hastily introduced a supplemental bill to replenish the Iron Dome missile defense system that was thankfully approved on Thursday. This caused an angry and frustrated Rashida Tlaib, the Michigan representative, to tweet in opposition to the Iron Dome funding: I will not support a standalone supplemental bill of $1 billion to replenish the bombs Israel used to commit war crimes in Gaza. Dumb as dirt stupidity from this Palestinian-American Jew hater. Even the fact that our funding was reinstated to Israel in another measure two days later was too little too late for us. The Squads swelling power over their associates sent shivers up our spines. Will it grow?

This issue stirred to life a Far Left Radical group, CODEPINK, to again display its overt Jew hating to the public. Its long time Jewish leader, a strong BDS advocate, co-director and Middle East analyst, Ariel Gold, supported the radical Squad with these words: The United States already provides $3.8 billion annually to Israel which is used to terrorize, oppress and bomb Palestinians. Removing an additional $1 billion for Israel is an incredible success towards our goals of ending the blank check and impunity that Israel, an apartheid state has enjoyed for far too long.

This lunatic group was joined by their partners in hate, Human Rights Watch and BTselem, who lamented, While Israel is able to use its Iron Dome to shoot down missiles from Gaza, Palestinians in Gaza have no such protection from the massive bombs that Israel drops on civilian populations. Imagine, during WWII, Americans complaining, whining that Germans didnt have the equivalent anti-aircraft weaponry to shoot down Allied planes. What would have been the reaction from their neighbors? Where are the (Progressive) pro-Israel advocates now? Where is the move to unseat these anti-American, Anti-Israel witches from their seats in Congress? The lack of any outcry from our Jewish citizenry, as well, scares us. Is overt Jew/Israel hating becoming the norm?

We are concerned that over the past 13 years, open Jew/Israel hating has grown like weeds in this country. It is now acceptable for groups to openly espouse such dangerous bigotry. Anyone speaking ill of blacks, demeaning them in any manner shape or form, would be immediately condemned, repudiated and called out as a bigot. But sadly, the same is not true of Jew haters. Take for instance, the Black Lives Matter (BLM) organization which has, since its inception, openly supported the BDS movement to strangle Israel. This group sent their delegations to Palestine in open support of the destruction of Israel. Strangely relevant at this time, in support of stopping U.S. aid to Israel, BLM published a Stop Military Expenditures Brief a few years back that could have been the blueprint for the Squads call for our military aid for Israel to be shut down. Yet, ADL Director, Jonathan Greenblatt, scolded those who express concern over the movements underlying antisemitism, as the Jewish Voice has done, stating: There are those who are attempting to smear this movement (BLM) as inherently antisemitic. It is not. And he leads the ADL?

To add to Jewish groups disgusting fawning over these black bigots, on August 28, 2020, a full page ad was published in the NYT to endorse BLM. Claiming to be the agent for the majority of American Jews, the ad represented Jewish organizations from across the spectrum, speaking in one voice, to support this radical black group. Anyone who had the audacity to evidence concern over the movements antisemitism were racists and white supremacists. Among the the proud sponsors was the Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA), the umbrella group for such giants as Hadassah, ADL, JWV, The Jewish Federations, ORT and the JCRCs. Strange, that prior to the Houses initial vote which we all knew would exclude Iron Dome funding, there was no outrage nor signs of concern for this obvious omission. Yet, on its website, the clueless JCPA has called for its supporters to take action to Help End Police Violence. What priorities does this major Jewish group have? Surely, it is merely a Social Justice one, having not much interest in Jewish causes. Yet their member groups continue to suck in Jewish Benjamins.

Again we are voicing our deep concern that Jew/Israel hating is looming large in the near future. Few elected Jewish Democrat legislators and civic leaders have the courage to stand up for what is a just cause to expose Jew hating. They appear to be intimidated by their comrades in arms. They are too timid, fearful, terrified, traumatized to speak the truth. We ask them to demand that The Squad and others of their hateful ilk be publicly scorned and voted out of their committee assignments and out of office in upcoming elections. They are evil, dangerous and un-American in their values and performance. They have to go. The sooner the better.

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Op-Ed: Jew Haters In Congress Have To Be Scorned, Reviled And ...

Orthodox Judaism – Wikipedia

Posted By on September 28, 2021

Traditionalist branches of Judaism

Orthodox Judaism is the collective term for the traditionalist branches of contemporary Judaism. Theologically, it is chiefly defined by regarding the Torah, both Written and Oral, as revealed by God to Moses on Mount Sinai and faithfully transmitted ever since.

Orthodox Judaism therefore advocates a strict observance of Jewish law, or halakha, which is interpreted and determined exclusively according to traditional methods and in adherence to the continuum of received precedent through the ages. It regards the entire halakhic system as ultimately grounded in immutable revelation, and beyond external influence. Key practices are observing the Sabbath, eating kosher, and Torah study. Key doctrines include a future Messiah who will restore Jewish practice by building the temple in Jerusalem and gather all the Jews to Israel, belief in a future bodily resurrection of the dead, divine reward and punishment for the righteous and the sinners.

Orthodox Judaism is not a centralized denomination. Relations between its different subgroups are sometimes strained, and the exact limits of Orthodoxy are subject to intense debate. Very roughly, it may be divided between ultra-Orthodox or Haredi Judaism, which is more conservative and reclusive, and Modern Orthodox Judaism, which is relatively open to outer society. Each of those is itself formed of independent communities. Together, they are almost uniformly exclusionist, regarding Orthodoxy not as a variety of Judaism, but as Judaism itself.

While adhering to traditional beliefs, the movement is a modern phenomenon. It arose as a result of the breakdown of the autonomous Jewish community since the 18th century, and was much shaped by a conscious struggle against the pressures of secularization and rival alternatives. The strictly observant and theologically aware Orthodox are a definite minority among all Jews, but there are also numerous semi- and non-practicing individuals who affiliate or identify with Orthodoxy. It is the largest Jewish religious group, estimated to have over 2 million practicing adherents, and at least an equal number of nominal members.

The earliest known mention of the term Orthodox Jews was made in the Berlinische Monatsschrift in 1795. The word Orthodox was borrowed from the general German Enlightenment discourse, and used not to denote a specific religious group, but rather those Jews who opposed Enlightenment. During the early and mid-19th century, with the advent of the progressive movements among German Jews, and especially early Reform Judaism, the title Orthodox became the epithet of the traditionalists who espoused conservative positions on the issues raised by modernization. They themselves often disliked the alien, Christian name, preferring titles like "Torah-true" (gesetztreu), and often declared they used it only for the sake of convenience. The Orthodox leader Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch referred to "the conviction commonly designated as Orthodox Judaism"; in 1882, when Rabbi Azriel Hildesheimer became convinced that the public understood that his philosophy and Liberal Judaism were radically different, he removed the word Orthodox from the name of his Hildesheimer Rabbinical Seminary. By the 1920s, the term became common and accepted even in Eastern Europe, and remains as such.[1]

Orthodoxy perceives itself ideologically as the only authentic continuation of Judaism throughout the ages, as it was until the crisis of modernity; in many basic aspects, such as belief in the unadulterated divinity of the Torah or strict adherence to precedent and tradition when ruling in matters of Jewish Law, Orthodoxy is indeed so. Its progressive opponents often shared this view, regarding it as a fossilized remnant of the past and lending credit to their own rivals' ideology.[2] Thus, the term Orthodox is often used generically to refer to traditional (even if only at the default sense, of being unrelated to the modernist non-Orthodox movements) synagogues, prayer rites, observances, and so forth.

However, academic research has taken a more nuanced approach, noting that the formation of Orthodox ideology and organizational frameworks was itself influenced by modernity. Thus was brought about by the need to defend and buttress the very concept of tradition, in a world where it was not self-evident anymore. When deep secularization and the dismantlement of communal structures uprooted the old order of Jewish life, traditionalist elements united to form groups which had a distinct self-understanding. This, and all that it entailed, constituted a notable change, for the Orthodox had to adapt to the new circumstances no less than anyone else; they developed novel, sometimes radically so, means of action and modes of thought. "Orthodoxization" was a contingent process, drawing from local circumstances and dependent on the extent of threat sensed by its proponents: a sharply-delineated Orthodox identity appeared in Central Europe, in Germany and Hungary, by the 1860s; a less stark one emerged in Eastern Europe during the Interwar period. Among the Jews of the Muslim lands, similar processes on a large scale only occurred around the 1970s, after they immigrated to Israel. Orthodoxy is often described as extremely conservative, ossifying a once-dynamic tradition due to the fear of legitimizing change. While this was not rarely true, its defining feature was not the forbidding of change and "freezing" Jewish heritage in its tracks, but rather the need to adapt to being but one segment of Judaism in a modern world inhospitable to traditional practice. Orthodoxy developed as a variegated "spectrum of reactions" as termed by Benjamin Brown involving in many cases much accommodation and leniency. Scholars nowadays, mainly since the mid-1980s, research Orthodox Judaism as a field in itself, examining how the need to confront modernity shaped and changed its beliefs, ideologies, social structure, and halakhic rulings, making it very much distinct from traditional Jewish society.[3]

Until the latter half of the 18th century, Jewish communities in Central and Western Europe were autonomous entities, another estate in the corporate order of society, with their own distinct privileges and obligations. They were led by the affluent wardens' class (parnasim), and judicially subject to rabbinical courts, which ruled in most civil matters. The rabbinical class held the monopoly over education and morals, much like the Christian clergy. Jewish Law was considered normative and enforced upon obstinate transgressors (common sinning being rebuked, but tolerated) with all communal sanctions: imprisonment, taxation, flogging, pillorying, and, especially, excommunication. Cultural, economic, and social exchange with non-Jewish society was limited and regulated.[citation needed]

This state of affairs came to an end with the rise of the modern, centralized state, which sought to appropriate all authority. The nobility, clergy, urban guilds, and all other corporate estates were gradually stripped of their privileges, inadvertently creating a more equal and secularized society. The Jews were but one of the groups affected: Excommunication was banned, and rabbinic courts lost almost all their jurisdiction. The state, especially since the French Revolution, was more and more inclined to tolerate the Jews only as a religious sect, not as an autonomous entity, and sought to reform and integrate them as "useful subjects". Jewish emancipation and equal rights were also discussed. Thus, the Christian (and especially Protestant) differentiation between "religious" and "secular" was applied to Jewish affairs, to which these concepts were traditionally alien. The rabbis were bemused when the state expected them to assume pastoral cares, foregoing their principal role as judiciary. Of secondary importance, much less than the civil and legal transformations, were the ideas of Enlightenment which chafed at the authority of tradition and faith.

By the turn of the century, the weakened rabbinic establishment was facing masses of a new kind of transgressors: They could not be classified as tolerable sinners overcome by their urges (khote le-te'avon), or as schismatics like the Sabbateans or Frankists, against whom all communal sanctions were levied. Their attitudes did not fit the criteria set when faith was a normative and self-evident part of worldly life, but rested on the realities of a new, secularized age. The wardens' class, which wielded most power within the communities, was rapidly acculturating, and often sought to oblige the reforming agenda of the state. Rabbi Elazar Fleckeles, who returned to Prague from the countryside in 1783, recalled that he first faced there "new vices" of principled irreverence towards tradition, rather than "old vices" like gossip or fornication. In Hamburg, Rabbi Raphael Cohen attempted to reinforce traditional norms. Cohen ordered all the men in his community to grow a beard, forbade holding hands with one's wife in public, and decried women who wore wigs, instead of visible headgear, to cover their hair; Cohen taxed and otherwise persecuted members of the priestly caste who left the city to marry divorcees, men who appealed to state courts, those who ate food cooked by Gentiles, and other transgressors. Hamburg's Jews repeatedly appealed to the authorities, which eventually justified Cohen. However, the unprecedented meddling in his jurisdiction profoundly shocked him, and dealt a blow to the prestige of the rabbinate.[citation needed]

An ideological challenge to rabbinic authority, in contrast to prosaic secularization, appeared in the form of the Haskalah (Jewish Enlightenment) movement which came to the fore in 1782. Hartwig Wessely, Moses Mendelssohn, and other maskilim called for a reform of Jewish education, abolition of coercion in matters of conscience, and other modernizing measures. They bypassed rabbinic approval and set themselves, at least implicitly, as a rival intellectual elite. A bitter struggle ensued. Reacting to Mendelssohn's assertion that freedom of conscience must replace communal censure, Rabbi Cohen of Hamburg commented:

The very foundation of the Law and commandments rests on coercion, enabling to force obedience and punish the transgressor. Denying this fact is akin to denying the sun at noon.[4]

However, maskilic-rabbinic rivalry ended rather soon in most Central Europe, for the governments imposed modernization upon their Jewish subjects, without regard to either party. Schools replaced traditional cheders, and standard German began to supplant Judeo-German. Differences between the establishment and the Enlightened became irrelevant, and the former often embraced the views of the latter (now antiquated, as more aggressive modes of acculturation replaced the Haskalah's program). In 1810, when philanthropist Israel Jacobson opened a reformed synagogue in Seesen, with a modernized ritual, he encountered little protest.

It was only the foundation of the Hamburg Temple in 1818 which mobilized the conservative elements. The organizers of the new Hamburg synagogue, who wished to appeal to acculturated Jews with a modernized ritual, openly defied not just the local rabbinic court that ordered them to desist but published learned tracts which castigated the entire rabbinical elite as hypocritical and obscurant. The moral threat they posed to rabbinic authority, as well as halakhic issues such as having a gentile play an organ on the Sabbath, were combined with severe theological issues. The Temple's revised prayer book omitted or rephrased petitions for the coming of the Messiah and renewal of sacrifices (post factum, it was considered as the first Reform liturgy). More than anything else, this doctrinal breach alarmed the traditionalists. Dozens of rabbis from across Europe united in support of the Hamburg rabbinic court, banning the major practices enacted there and offering halakhic grounds for forbidding any change in received custom. Most historians concur that the 18181821 Hamburg Temple dispute, with its concerted backlash against Reform and the emergence of a self-aware conservative ideology, marks the beginning of Orthodox Judaism.

The leader and organizer of the Orthodox camp during the dispute, and the most influential figure in early Orthodoxy, was Rabbi Moses Sofer of Pressburg, Hungary. Historian Jacob Katz regarded him as the first to fully grasp the realities of the modern age. Sofer understood that what remained of his political clout would soon disappear, and that he largely lost the ability to enforce observance; as Katz wrote, "obedience to halakha became dependent on recognizing its validity, and this very validity was challenged by those who did not obey". He was also deeply troubled by reports from his native Frankfurt and the arrival from the west of dismissed rabbis, ejected by progressive wardens, or pious families, fearing for the education of their children. These migrs often became his ardent followers.

Sofer's response to the crisis of traditional Jewish society was unremitting conservatism, canonizing every detail of prevalent norms in the observant community lest any compromise legitimize the progressives' claim that the law was fluid or redundant. He was unwilling to trade halakhic opinions with those he considered as merely pretending to honor the rules of rabbinic discourse, while intending to undermine the very system. Sofer also awarded customs absolute validity, regarding them as uniformly equivalent to vows; he warned already in 1793 that even the "custom of ignoramuses" (one known to be rooted solely in a mistake of the common masses) was to be meticulously observed and revered. Sofer was frank and vehement about his conservative stance, stating during the Hamburg dispute that prayers in the vernacular were not particularly problematic, but he forbade them because they constituted an innovation. He succinctly expressed his attitude in a wordplay he borrowed from the Talmud: "The new (Chadash, originally meaning new grain) is forbidden by the Torah anywhere." Regarding the new, ideologically-driven sinners, Sofer commented in 1818 that they should have been anathemized and banished from the People Israel like the heretical sects of yore.

Unlike most, if not all, rabbis in Central Europe, who had little choice but to compromise, Sofer enjoyed unique circumstances. He, too, had to tread carefully during the 1810s, tolerating a modernized synagogue in Pressburg and other innovations, and his yeshiva was nearly closed by warden Wolf Breisach. But in 1822, three poor (and therefore traditional) members of the community, whose deceased apostate brother bequeathed them a large fortune, rose to the wardens' board. Breisach died soon after, and the Pressburg community became dominated by the conservatives. Sofer also possessed a strong base in the form of his yeshiva, the world's largest at the time, with hundreds of students. And crucially, the large and privileged Hungarian nobility blocked most imperial reforms in the backward country, including those relevant to the Jews. Hungarian Jewry retained its pre-modern character well into the first half of the 19th century, allowing Sofer's disciples to establish a score of new yeshivas, at a time when these institutions were rapidly closing in the west, and a strong rabbinate in the communities which appointed them. A generation later, a self-aware Orthodoxy was already well entrenched in the country. Hungarian Jewry gave rise both to Orthodoxy in general, in a sense of a comprehensive response to modernity, and specifically to the traditionalist, militant ultra-Orthodoxy.[5]

The 18181821 controversy also elicited a very different response, which first arose in its very epicenter. Severe protests did not affect the Temple's congregants, eventually leading the wardens of Hamburg's Jewish community to a comprehensive compromise for the sake of unity. They dismissed the elderly, traditional Chief Dayan Baruch Oser and appointed Isaac Bernays. The latter was a university graduate, clean-shaven, and modernized, who could appeal to the acculturated and the young. Bernays signified a new era, and is believed by historians to be the first modern rabbi, fitting the demands of the emancipation: His contract forbade him to tax, punish, or employ coercion, and he lacked any political or judiciary power. He was also forbidden from interfering in the Temple's conduct. Though conservative in the principal issues of faith, in aesthetic, cultural, and civil matters, Bernays was a reformer and resembled the Temple leaders. He introduced secular studies for children, wore a cassock like a Protestant clergyman, and delivered frequent vernacular sermons. He forbade the spontaneous, informal character of synagogue conduct typical of Ashkenazi tradition, and ordered prayers to be somber and dignified. Bernays' style re-unified the Hamburg community by drawing most of the Temple's members back to the main synagogue, having met their aesthetic demands (rather than the theological ones, raised by a learned few) met.[6]

The combination of religious conservatism and embrace of modernity in everything else was emulated elsewhere, earning the epithet "Neo-Orthodoxy". Bernays and his like-minded followers, such as Rabbi Jacob Ettlinger, fully accepted the platform of the moderate Haskalah, which now lost its progressive edge. While old-style traditional life was still quite extant in Germany until the 1840s, rapid secularization and acculturation turned Neo-Orthodoxy into the strict right-wing of German Jewry. It was fully articulated by Bernays' disciples Samson Raphael Hirsch and Azriel Hildesheimer, active in mid-century. Hirsch, a Hamburg native who was ten during the Temple dispute, combined fierce Orthodox dogmatism and militancy against rival interpretations of Judaism, with leniency on many modern issues and an elated embrace of German culture. Neo-Orthodoxy also spread to other parts and Western Europe.

While insisting on strict observance, the movement both tolerated and actively advocated modernization: Formal religious education for girls, virtually unheard of in traditional society, was introduced; modesty and gender separation were relaxed in favour of the prevalent norms of German society, while men went clean-shaven and dressed like their non-Jewish compatriots; and exclusive Torah study virtually disappeared, supplanted with more basic religious studies (while German Bildung was incorporated), which were to provide children with practical halakhic knowledge for life in the secular world. Synagogue ritual was reformed in semblance of prevalent aesthetic conceptions, much like non-Orthodox synagogues though without the ideological undertone, and the liturgy was often abbreviated. Neo-Orthodoxy mostly did not attempt to thoroughly reconcile its conduct and traditional halakhic or moral norms (which, among others, banned Torah study for women). Rather, it adopted compartmentalization, de facto limiting Judaism to the private and religious sphere, while yielding to outer society in the public sphere.[7][8] While conservative Rabbis in Hungary still thought in terms of the now-lost communal autonomy, the Neo-Orthodox acknowledged, at least de facto, the confessionalization of Judaism under emancipation, turning it from an all-encompassing structure defining every aspect of one's life, into a private religious conviction.

In the late 1830s, modernist pressures in Germany shifted from the secularization debate, progressing even into the "purely religious" sphere of theology and liturgy. A new generation of young, modern university-trained rabbis (many German states already required communal rabbis to possess such education) sought to reconcile Judaism with the historical-critical study of scripture and the dominant philosophies of the day, especially Kant and Hegel. Influenced by the critical "Science of Judaism" (Wissenschaft des Judentums) pioneered by Leopold Zunz, and often in emulation of the Liberal Protestant milieu, they reexamined and undermined beliefs held as sacred in traditional circles, especially the notion of an unbroken chain from Sinai to the Sages. The more radical among the Wissenschaft rabbis, unwilling to either limit critical analysis or its practical application, coalesced around Rabbi Abraham Geiger to establish the full-fledged Reform Judaism. Between 1844 and 1846, Geiger organized three rabbinical synods in Braunschweig, Frankfurt and Breslau, to determine how to refashion Judaism in present times.

The Reform conferences were met with uproar by the Orthodox. Warden Hirsch Lehren of Amsterdam and Rabbi Jacob Ettlinger of Altona both organized anti-Reform manifestos, vehemently denouncing the new initiatives, signed by scores of rabbis from Europe and the Middle East. The tone of the undersigned varied considerably along geographic lines: letters from the traditional societies in Eastern Europe and the Ottoman Empire, implored local leaders to petition the authorities and have them ban the movement. Signatories from Central and Western Europe used terms commensurate with the liberal age. All were implored by the petitioners to be brief and accessible; complex halakhic arguments, intended to convince the rabbinic elite in past generations, were replaced by an appeal to the secularized masses, the new target audience.

The struggle with Wissenschaft criticism profoundly shaped the Orthodox. For centuries, Ashkenazi rabbinic authorities espoused Nahmanides' position that the Talmudic exegesis, which derived laws from the Torah's text by employing complex hermeneutics, was binding d'Oraita. Geiger and others presented exegesis as an arbitrary, illogical process, and consequently defenders of tradition embraced Maimonides' marginalized claim that the Sages merely buttressed already received laws with biblical citations, rather than actually deriving them through exegesis. As Jay Harris commented: "An insulated orthodox, or, rather, traditional rabbinate, feeling no pressing need to defend the validity of the Oral Law, could confidently appropriate the vision of most medieval rabbinic scholars; a defensive German Orthodoxy, by contrast, could not. ... Thus began a shift in understanding that led Orthodox rabbis and historians in the modern period to insist that the entire Oral Law was revealed by God to Moses at Sinai." 19th-Century Orthodox commentaries, like those authored by Malbim, invested great effort to amplify the notion that the Oral and Written Law were intertwined and inseparable.[9]

Wissenschaft posed a greater challenge to the modernized neo-Orthodox than to insulated traditionalist. Hirsch and Hildesheimer were divided on the matter, basically anticipating all modernist Orthodox attitudes to the historical-critical method. Hirsch argued that analyzing even the slightest minutiae of tradition as products of their historical context, was akin to denying the divine origin and timeless relevance of it all. Hildesheimer consented to research under limits, subjugating it to the predetermined sanctity of the subject matter and accepting its results only when they did not conflict with the latter. More importantly, while he was content to engage it academically, he utterly opposed its practical application in religious questions, where only traditional methods were to be used. Hildesheimer's approach was emulated by his disciple Rabbi David Zvi Hoffmann, who was both a scholar of note and a consummate apologetic.[10] His polemic against the Graf-Wellhausen hypothesis (Hoffman declared that for him, the unity of the Pentateuch was a given, regardless of research) remains the classical Orthodox response to Higher Criticism. Hirsch often lambasted Hoffman for contextualizing rabbinic literature.[11]

All of them stressed ceaselessly the importance of dogmatic adherence to Torah min ha-Shamayim, which led them to conflict with Rabbi Zecharias Frankel, Chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary of Breslau. Unlike the Reform camp, Frankel both insisted on strict observance and displayed great reverence towards tradition. But though regarded with much appreciation by many conservatives, his keen practice of Wissenschaft made him a suspect in the eyes of Hirsch and Hildesheimer. They demanded again and again that he unambiguously state his beliefs concerning the nature of revelation. In 1859, Frankel published a critical study of the Mishnah, and casually added that all commandments classified as "Law given to Moses at Sinai" were merely ancient customs accepted as such (he broadened Asher ben Jehiel's opinion). Hirsch and Hildesheimer seized the opportunity and launched a prolonged public campaign against him, accusing him of heresy. Concerned that public opinion regarded both neo-Orthodoxy and Frankel's "Positive-Historical School" centered at Breslau as similarly observant and traditionalist, the two stressed that the difference was dogmatic and not halakhic. They managed to tarnish Frankel's reputation in the traditional camp and make him illegitimate in the eyes of many. The Positive-Historical School is regarded by Conservative Judaism as an intellectual forerunner.[12] While Hildesheimer cared to distinguish between Frankel's observant disciples and the proponents of Reform, he wrote in his diary: how meager is the principal difference between the Breslau School, who don silk gloves at their work, and Geiger who wields a sledgehammer.[13]

During the 1840s in Germany, as traditionalists became a clear minority, some Orthodox rabbis, like Salomo Eger of Posen, urged to adopt Moses Sofer's position and anathemize the principally nonobservant. Eating, worshipping or marrying with them were to be banned. Rabbi Jacob Ettlinger, whose journal Treue Zionswchter was the first regular Orthodox newspaper (signifying the coalescence of a distinct Orthodox millieu), refused to heed their call. Ettlinger, and German neo-Orthodoxy in his steps, chose to regard the modern secularized Jew as a transgressor and not as a schismatic. He adopted Maimonides' interpretation of the Talmudic concept tinok shenishba (captured infant), a Jew by birth who was not raised as such and therefore could be absolved for not practicing the Law, and greatly expanded it to serve the Orthodox need to tolerate the nonobservant majority (many of their own congregants were far removed from strict practice). For example, he allowed to drink wine poured by Sabbath desecrators, and to ignore other halakhic sanctions. Yet German neo-Orthodoxy could not legitimize nonobservance, and adopted a complex hierarchical approach, softer than traditional sanctions but no less intent on differentiating between sinners and righteous. Reform rabbis or lay leaders, considered ideological opponents, were castigated, while the common mass was to be handled carefully.[14]

Some German neo-Orthodox believed that while doomed to a minority status in their native country, their ideology could successfully confront modernity and unify Judaism in the more traditional communities to the east. In 1847, Hirsch was elected Chief Rabbi of Moravia, where old rabbinic culture and yeshivas were still extant. He soon found his expectations dashed: The traditionalist rabbis scorned him for his European manners and lack of Talmudic acumen, and were enraged by his attempts to impose synagogue reform and to establish a modern rabbinical seminary with comprehensive secular studies. The progressives viewed him as too conservative. After just four years of constant strife, he utterly lost faith in the possibility of reuniting the broad Jewish public. In 1851, a small group in Frankfurt am Main which opposed the Reform character of the Jewish community turned to Hirsch. He led them for the remainder of his life, finding Frankfurt an ideal location to implement his unique ideology, which amalgamated acculturation, dogmatic theology, thorough observance and now also strict secessionism from the non-Orthodox.

In the very same year, Hildesheimer set out for Hungary. Confounded by rapid urbanization and acculturation which gave rise to what was known as "Neology", a nonobservant laity served by rabbis who mostly favoured the Positive-Historical approach the elderly local rabbis at first welcomed Hildesheimer. He opened a modern school in Eisenstadt, which combined secular and religious studies, and traditionalists such as Moshe Schick and Yehudah Aszd sent their sons there. Samuel Benjamin Sofer, the heir of late Hatam Sofer, considered appointing Hildesheimer as his assistant-rabbi in Pressburg and instituting secular studies in the city's great yeshiva. The rabbi of Eisenstadt believed that only a full-fledged modern rabbinical seminary will serve to fulfill his neo-Orthodox agenda. In the 1850s and 1860s, however, a radical reactionary Orthodox party coalesced in the backward northeastern regions of Hungary. Led by Rabbi Hillel Lichtenstein, his son-in-law Akiva Yosef Schlesinger and decisor Chaim Sofer, the "zealots" were deeply shocked by the demise of the traditional world into which they were born. Like Moses Sofer a generation before them, these Orthodox migr left the acculturating west and moved east, to a yet pre-modern environment which they were determined to safeguard. Lichtenstein ruled out any compromise with modernity, insisting of maintaining Yiddish and traditional dress; they considered the Neologs as already beyond the pale of Judaism, and were more concerned with neo-Orthodoxy, which they regarded as a thinly-veiled gateway for a similar fate. Chaim Sofer summarized their view of Hildesheimer: The wicked Hildesheimer is the horse and chariot of the Evil Inclination... All the heretics in the last century did not seek to undermine the Law and the Faith as he does.

In their struggle against acculturation, the Hungarian ultra-Orthodox found themselves hard pressed to provide strong halakhic arguments. Michael Silber wrote: These issues, even most of the religious reforms, fell into gray areas not easily treated within Halakha. It was often too flexible or ambiguous, at times silent, or worse yet, embarrassingly lenient. Schlesinger was forced to venture outside of normative law, into the mystical writings and other fringe sources, to buttress his ideology. Most Hungarian Orthodox rabbis, while sympathetic to the "zealots"' cause, dismissed their legal arguments. In 1865, the ultra-Orthodox convened in Nagymihly and issued a ban on various synagogue reforms, intended not against the Neologs but against developments in the Orthodox camp, especially after Samuel Sofer violated his father's expressed ban and instituted German-language sermons in Pressburg. Schick, the country's most prominent decisor, and other leading rabbis refused to sign, though they did not publicly oppose the decree. Hildesheimer's planned seminary was also too radical for the mainstream rabbis, and he became marginalized and isolated by 1864.[15]

The internal Orthodox division was conflated by growing tension with the Neologs. In 1869, the Hungarian government convened a General Jewish Congress which was aimed at creating a national representative body. Fearing Neolog domination, the Orthodox seceded from the Congress and appealed to Parliament in the name of religious freedom this demonstrated a deep internalization of the new circumstances; just in 1851, Orthodox leader Meir Eisenstaedter petitioned the authorities to restore the coercive powers of the communities. In 1871 the government recognized a separate Orthodox national committee. Communities which refused to join either side, labeled "Status Quo", were subject to intense Orthodox condemnation. Yet the Orthodox tolerated countless nonobservant Jews as long as they affiliated with the national committee: Adam Ferziger stressed that membership and loyalty to one of the respective organizations, rather than beliefs and ritual behavior, emerged as the definitive manifestation of Jewish identity. The Hungarian schism was the most radical internal separation among the Jews of Europe. Hildesheimer left back to Germany soon after, disillusioned though not as pessimistic as Hirsch. He was appointed rabbi of the small Orthodox sub-community in Berlin (which had separate religious institutions but was not formally independent of the Liberal majority), where he finally established his seminary.[16]

In 1877, a law enabling Jews to secede from their communities without conversion again, a stark example that Judaism was now confessional, not corporate was passed in Germany. Hirsch withdrew his congregation from the Frankfurt community and decreed that all the Orthodox should do the same. However, even in Frankfurt he encountered dismissal. Unlike the heterogeneous communities of Hungary, which often consisted of recent immigrants, Frankfurt and most German communities were close-knit. The majority of Hirsch's congregants enlisted Rabbi Seligman Baer Bamberger, who was older and more conservative. Bamberger was both concerned with the principal of unity among the People Israel and dismissive of Hirsch, whom he regarded as unlearned and overly acculturated. He decreed that since the mother community was willing to finance Orthodox services and allow them religious freedom, secession was unwarranted. Eventually, less than 80 families from Hirsch's 300-strong congregation followed their own rabbi. The vast majority of the 15%20% of German Jews affiliated with Orthodox institutions cared little for the polemic, and did not secede due to prosaic reasons of finance and familial relations. Only a handful of Secessionist, Austrittorthodox, communities were established in the Reich; almost everyone remained as Communal Orthodox, Gemeindeortodox, within Liberal mother congregations. The Communal Orthodox argued that their approach was both true to Jewish unity, and decisive in maintaining public standards of observance and traditional education in Liberal communities, while the Secessionists viewed them as hypocritical middle-of-the-roaders.[17]

The fierce conflicts in Hungary and Germany, and the emergence of distinctly Orthodox communities and ideologies, were the exception rather than the rule in Central and Western Europe. France, Britain, Bohemia, Austria and other countries saw both a virtual disappearance of observance and a lack of serious interest in bridging Judaism and modernity. The official rabbinate remained technically traditional, at least in the default sense of not introducing ideological change.[18] The organ a symbol of Reform in Germany since 1818, so much that Hildesheimer seminarians had to sign a declaration that they will never serve in a synagogue which introduced one was accepted (not just for weekday use but also on the Sabbath) with little qualm by the French Consistoire in 1856, as part of a series of synagogue regulations passed by Chief Rabbi Salomon Ulmann. Even Rabbi Solomon Klein of Colmar, the leader of Alsatian conservatives who partook in the castigation of Zecharias Frankel, had the instrument in his community.[19] In England, Rabbi Nathan Marcus Adler's shared a very similar approach: It was vehemently conservative in principle and combated ideological reformers, yet served a nonobservant public as Todd Endelman noted, While respectful of tradition, most English-born Jews were not orthodox in terms of personal practice. Nonetheless they were content to remain within an orthodox congregational framework and introduced considerable synagogue reforms.[20]

The much belated pace of modernization in Russia, Congress Poland and the Romanian principalities, where harsh discrimination and active persecution of the Jews continued until 1917, delayed the crisis of traditional society for decades. Old-style education in the heder and yeshiva remained the norm, retaining Hebrew as the language of the elite and Yiddish as the vernacular. The defining fault-line of Eastern European Jews was between the Hasidim and the Misnagdic reaction against them. Reform attempts by the Czar's government, like the school modernization under Max Lilienthal or the foundation of rabbinical seminaries and the mandating of communities to appoint clerks known as "official rabbis", all had little influence. Communal autonomy and the rabbinic courts' jurisdiction were abolished in 1844, but economic and social seclusion remained, ensuring the authority of Jewish institutions and traditions de facto. In 1880, there were only 21,308 Jewish pupils in government schools, out of some 5million Jews in total; In 1897, 97% of the 5.2million Jews in the Pale of Settlement and Congress Poland declared Yiddish their mother tongue, and only 26% possessed any literacy in Russian. Though the Eastern European Haskalah challenged the traditional establishment unlike its western counterpart, no acculturation process turned it irrelevant; it flourished from the 1820s until the 1890s the latter's hegemony over the vast majority was self-evident. The leading rabbis maintained the old conception of communal unity: In 1882, when an Orthodox party in Galicia appealed for the right of secession, the Netziv and other Russian rabbis declared it forbidden and contradicting the idea of Israel's oneness.[21]

While slow, change was by no means absent. In the 1860s and 1870s, anticipating a communal disintegration like the one in the west, moderate maskilic rabbis like Yitzchak Yaacov Reines and Yechiel Michel Pines called for inclusion of secular studies in the heders and yeshivas, a careful modernization, and an ecumenical attempt to form a consensus on necessary adaptation of halakha to novel times. Their initiative was thwarted by a combination of strong anti-traditional invective on behalf of the radical, secularist maskilim and conservative intransigence from the leading rabbis, especially during the bitter polemic which erupted after Moshe Leib Lilienblum's 1868 call for a reconsideration of Talmudic strictures. Reines, Pines and their associates would gradually form the nucleus of Religious Zionism, while their conservative opponents would eventually adopt the epithet Haredim (then, and also much later, still a generic term for the observant and the pious).[22]

The attitude toward Jewish nationalism, particularly Zionism, and its nonobservant if not staunchly secularist leaders and partisans, was the key question facing the traditionalists of Eastern Europe. Closely intertwined were issues of modernization in general: As noted by Joseph Salmon, the future religious Zionists (organized in the Mizrahi since 1902) were not only supportive of the national agenda per se, but deeply motivated by criticism of the prevalent Jewish society, a positive reaction to modernity and a willingness to tolerate nonobservance while affirming traditional faith and practice. Their proto-Haredi opponents sharply rejected all of the former positions and espoused staunch conservatism, which idealized existing norms. Any illusion that differences could be blanded and a united observant pro-Zionist front would be formed, were dashed between 1897 and 1899, as both the Eastern European nationalist intellectuals and Theodor Herzl himself revealed an uncompromising secularist agenda, forcing traditionalist leaders to pick sides. In 1900, the anti-Zionist pamphlet Or la-Yesharim, endorsed by many Russian and Polish rabbis, largely demarcated the lines between the proto-Haredi majority and the Mizrahi minority, and terminated dialogue; in 1911, when the 10th World Zionist Congress voted in favour of propagating non-religious cultural work and education, a large segment of the Mizrahi seceded and joined the anti-Zionists.[23]

In 1907, Eastern European proto-Haredi elements formed the Knesseth Israel party, a modern framework created in recognition of the deficiencies of existing institutions. It dissipated within a year. German Neo-Orthodoxy, in the meantime, developed a keen interest in the traditional Jewish masses of Russian and Poland; if at the past they were considered primitive, a disillusionment with emancipation and enlightenment made many young assimilated German Orthodox youth embark on journeys to East European yeshivot, in search of authenticity. The German secessionists already possessed a platform of their own, the Freie Vereinigung fr die Interessen des Orthodoxen Judentums, founded by Samson Raphael Hirsch in 1885. In 1912, two German FVIOJ leaders, Isaac Breuer and Jacob Rosenheim, managed to organize a meeting of 300 seceding Mizrahi, proto-Haredi and secessionist Neo-Orthodox delegate in Katowice, creating the Agudath Israel party. While the Germans were a tiny minority in comparison to the Eastern Europeans, their modern education made them a prominent elite in the new organization, which strove to provide a comprehensive response to world Jewry's challenges in a strictly observant spirit. The Agudah immediately formed its Council of Torah Sages as supreme rabbinic leadership body. Many ultra-traditionalist elements in Eastern Europe, like the Belz and Lubavitch Hasidim, refused to join, viewing the movement as a dangerous innovation; and the organized Orthodox in Hungary rejected it as well, especially after it did not affirm a commitment to communal secession in 1923.

In the Interwar period, sweeping secularization and acculturation deracinated old Jewish society in Eastern Europe. The October Revolution granted civil equality and imposed anti-religious persecutions, radically transforming Russian Jewry within a decade; the lifting of formal discrimination also strongly affected the Jews of independent Poland, Lithuania and other states. In the 1930s, it was estimated that no more than 20%33% of Poland's Jews, the last stronghold of traditionalism where many were still living in rural and culturally-secluded communities, could be considered strictly observant.[24] Only upon having become an embattled (though still quite large) minority, did the local traditionalists complete their transformation into Orthodox, albeit never as starkly as in Hungary or Germany. Eastern European Orthodoxy, whether Agudah or Mizrahi, always preferred cultural and educational independence to communal secession, and maintained strong ties and self-identification with the general Jewish public.[21] Within its ranks, the 150-years-long struggle between Hasidim and Misnagdim was largely subsided; the latter were even dubbed henceforth as "Litvaks", as the anti-Hasidic component in their identity was marginalized. In the interwar period, Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan emerged as the popular leader of the Eastern European Orthodox, particularly the Agudah-leaning.

American Jewry of the 19th century, small and lacking traditional institutions or strong rabbinic presence due to its immigrant-based nature, was a hotbed of religious innovation. Voluntary congregations, rather than corporate communities, were the norm; separation of church and state, and dynamic religiosity of the independent Protestant model, shaped synagogue life. In the mid-19th century, Reform Judaism spread rapidly, advocating a formal relinquishment of traditions very few in the secularized, open environment observed anyhow; the United States would be derisively named the Treife Medina, or "Profane Country", in Yiddish. Conservative elements, concerned mainly with public standards of observance in critical fields like marriage, rallied around Isaac Leeser. Lacking a rabbinic ordination and little knowledgeable by European standards, Leeser was an ultra-traditionalist in his American milieu. In 1845 he introduced the words "Orthodox" and "Orthodoxy" into the American Jewish discourse, in the sense of opposing Reform;[25] while admiring Samson Raphael Hirsch, Leeser was an even stauncher proponent of Zecharias Frankel, whom he considered the "leader of the Orthodox party" at a time when Positive-Historical and Orthodox positions were barely discernible from each other to most observers (in 1861, Leeser defended Frankel in the polemic instigated by Hirsch).[26]

Indeed, a broad non-Reform, relatively traditional camp slowly coalesced as the minority within American Jewry; while strict in relation to their progressive opponents, they served a nonobservant public and instituted thorough synagogue reforms omission of piyyutim from the liturgy, English-language sermons and secular education for the clergy were the norm in most,[27] and many Orthodox synagogues in America did not partition men and women.[28] In 1885, the antinomian Pittsburgh Platform moved a broad coalition of conservative religious leaders to found the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. They variously termed their ideology, which was never consistent and mainly motivated by a rejection of Reform, as "Enlightened Orthodoxy" or "Conservative Judaism". The latter term would only gradually assume a clearly distinct meaning.

To their right, strictly traditionalist Eastern European immigrants formed the Union of Orthodox Rabbis in 1902, in direct opposition to the Americanized character of the OU and JTS. The UOR frowned upon English-language sermons, secular education and acculturation in general. Even before that, in 1897, an old-style yeshiva, RIETS, was founded in New York. Eventually, its students rebelled in 1908, demanding a modern rabbinic training much like that of their peers in JTS. In 1915, RIETS was reorganized as a decidedly Modern Orthodox institution, and a merger with the JTS was also discussed.[29] In 1923, the Rabbinical Council of America was established as the clerical association of the OU.

Only in the postwar era, did the vague traditional coalition come to a definite end. During and after the Holocaust, a new wave of strictly observant refugees arrived from Eastern and Central Europe. They often regarded even the UOR as too lenient and Americanized. Typical of these was Rabbi Aaron Kotler, who established Lakewood Yeshiva in New Jersey during 1943. Alarmed by the enticing American environment, Kotler turned his institution into an enclave, around which an entire community slowly evolved. It was very different from his prewar yeshiva at Kletsk, Poland, the students of which were but a segment of the general Jewish population and mingled with the rest of the population. Lakewood pioneered the homogeneous, voluntary and enclavist model of postwar Haredi communities, which were independent entities with their own developing subculture.[30] The new arrivals soon dominated the traditionalist wing of American Jewry, forcing the locals to adopt more rigorous positions. Concurrently, the younger generation in the JTS and the Rabbinical Assembly demanded greater clarity, theological unambiguity and halakhic independence from the Orthodox veto on serious innovations in 1935, for example, the RA yielded to such pressures and shelved its proposal for a solution to the agunah predicament. "Conservative Judaism", now adopted as an exclusive label by most JTS graduates and RA members, became a truly distinct movement. In 1950, the Conservatives signaled their break with Orthodox halakhic authorities, with the acceptance of a far-reaching legal decision, which allowed one to drive to the synagogue and to use electricity on Sabbath.[31]

Between the ultra-Orthodox and Conservatives, Modern Orthodoxy in America also coalesced, becoming less a generic term and more a distinct movement. Its leader in the postwar era, Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, left Agudas Israel to adopt both pro-Zionist positions and a positive, if reserved, attitude toward Western culture. As dean of RIETS and honorary chair of RCA's halakha committee, Soloveitchik shaped Modern Orthodoxy for decades.[32] While ideological differences with the Conservatives were clear, as the RCA stressed the divinely revealed status of the Torah and a strict observance of halakha, sociological boundaries were less so. Many members of the Modern Orthodox public were barely observant, and a considerable number of communities did not install a gender partition in their synagogues physically separate seating became the distinguishing mark of Orthodox/Conservative affiliation in the 1950s, and was strongly promulgated by the RCA for many years.[33] As late as 1997, seven OU congregations still lacked a partition.[28]

A definite and conclusive credo was never formulated in Judaism; the very question whether it contains any equivalent of dogma is a matter of intense scholarly controversy. Some researchers attempted to argue that the importance of daily practice and punctilious adherence to halakha (Jewish law) relegated theoretical issues to an ancillary status. Others dismissed this view entirely, citing the debates in ancient rabbinic sources which castigated various heresies with little reference to observance. However, while lacking a uniform doctrine, Orthodox Judaism is basically united in affirming several core beliefs, disavowal of which is considered major blasphemy. As in other aspects, Orthodox positions reflect the mainstream of traditional Rabbinic Judaism through the ages.

Attempts to codify these beliefs were undertaken by several medieval authorities, including Saadia Gaon and Joseph Albo. Each composed his own creed. Yet the 13 principles expounded by Maimonides in his Commentary on the Mishna, authored in the 1160s, eventually proved the most widely accepted. Various points for example, Albo listed merely three fundamentals, and did not regard the Messiah as a key tenet the exact formulation, and the status of disbelievers (whether mere errants or heretics who can no longer be considered part of the People Israel) were contested by many of Maimonides' contemporaries and later sages. Many of their detractors did so from a maximalist position, arguing that the entire corpus of the Torah and the sayings of ancient sages were of canonical stature, not just certain selected beliefs. But in recent centuries, the 13 Principles became standard, and are considered binding and cardinal by Orthodox authorities in a virtually universal manner.[34]

During the Middle Ages, two systems of thought competed for theological primacy, their advocates promoting them as explanatory foundations for the observance of the Law. One was the rationalist-philosophic school, which endeavored to present all commandments as serving higher moral and ethical purposes, while the other was the mystical tradition, exemplified in Kabbalah, which assigned each rite with a role in the hidden dimensions of reality. Sheer obedience, without much thought and derived from faithfulness to one's community and ancestry, was believed fit only for the common people, while the educated classes chose either of the two schools. In the modern era, the prestige of both suffered severe blows, and "naive faith" became popular. At a time when excessive contemplation in matters of belief was associated with secularization, luminaries such as Yisrael Meir Kagan stressed the importance of simple, unsophisticated commitment to the precepts passed down from the Beatified Sages. This is still the standard in the ultra-Orthodox world.[35]

The basic tenets of Orthodoxy, drawn from ancient sources like the Talmud as well as later sages, prominently and chiefly include the attributes of God in Judaism: one and indivisible, preceding all creation which he alone brought into being, eternal, omniscient, omnipotent, absolutely incorporeal, and beyond human reason. This basis is evoked in many foundational texts, and is repeated often in the daily prayers, such as in Judaism's creed-like Shema Yisrael: "Hear, O Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is One."

Maimonides delineated this understanding of a monotheistic, personal God in the opening six articles of his thirteen. The six concern God's status as the sole creator, his oneness, his impalpability, that he is first and last, that God alone, and no other being, may be worshipped, and that he is omniscient. The supremacy of God of Israel is even applied on non-Jews, who, according to most rabbinic opinions, are banned from the worship of other deities, though they are allowed to "associate" lower divine beings in their faith in God (this notion was mainly used to allow contact with Christians, proving they were not idolaters with whom any business dealings and the like are forbidden.)

The utter imperceptibility of God, considered as beyond human reason and only reachable through what he chose to reveal, was emphasized among others in the ancient ban on making any image of him. Maimonides and virtually all sages in his time and since then also stressed that the creator is incorporeal, lacking "any semblance of a body"; while almost taken for granted since the Middle Ages, Maimonides and his contemporaries noted that anthropomorphic conceptions of God were quite common in their time.

The medieval tension between God's transcendence and equanimity, on the one hand, and his contact and interest in his creation, on the other, found its most popular resolution in the esoteric Kabbalah. The Kabbalists asserted that while God himself is beyond the universe, he progressively unfolds into the created realm via a series of inferior emanations, or sefirot, each a refraction of the perfect godhead. While widely received, this system also proved contentious and some authorities lambasted it as a threat to God's unity.[36] In modern times it is upheld, at least tacitly, in many traditionalist Orthodox circles, while Modern Orthodoxy mostly ignores it without confronting the notion directly.

The defining doctrine of Orthodox Judaism is the belief that the Torah ("Teaching" or "Law"), both the written scripture of the Pentateuch and the oral tradition explicating it, was revealed by God to Moses on Mount Sinai, and that it was transmitted faithfully from Sinai in an unbroken chain ever since. One of the foundational texts of rabbinic literature is the list opening the Ethics of the Fathers, enumerating the sages who received and passed on the Torah, from Moses through Joshua, the Elders, and Prophets, and then onward until Hillel the Elder and Shammai. This core belief is referred to in classical sources as "The Law/Teaching is from the Heavens" (Torah min HaShamayim).

The basic philosophy of Orthodoxy is that the body of revelation is total and complete; its interpretation and application under new circumstances, required of scholars in every generation, is conceived as an act of inferring and elaborating based on already prescribed methods, not of innovation or addition. One clause in the Jerusalem Talmud asserts that anything which a veteran disciple shall teach was already given at Sinai; and a story in the Babylonian Talmud claims that upon seeing the immensely intricate deduction of future Rabbi Akiva in a vision, Moses himself was at loss, until Akiva proclaimed that everything he teaches was handed over to Moses. The Written and Oral Torah are believed to be intertwined and mutually reliant, for the latter is a source to many of the divine commandments, and the text of the Pentateuch is seen as incomprehensible in itself. God's will may only be surmised by appealing to the Oral Torah revealing the text's allegorical, anagogical, or tropological meaning, not by literalist reading.

Lacunae in received tradition or disagreements between early sages are attributed to disruptions, especially persecutions which caused to that "the Torah was forgotten in Israel" according to rabbinic lore, these eventually compelled the legists to write down the Oral Law in the Mishna and Talmud. Yet, the wholeness of the original divine message, and the reliability of those who transmitted it through the ages, are axiomatic. One of the primary intellectual exercises of Torah scholars is to locate discrepancies between Talmudic or other passages and then demonstrate by complex logical steps (presumably proving each passage referred to a slightly different situation etc.) that there is actually no contradiction.[37] Like other traditional, non-liberal religions, Orthodox Judaism considers revelation as propositional, explicit, verbal and unambiguous, that may serve as a firm source of authority for a set of religious commandments. Modernist understandings of revelation as a subjective, humanly-conditioned experience are rejected by the Orthodox mainstream,[38] though some thinkers at the end of the liberal wing did try to promote such views, finding virtually no acceptance from the establishment.[39]

An important ramification of Torah min HaShamayim in modern times is the reserved, and often totally rejectionist, attitude of Orthodoxy toward the historical-critical method, particularly higher criticism of the Bible. A refusal by rabbis to significantly employ such tools in determining halakhic decisions, and insistence on traditional methods and the need for consensus and continuity with past authorities, is a demarcation line separating the most liberal-leaning Orthodox rabbinic circles from the most right-wing non-Orthodox ones.[40]

While the Sinaitic event is perceived as the supreme and binding act of revelation, it is not the only one. Rabbinic tradition acknowledges matter handed down from the Prophets, as well as announcements from God later on. Secret lore or Kabbalah, allegedly revealed to illustrious figures in the past and passed on through elitist circles, is widely (albeit not universally) esteemed. While not a few prominent rabbis deplored Kabbalah, and considered it a late forgery, most generally accepted it as legitimate. However, its status in determining normative halakhic decision-making, which is binding for the entire community and not just intended for spiritualists who voluntarily adopt kabbalistic strictures, was always highly controversial. Leading decisors openly applied criteria from Kabbalah in their rulings, while others did so only inadvertently, and many denied it any role in normative halakha. A closely related mystical phenomenon is the belief in Magidim, supposed dreamlike apparitions or visions, that may inform those who experience them with certain divine knowledge.[41]

Belief in a future Messiah is central to Orthodox Judaism. According to this doctrine, a king will arise from King David's lineage, and will bring with him signs such as the restoration of the Temple, peace, and universal acceptance of God.[42] The Messiah will embark on a quest to gather all Jews to the Holy Land, will proclaim prophethood, and will restore the Davidic Monarchy.

Classical Judaism did incorporate a tradition of belief in the resurrection of the dead.[43]:p. 1 There is scriptural basis for this doctrine, quoted by the Mishnah:[43]:p. 24 "All Israelites have a share in the World-to-Come, as it is written: And your people, all of them righteous, Shall possess the land for all time; They are the shoot that I planted, My handiwork in which I glory (Isa 60:21)." The Mishnah also brands as heretics any Jew who rejects the doctrine of resurrection or its origin from the Torah.[43]:p. 25 Those who deny the doctrine are deemed to receive no share in the World-to-Come.[43]:p. 26 The Pharisees believed in both a bodily resurrection and the immortality of the soul. They also believed that acts in this world would affect the state of life in the next world.[44]:p. 61 The Mishnah Sahendrin 10 clarifies that only those who follow the correct theology will have a place in the World to Come.[43]:p. 66

There are other passing references to the afterlife in Mishnaic tractates. A particularly important one in the Berakhot informs that the Jewish belief in the afterlife was established long before the compilation of the Mishnah.[43]:p. 70[failed verification] Biblical tradition categorically mentions Sheol sixty-five times. It is described as an underworld containing the gathering of the dead with their families.[44]:p. 19 Numbers 16:30 states that Korah went into Sheol alive, to describe his death in divine retribution.[44]:p. 20 The deceased who reside in Sheol have a "nebulous" existence and there is no reward or punishment in Sheol, which is represented as a dark and gloomy place. But a distinction is made for kings who are said to be greeted by other kings when entering Sheol.[44]:p.21 Biblical poetry suggests that resurrection from Sheol is possible.[44]:p. 22 Prophetic narratives of resurrection in the Bible have been labelled as an external cultural influence by some scholars.[44]:p. 23

The Talmudic discourse expanded on the details of the World to Come. This was to motivate Jewish compliance with their religious codes.[44]:p. 79 In brief, the righteous will be rewarded with a place in Gan Eden, the wicked will be punished in Gehinnom, and the resurrection will take place in the Messianic age. The sequence of these events is unclear.[44]:p. 81 Rabbis have supported the concept of resurrection with plenteous Biblical citations, and have shown it as a sign of God's omnipotence.[45]

A relatively thorough observance of halakha rather than any theological and doctrinal matters, which are often subject to diverse opinions is the concrete demarcation line separating Orthodox Jews from other Jewish movements. As noted both by researchers and communal leaders, the Orthodox subgroups have a sense of commitment towards the Law, perceiving it as seriously binding, which is rarely manifest outside the movement.[46]

The halakha, like any jurisprudence, is not a definitive set of rules, but rather an ever-expanding discourse: Its authority is derived from the belief in divine revelation, but interpretation and application are done by the rabbis, who base their mandate on biblical verses such as and thou shalt observe to do according to all that they inform thee. From ancient to modern times, the rabbinic discourse was wrought with controversy (machloket) and sages disagreeing upon various points of the law. The Talmud itself is mainly a record of such disputes. The traditional belief, maintained by the Orthodox today, regards such disagreement as flowing naturally from the divinity of Jewish Law, which is presumed to potentially contain a solution for any possible predicament. As long as both contesting parties base their arguments according to received hermeneutics and precedents and are driven by sincere faith, both these and those are the words of the Living God (this Talmudic statement is originally attributed to a divine proclamation during a dispute between the House of Hillel and House of Shammai).[47] Majority opinions were accepted and canonized, though many old disagreements remain and new ones appear ceaselessly. This plurality of opinion allows decisors, rabbis tasked with determining the legal stance in subjects without precedent, to weigh between a range of options, based on methods derived from earlier authorities. The most basic form of halakhic discourse is the responsa literature, in which rabbis answered questions directed from commoners or other rabbis, thus setting precedent for the next generations.[48]

The system's oldest and most basic sources are the Mishna and the two Talmuds, to which were added the later commentaries and novellae of the Geonim. Those were followed by the great codes which sought to assemble and standardize the laws, including Isaac Alfasi's Hilchot HaRif, Maimonides' Mishneh Torah, and Jacob ben Asher's Arba'ah Turim. One of the latest and most authoritative codifications is the 1565 Shulchan Aruch, or "Set Table", which gained a canonical status and became almost synonymous, in popular parlance, with the halakhic system itself though no later authority accepted it in its entirety (for example, all Orthodox Jews don phylacteries in a manner different from the one advocated there), and it was immediately contested or re-interpreted by various commentaries, most prominently the gloss written by Rabbi Moses Isserles named HaMapah. Halakhic literature continued to expand and evolve, with new authoritative guides being compiled and canonized, until the popular works of the 20th century like the Mishnah Berurah.

The most important distinction within halakha is between all laws derived from God's revelation (d'Oraita); and those enacted by human authorities (d'Rabanan), who is believed traditionally to have been empowered by God to legislate when necessary. The former are either directly understood, derived in various hermeneutical means or attributed to commandments orally handed down to Moses. The authority to pass measures d'Rabanan is itself subject to debate for one, Maimonides stated that absolute obedience to rabbinic decrees is stipulated by the verse and thou shalt observe, while Nachmanides argued that such severeness is unfounded though such enactments are accepted as binding, albeit less than the divine commandments. A Talmudic maxim states that when in doubt regarding a matter d'Oraita, one must rule strenuously, and leniently when it concerns d'Rabanan. Many arguments in halakhic literature revolve over whether any certain detail is derived from the former or the latter source, and under which circumstances. Commandments or prohibitions d'Rabanan, though less stringent than d'Oraita ones, are an equally important facet of Jewish law. They range from the 2nd century BCE establishment of Hanukkah, to the bypassing on the Biblical ban on charging interest via the Prozbul, and up to the 1950 standardization of marital rules by the Chief Rabbinate of Israel which forbade polygamy and levirate marriage even in communities which still practiced those.[49]

Apart from these, a third major component buttressing Orthodox practice (and Jewish in general) is local or familial custom, Minhag. The development and acceptance of customs as binding, more than disagreements between decisors, is the main factor accounting for the great diversity in matters of practice across geographic or ethnic lines. While the reverence accorded to Minhag across rabbinic literature is far from uniform ranging from positions like "a custom may uproot halakha" to wholly dismissive attitudes [50] it was generally accepted as binding by the scholars, and more importantly, drew its power from popular adherence and routine.

The most important aspect of Minhag is in the disparities between various Jewish ethnic or communal groups, which also each possess a distinctive tradition of halakhic rulings, stemming from the opinions of local rabbis. Ashkenazim, Sephardim, Teimanim, and others have different prayer rites, somewhat different kosher emphases (since the 12th century at least, it is an Ashkenazi custom not to consume legumes in Passover), and numerous other points of distinction. So do, for example, Hasidic Jews and non-Hasidic ones, though both originate from Eastern Europe.

Eating in the Sukkah on Shemini Atzeret[51][52] is an area where Minhag varies; likewise, how to accommodate the idea of eating some dairy on Shavuos.[53] The influence of custom even elicited the complaint of scholars who noted that the common masses observe Minhag, yet ignore important divine decrees.

Rabbinic leadership, assigned with implementing and interpreting the already accumulated tradition, changed considerably in recent centuries, marking a major difference between Orthodox and pre-modern Judaism. Since the demise of the Geonim, who led the Jewish world up to 1038, halakha was adjudicated locally, and the final arbiter was mostly the communal rabbi, the Mara d'Athra (Master of the Area). He was responsible to judicially instruct all members of his community. The emancipation and modern means of transport and communication all jointly made this model untenable.[54] While Orthodox communities, especially the more conservative ones, have rabbis who technically fill this capacity, the public generally follows well-known luminaries whose authority is not limited by geography, and based on reverence and peer pressure more than the now-defunct legal coercion of the old community. These may be either popular chairs of Talmudic academies, renowned decisors, and, in the Hasidic world, hereditary rebbes.

Their influence varies considerably: In conservative Orthodox circles, mainly ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) ones, rabbis possess strong authority, and exercise their leadership often. Bodies such as the Council of Torah Sages, Council of Torah Luminaries, the Central Rabbinical Congress, and the Orthodox Council of Jerusalem are all considered, at least in theory, as the supreme arbiters in their respective communities. In the more liberal Orthodox sectors, rabbis are revered and consulted, but rarely exert such direct control.

Orthodox Judaism emphasizes practicing rules of kashrut, Shabbat, family purity, and tefilah (daily prayer).

Many Orthodox Jews can be identified by their manner of dress and family lifestyle. Orthodox men and women dress modestly by keeping most of their skin covered. Married women cover their hair, with either scarves (tichel), snoods, hats, berets, or wigs.

Orthodox men are expected to wear a ritual fringe called Tzitzit, and the donning of a head-covering for males at all times[55] is a well-known attribute distinguishing Orthodox Jews. Many men grow beards, and Haredi men wear black hats with a skullcap underneath and suits. Modern Orthodox Jews are sometimes indistinguishable in their dress from general society, although they, too, wear kippahs and tzitzit; additionally, on Shabbat, Modern Orthodox men wear suits (or at least a dress shirt) and dress pants, while women wear fancier dresses or blouses.

Orthodox Jews also follow the laws of negiah, which means touch. Orthodox men and women do not engage in physical contact with those of the opposite sex outside of their spouse, or immediate family members (such as parents, grandparents, siblings, children, and grandchildren). Kol Isha[56] is the prohibition[57] of a woman's (singing) voice to a man (except as per negiah).[58]

Doorposts have a mezuzah; separate sinks for meat and dairy have become increasingly common.[59][60]

Orthodox Judaism lacks any central framework or a common, authoritative leadership. It is not a "denomination" in the structural sense, but a variegated spectrum of groups, united in broadly affirming several matters of belief and practice, which also share a consciousness and a common discourse. Individual rabbis may, and often do, gain respect across boundaries, especially recognized decisors, but each community eventually obeys or reveres its own immediate leaders (for example, the ultra-Orthodox world shares a sense of common identity, yet constitutes several large distinct sub-sections, each including hundreds of independent communities with their own rabbis). Apart from this inherent plurality, the limits and boundaries of Orthodoxy are also a matter of great controversy. Indeed, the attempt to offer a definition that would encompass all communities and subgroups challenges scholars. Even the moderately conservative subgroups hotly criticize the more liberal ones for deviation from what they consider as inviolable principles, while strict hard-liners merely dismiss the latter as non-Orthodox. Contentious topics range from the abstract and theoretical, like the attitude to the historical-critical study of scripture, to the mundane and pressing, such as modesty rules for women and girls.

As in any other broad religious movement, there is an intrinsic tension between the ideological and the sociological dimensions of Orthodox Judaism while the leading elites and intellectuals define adherence in theoretical terms, the masses are inducted via societal, familial, and institutional affiliation. Rank-and-file members may often neither be strictly observant nor fully accept the tenets of faith.[61][62]

Professors Daniel Elazar and Rela Mintz Geffen, according to calculations in 1990, assumed there to be at least 2,000,000 observant Orthodox Jews worldwide in 2012, and at least 2,000,000 additional nominal members and supporters who identified as such. These figures made Orthodoxy the largest Jewish religious group. Originally, Elazar produced an even higher estimate when he considered association by default and assumed higher affiliation rates, reaching a maximum of 5,500,000 that may be considered involved with Orthodoxy.[63]

In the State of Israel, where the total Jewish population is about 6.5million, 22% of all Jewish respondents to a 2016 PEW survey declared themselves as observant Orthodox (9% Haredim, or "ultra-Orthodox", 13% Datiim, "religious"). 29% described themselves as "traditional", a label largely implying little observance, but identification with Orthodoxy.[64] The second largest Orthodox concentration is in the United States, mainly in the Northeast and specifically in New York and New Jersey. A 2013 PEW survey found that 10% of respondents identify as Orthodox, in a total Jewish population of at least 5.5million. 3% were Modern Orthodox, 6% were ultra-Orthodox, and 1% were "other" (Sephardic, liberal Orthodox, etc.)[65] In Britain, of 79,597 households with at least one Jewish member that held synagogue membership in 2016, 66% affiliated with Orthodox synagogues: 53% in "centrist Orthodox", and 13% in "strictly Orthodox" (further 3% were Sephardi, which technically eschews the title "Orthodox").[66]

High birth rates are an important aspect of Orthodox demographics: They are the most reproductive of all Jews, and ultra-Orthodox communities have some of the highest rates in the world, with 6 children per an average household. Non-existent levels of intermarriage (unlike some liberal Jewish denominations, Orthodoxy vehemently opposes the phenomenon) also contribute to their growing share in the world's Jewish population. While American Orthodox are but 10% of all Jews, among children, their share rises immensely: An estimated 61% of Jewish children in New York belong to Orthodox households, 49% to ultra-Orthodox. Similar patterns are observed in Britain and other countries. With present trends sustained, Orthodox Jews are projected to numerically dominate British Jewry by 2031, and American Jewry by 2058.[63][67] However, their growth is balanced by large numbers of members leaving their communities and observant lifestyle. Among the 2013 PEW respondents, 17% of those under 30 who were raised Orthodox disaffiliated (in earlier generations, this trend was far more prevalent, and 77% of those over 65 left).

Orthodox Judaism may be categorized according to varying criteria. The most recognizable sub-group is the Haredim (literally, "trembling" or "fervent"), also known as "strictly Orthodox", and the like. They form the most traditional part of the Orthodox spectrum. Haredim are characterized by a minimal engagement with modern society and culture if not their wholesale rejection, by avowed precedence given to religious values, and by a high degree of rabbinic authority and involvement in daily life. In spite of many differences, Haredi rabbis and communities generally recognize each other as such, and therefore accord respect and legitimacy between them. They are organized in large political structures, mainly Agudath Israel of America and the Israeli United Torah Judaism party. Other organized groups include the Anti-Zionist Central Rabbinical Congress and the Edah HaChareidis. Some Haredim also hold a lukewarm or negative assessment of the more modernist Orthodox. They are easily discerned by their mode of dress, often all black for men and very modest, by religious standards, for women (including hair covering, long skirts, etc.).

Apart from that, the ultra-Orthodox consists of a large spectrum of communities. They may be roughly classified into three different sub-groups.

The first of the three Haredi sub-groups are the Hasidic Jews. The Hasidim originated in 18th-century Eastern Europe, where they formed as a spiritual revival movement that defied the rabbinical establishment. The threat of modernity turned the movement into a bastion of conservatism and reconciled it with other traditionalist elements. Hasidim espouses a mystical interpretation of religion, with each Hasidic community aligned with a hereditary leader known as rebbe (who is almost always, though not necessarily, an ordained rabbi). While the spiritualist element of Hasidism declined somewhat through the centuries, the authority of rebbes is derived from the mystical belief that the holiness of their ancestors is inborn. They exercise tight control over the lives of their followers. Every single one of the several hundreds of independent Hasidic groups/sects (also called "courts" or "dynasties"), from large ones with thousands of member households to very small, has its own line of rebbes. "Courts" often possess unique customs, religious emphases, philosophies, and styles of dress. Hasidic men, especially on the Sabbath, don long garments and fur hats, which were once the staple of all Eastern European Jews, but are now associated almost exclusively with them. As of 2016, there were 130,000 Hasidic households worldwide.

The second Haredi group are the "Litvaks", or "Yeshivish". They originated, in a loose fashion, with the Misnagdim, the opponents of Hasidism, who were mainly concentrated in old Lithuania. The confrontation with the Hasidism bred distinct ideologies and institutions, especially great yeshivas, learning halls, where the study of Torah for its own sake and admiration for the scholars who headed these schools was enshrined. With the advent of secularization, the Misnagdim largely abandoned their hostility towards Hasidism. They became defined by affiliation with their yeshivas, and their communities were sometimes composed of alumni of the same institutes. The great prestige ascribed to those as centers of Torah study (after they were rebuilt in Israel and America, bearing the names of original Eastern European yeshivas destroyed in the Holocaust) swept many of a non-Misnagdic background, and the term "Litvak" lost its ethnic connotation. It is in fact granted to all non-Hasidic Haredim of European (Ashkenazi) descent. The "Litvak" sector is led mainly by heads of yeshivas.

The third ultra-Orthodox movement is the Sephardic Haredim, who are particularly identified with the Shas party in Israel and the legacy of Rabbi Ovadia Yosef. Originating in the Mizrahi (Middle Eastern and North African Jews) immigrants to the country who arrived in the 1950s, most of the Sephardi Haredim were educated in Litvak yeshivas, both adopting their educators' mentality and developing a distinct identity in reaction to the racism they encountered. Shas arose in the 1980s, with the aim of reclaiming Sephardi religious legacy, in opposition to secularism on one hand and the hegemony of European-descended Haredim on the other. While living in strictly observant circles (there are several hundreds of Sephardic-Haredi communal rabbis), they, unlike the insular Hasidim or Litvaks, maintain a strong bond with the non-Haredi masses of Israeli Mizrahi society.

Apart from the Haredim, there are other Orthodox communities. In the West, especially in the United States, Modern Orthodoxy, or "Centrist Orthodoxy", is a broad umbrella term for communities which seek an observant lifestyle and traditional theology, while, at the same time, ascribing positive value to engagement (if not "Synthesis") with the modern world.[68][69]

In America, the Modern Orthodox form a cohesive community and identity group, highly influenced by the legacy of leaders such as Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, and concentrated around Yeshiva University and institutions like the Orthodox Union or National Council of Young Israel. They affirm strict obedience to Jewish Law, the centrality of Torah study, and the importance of positive engagement with modern culture.[70]

In Israel, Religious Zionism represents the largest Orthodox public. While Centrist Orthodoxy's fault-line with the ultra-Orthodox is the attitude to modernity, a fervent adoption of Zionism marks the former. Religious Zionism not only supports the State of Israel, but it also ascribes an inherent religious value to it; the dominant ideological school, influenced by Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook's thought, regards the state in messianic terms. Religious Zionism is not a uniform group, and fragmentation between its strict and conservative flank (often named "Chardal", or "National-Haredi") and more liberal and open elements has increased since the 1990s. The National Religious Party, once the single political platform, dissolved, and the common educational system became torn on issues such as gender separation in elementary school or secular studies.

In Europe, "Centrist Orthodoxy" is represented by bodies like the British United Synagogue and the Israelite Central Consistory of France, both the dominant official rabbinates in their respective countries. The laity is often non-observant, retaining formal affiliation due to familial piety or a sense of Jewish identity.

Another large demographic usually considered aligned with Orthodoxy are the Israeli Masortim, or "traditional". This moniker originated with Mizrahi immigrants who were both secularized and reverent toward their communal heritage. However, Mizrahi intellectuals, in recent years, developed a more reflective, nuanced understanding of this term, eschewing its shallow image and not necessarily agreeing with the formal deference to Orthodox rabbis. Self-conscious Masorti identity is still limited to small, elitist circles.

Even more than in Europe's formal state rabbinates, Orthodox Judaism exerts a powerful, transnational authority through its control of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel. Regulating Jewish marriage, conversion, adoption, and dietary standards in the country, the Chief Rabbinate influences both Israel's population and Jews worldwide.

Link:

Orthodox Judaism - Wikipedia

The last Jew of Afghanistan has reportedly divorced his wife …

Posted By on September 28, 2021

Photo by Paula Bronstein/Getty Ima...

Zebulon Simantov reads a prayer book before celebrating Rosh Hashanah in Kabul, Afghanistan, Sept. 18, 2009.

(JTA) Zebulon Simantov, who was the last Jew living in Afghanistan, granted his wife a Jewish ritual divorce after refusing to do so for decades, according to reports.

He left Afghanistan earlier this month, following the Talibans takeover of the country, after at first rebuffing efforts to get him out. He now wants to start a new life in the New York City borough of Queens, where he has relatives, the New York Post reported on Saturday.

I am a businessman, Ill do business there, Simantov said in an interview with the Post.

Simantov recently granted his wife, who is living in Israel with their children, a get, or Jewish ritual divorce, according to reports in Israeli publications. The Jewish legal ceremony took place via videoconference, according to the Times of Israel.

He had refused to grant the divorce for more than 20 years. According to Jewish law, both spouses must agree to a divorce in order for it to take effect. In the vast majority of known cases, women have been the ones who are refused a get, which prevents them from getting remarried.

The post The last Jew of Afghanistan has reportedly divorced his wife and wants to go to Queens appeared first on Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

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Wandering Jew Plant: Care, Types, and Growing Tips | Epic …

Posted By on September 28, 2021

The Wandering Jew is not a single plant its the name given to a few different plants in the genus Tradescantia.

When grown outdoors its considered invasive in many regions of the world, but those same growing characteristics make it perfect as an indoor vining plant.

Where to Buy Wandering Jew Plants

Preventing Common Wandering Jew Pests & Diseases

Wandering jew plants have green, heart-shaped leaves with purple stripes and a silvery sheen to them. Depending on the variety, the leaves can be solid or variegated. Blooms are small with three petals and can be violet or white.

The name wandering jew is really referring to three different species in the Tradescantia genus: fluminensis, zebrina, and pallida.

Tradescantia fluminensis

The classic wandering jew plant. It has dark-green leaves that contrast nicely against the bright, white, three-petaled flowers.

Learn More: Tradescantia Fluminensis Care Guide

Tradescantia zebrina

As you can probably guess, its named for its zebra-like leaves. The middle of each half of the leaves are a creamy white, with the outer edges tipped in silver.

Tradescantia pallida

This variety is unique in that the foliage is a deep purple with light purplish-pink flowers. Its one of the most popular varieties of wandering jew.

Learn More: Tradescantia Pallida Care Guide

All types of wandering jew plants are fairly easy to care for. As long as you give them a good amount of light and prune regularly, you should enjoy your tradescantia for many years.

This is a houseplant that really thrives in bright but indirect sunlight. The brighter the light you provide your wandering jew plant, the more flowers it will produce.

If its not getting enough light, the brightly-colored foliage will begin to fade.

These plants are happy as long as theyre not kept soaked or allowed to be completely dry too long. Keeping the soil evenly moist is the best.

Youll know its ready for more water when the soil is dry to at least 1/2 deep. Give it a good drink but be sure that the pot drains well.

You can use a standard houseplant potting mix for your wandering jew, but theyll do even better if you give them soil that has more organic matter.

To make your own soil mixture, add equal parts of the following:

Youre looking for the perfect balance of water retention and draining ability, so give the plant a watering and watch to see which way your soil tends to go, then adjust accordingly.

Use a water-soluble fertilizer at least twice a month during the growing season. Be sure to dilute it down to 50% strength to avoid nutrient burn on the foliage.

You can also use a slow-release fertilizer to the soil once a year.

If your wandering jews beginning to become a bit crammed in its pot, select a pot thats 1-2 wider than its current one. Prepare your pot with a little fresh potting soil around the sides.

Remove your plant from its existing pot, setting the root ball into the new one. Add or remove soil as necessary to get it in place. Then, fill to 2 below the pots rim. Lightly tamp down the potting soil to anchor the plant in place.

Wandering jew plants have a tendency to get leggy, so pruning them becomes a must if you want to maintain a healthy appearance.

Simply prune back the stems and pinch off stem tips. The plant will send out two shoots from right below the pinched area, making your plant bushier.

Whatever you do, dont waste your stem cuttings! Wandering jew propagation is easily done from stem cuttings.

Remove all but a few leaves off of the stem cuttings and then place them in a smaller pot with moist potting soil in a warm, bright area.

Youll start seeing new shoots growing after 1-1.5 months. Wandering jew plants are one of the easiest houseplants to propagate!

In some people and animals, skin irritation can occur when coming in contact with the sap from the plant. You should keep it in an area that is hard for your cat or dog to reach. A good idea is to grow it in hanging baskets that are too high up for your pets to nibble on!

The most prominent pests youll deal with on wandering jew plants are spider mites. They love warm, dry areas, so one good way to counter them is to keep humidity high or mist your wandering jew plant.

If that doesnt work, you can wash the plant off with water to knock the mites off of the plant. For even more serious infestations, you should remove infested areas and use a systemic insecticide.

Most diseases youll run into are related to over watering. Root rot is a big problem with most houseplants, and has two causes:

If you have problem #1, simply water less often! If you have problem #2, add some perlite or coarse sand to your soil mix. You can also add rocks to the bottom of the pot to improve drainage.

Q. Im trying to take cuttings of wandering jew, but they keep rotting. How can I prevent this?

A. Your cuttings are probably suffering from a fungal infection. To prevent this, make sure to use a sterilized cutting instrument and dip in chlorox, then rooting hormone before you place your cuttings in soil.

Q. How do I know how far to place my wandering jew away from a window or light source?

A. Leave your plant where it is and monitor the color of the leaves. If they start to lose their bright colors, its a clear-cut sign that the plant needs more light. Move it closer to the window and keep watching the leaves until the color starts to come back on new growth.

Q. Im having trouble rooting cuttings in soil. Can I do anything else?

A. Many gardeners have success rooting their wandering jew cuttings directly in water. Just be sure to sterilize and change the water every so often so it remains fresh and free from any pathogens. When you see roots, plant in potting mix.

Q. Is wandering jew plant toxic to cats?

In short, no, but its also not deadly either. It irritates the digestive tract of pets if consumed, and also produces a dermatitis-like effect on their skin.

Q. Can I grow wandering jew plant outdoors?

A: Absolutely! It can be a bit tricky if youre outside USDA growing zones 9-11, but if youre in that range, its easy to grow outside!

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Wandering Jew Plant Care Guide (How To Grow & Care For Your …

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Wandering jew plants are fun to grow, and there are lots of different varieties. This comprehensive wandering jew plant care guide will show you everything you need to know about how to grow tradescantia indoors or out.

Wandering jew plants are much loved for their unique bright colors, and their vining growth habit. They look gorgeous in hanging baskets, or set atop a pedestal, where the tendrils can cascade down.

I love training mine to grow on the fancy obelisks that adorn my front step outdoors through the summer. Then I bring them indoors to keep them going as houseplants in the winter.

There are tons of different types, and they are fun to collect. The good news is that, no matter which variety you have, tradescantia plant care is the same.

Heres what youll find in this detailed wandering jew care guide

Wandering jews (Tradescantia) are tropical plants that add wonderful color to mixed containers and shady garden areas.

Theyre commonly sold as annual plants in cold climates. But they are actually tropical perennials in their native environment.

They are not tolerant of the cold, and will die at the first hard freeze if left outdoors. But they can easily be brought indoors and grown as a houseplant through the winter.

When you think of a wandering jew plant, you might think about the classic variety with purple and silver variegated leaves (Tradescantia zebrina, aka inch plant).

But the common name actually refers to a whole family of plants that fall under the scientific name of Tradescantia. Tradescantia wandering jew plants all require similar care, and they are all fairly easy to grow.

There are a whole bunch of different types, and they are all equally beautiful. There are plain green ones, variegated, purple, and even fuzzy leaf ones.

Whew, with all those options, how will you ever decide which variety to grow (I guess you could just start a collection like me!).

Related Post: 17 Beautiful Purple Houseplants To Liven Up Your Home

Heres a list of the most common wandering jew varieties (take a look at the pictures throughout this post to see what some of them look like).

Before we get into the details of wandering jew plant care, its important to know a few key things about where to grow them in order to be successful.

I find it much easier for long term wandering jew plant care to move them outside for the summer, where they thrive and get huge!

As I mentioned above, I grow my wandering jew plants outside on my shady front step every summer. I have two large containers with obelisks in them that are perfect.

As the vines grow longer, I train them to climb the supports. By mid-summer they are absolutely gorgeous, and I get tons of compliments on them every year.

Before frost hits in the fall, I bring my wandering jew plants indoors, and keep them growing as houseplants.

Growing them indoors can be a bit difficult, but given the right care, you can keep your plant thriving year after year which is totally worth it if you ask me.

The most important things to consider when growing wandering jew indoors are proper watering, humidity, and adequate light.

Despite their differences, all varieties of wandering jew plants have the same basic care requirements. So you can follow these growing instructions for any type that you have.

Wandering jews like to be watered regularly, and wont tolerate their soil drying out for very long.

Keep the soil evenly moist (but never soggy) at all times. Water them thoroughly, and allow the excess to drain from the bottom of the pot.

Wandering jew plants will tolerate being overwatered once in a while, but never allow the soil to stay wet for too long.

If you struggle with giving them the right amount of water, I recommend getting a soil moisture gauge to help you out.

If you dont want to bring a large wandering jew inside, you could take cuttings and grow them in a vase of water. They wont live that way forever, but if you keep the water fresh, theyll be fine for several weeks.

Another key part of successful wandering jew plant care is humidity, and lots of it! When the humidity is too low, the leaves will start to turn brown and die.

This is the biggest issue with growing them indoors during the winter months, when the air in our home is super dry. So, its very important to keep the humidity as high as possible.

One easy way to increase the humidity level around your wandering jew plant is to run a humidifier next to it. You should also keep an indoor humidity monitor near your plants.

You could put the pot on a pebble tray filled with water (dont allow it to sit in the water though), or even grow it in a small plant cloche or a mini indoor greenhouse.

Wandering jews are pretty picky about getting the right amount of light. They need a lot of light to maintain their bright color, but direct sun will burn their leaves (except for purple queen, they love growing in full sun!).

The ideal location for growing wandering jew indoors is an east or west facing window. That way it will get plenty of natural light in the morning/evening, and bright indirect sun for the rest of the day.

When they dont get enough light, their leaf colors will fade and look dull. If you dont have a spot with lots of natural sun, then add a grow light.

If you choose to move your plant outside for the summer, make sure to keep it in the shade or a partial shade location where its protected from the hot afternoon sun.

When it comes to soil, wandering jew plants arent picky, they will grow just fine in a general purpose mix.

But if you tend to forget to water (been there, done that!), or the soil drys out too quickly, then mix in some peat moss, coco coir, and/or vermiculite to help it retain moisture.

Wandering jew plants dont really need to be fertilized, but of course they will benefit from being fed once in a while.

They only need it spring through summer, dont fertilize them in the fall or winter. Winter growth is usually very weak and leggy, so you really dont want to encourage that.

As part of your wandering jew plant care routine, you can feed it monthly with a liquid fertilizer mixed at half strength.

I recommend using organic plant food, rather than a synthetic one. Wandering jews can be sensitive to chemical fertilizers.

A good organic general purpose fertilizer, or compost tea would work great. You could also add slow-release organic granules to the soil if you prefer doing that.

Fish emulsion and liquid kelp are also great options, but only use these outdoors (they can get a bit stinky when used indoors).

Fertilizing can also help encourage blooming. Wandering jew flowers are pretty small and insignificant, and not all varieties look the same.

A wandering jew flower can be purple, pink, or white, and its always fun to see them. Sometimes they will even flower during the winter, which is a welcome surprise!

Bugs arent usually an issue when growing wandering jews outdoors. But spider mites, aphids, and fungus gnats can become a problem indoors.

To fight houseplant pests that infest the leaves, I recommend using neem oil, which is a natural pesticide.

I also like to use a mixture of 1 tsp mild liquid soap per 1 liter of water, and spray it on the leaves to kill the bugs. Insecticidal soap or horticultural oil also work great.

If you see gnats flying around your wandering jew houseplant, allow the soil to dry out a bit more between waterings. You can use a yellow sticky trap to help control them.

Its a good idea to make pruning a part of your wandering jew plant care schedule. Regular pinching and pruning will keep the vines compact and thick.

Trimming wandering jews encourages new growth, so its best to do it during the spring and summer months only. You can prune off dead and dying growth at any time.

For precision cuts, I recommend using bonsai shears or a micro-tip snip. Otherwise, if youre doing heavy pruning, regular hand shears are perfect.

Wandering jew plants are super easy to propagate. Take cuttings that are 3-4 long, and include a couple of leaf nodes.

Dip the cut ends into rooting hormone, then stick them in moist soil. Dont allow the soil to dry out, and keep the air around the cuttings humid. A propagation chamber makes this super easy.

They are also simple to root in a vase of water, and youll start to see new roots in a matter of days. I like to use a clear vase so I can see when the roots start to form.

Its super easy to grow wandering jew plants outside, especially when its humid. But growing them indoors is a whole different story.

Most of the problems youll have with indoor wandering jew plant care will be due to inadequate water, light, and/or humidity.

Its easy to find all kinds of wandering jews for sale during the spring. Just look for different varieties in the annual plant section at any garden center, or you can buy them online.

During the winter, you can find them in the houseplant section. But, its usually cheaper to buy them as annual plants during the spring and summer, so you may want to wait a few months.

Growing wandering jews indoors or outside is easy and fun! There are so many Tradescantia varieties to choose from, you could collect them all. The best part is that, no matter which one you choose, wandering jew plant care is the same for them all!

If you struggle with taking care of plants during the long winter months, my Winter Houseplant Care eBook is perfect for you! Its a comprehensive guide that will show you exactly how to care for your favorite plants indoors during the winter, so you can keep them thriving all year long! Grab your copy today!

Share your wandering jew plant care tips in the comments below.

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Wandering Jew Plant Care Guide (How To Grow & Care For Your ...

Zionism as the Root of All Evil – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on September 28, 2021

According to the Palestinian National Covenant of 1968, Zionism is a racist ideology that uses Fascist and Nazi methods to achieve its objectives. Article 22 of the Covenant describes it like this:

Zionism is a political movement that is organically linked with world imperialism and is opposed to all liberation movements or movements for progress in the world. The Zionist movement is essentially fanatical and racialist; its objectives involve aggression, expansion and the establishment of colonial settlements and its methods are those of the Fascists and the Nazis. Israel acts as cats paw for the Zionist movement, a geographic and manpower base for world imperialism and a springboard for its thrust into the Arab homeland to frustrate the aspirations of the Arab nation to liberation, unity, and progress. Israel is a constant threat to peace in the Middle East and the whole world. Inasmuch as the liberation of Palestine will eliminate the Zionist and imperialist presence in that country and bring peace to the Middle East, the Palestinian people look for support to all liberals and to all forces of good, peace and progress in the world, and call on them, whatever their political convictions, for all possible aid and support in their just and legitimate struggle to liberate their homeland.[1]

This essentially communist view, married to Nazismboth discredited isms in the Westdepicts Jews as the personification of colonialism and racism. It was calculated to provoke hostility toward Israel from Afro-Asian countries, who relied on Israel for nascent technologies. The influence on the Arabs was more pronounced. They declared Zionism was created to humiliate them and reacting with resentment, rioted. They were given an ideological excuse to commit politicide in Israel a slow, methodical process that would ensure her extinction as an autonomous political and social body. This image of the Jew inflamed hatred and nurtured a need for retribution. [2]

According to Yehoshafat Harkabi, former chief of Israeli Military Intelligence, and foreign policy expert at the Hebrew University, the Arabs define Zionism as the primary cause of the conflict and the root of evil. The National Covenant is not a reflection of the more radical elements within the Arab camp, but of the mainstream members of the Palestinian Arab movement. It signifies an egotistic stand that does not show the slightest consideration for the adversary, nor any trace of recognition that he too may have a grievance, a claim and justice. [3]

The movement professes absoluteness and totalitythere is absolute justice in the Palestinian stand in contrast to the absolute injustice of Israel; an unqualified Manichaean division of good and evil; right is on the Palestinian side onlyonly they are worthy of self-determination. Israelis are barely human creatures who at most must be tolerated in the Palestinian State as individuals or as a religious community, with their numbers reduced to five percent (Article 6 in the 1968 version) and then assimilated in an Arab environment; the historical link of the Jews with the land of Israel is deceit; the spiritual link as expressed in the centrality of the land of Israel in Judaism is a fraud; international decisions such as the Mandate granted by the League of Nations and the United Nations Partitions Resolution are all consigned to nothingness in a cavalier manner.[4]

Zionism is described as a spiritual sister and spiritual heir of Nazi ideologythough Nazi ideology preceded Zionism. Dr. Hasan Saab, an Arab intellectual who believed Zionisms original sin was its calculated scheme to steal another peoples land, wrote: The concept of a chosen race in Zionism differs from the concept of a chosen race in Nazism, only in the identity of that racethe Zionists speaking of a Jewish race and the Nazis of an Aryan race. But anti-Semitism, Nazism and Zionism are different manifestations of a racism and nationalism which grew up in the same area and in the same intellectual climate. [5]

Dr. Fayez al-Sayegh, Senior Consultant to the Kuwait Ministry of Foreign Affairs, wrote: The Zionist concept of the final solution to the Arab problem in Palestine and the Nazi concept of the final solution to the Jewish Problem in Germany consisted essentially of the same basic ingredient: the elimination of the unwanted human element in question. The creation of a Jew-free Germany was indeed sought by Nazism through more ruthless and more inhuman method than was the creation of an Arab-free Palestine accomplished by the Zionists: but behind the difference in techniques lay an identity of goals.[6]

In his 1982 doctoral dissertation for Moscows Oriental College, Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), President of the Palestinian Authority, claimed that the Nazis and the leadership of the Zionist movement conspired together during the war. In 1984 he wrote: When discussing declared Zionist ideas, which have been espoused with profound conviction and faith by the movements followers, one finds that they believe in the purity of the Jewish raceas Hitler believed in the purity of the Aryan raceand the movement calls for finding a deeply-rooted and decisive solution to the Jewish problem in Europe via immigration to Palestine. Hitler also called for this and carried it out. The Zionist movement maintains that antisemitism is an eternal problem that throbs in the Gentiles blood; that it is not possible to put an end to it or get away from it; and thus it is the basic motive for Zionist immigration. It follows that if anti-Semitism did not exist it would be necessary to invent it, and that if its flame dies away it must be fanned. David Ben-Gurion defined the Zionist movement as immigration [to Israel] and nothing else; whoever does not immigrate [to Israel] denies the Torah and the Talmud and therefore is not a Jew These ideas provide a general dispensation to every racist in the world, most prominently Hitler and the Nazis, to treat the Jews as they wish, as long as this includes immigration to Palestine. [7]

At the same time, Abu Mazen did acknowledge the gravity of the catastrophe: The truth of the matter is that no one can verify this number, or completely deny it. In other words, the number of Jewish victims might be 6 million and might be much smaller even less than 1 million. [Nevertheless], raising a discussion regarding the number of Jews [murdered] does not in any way diminish the severity of the crime committed against them, as murder even of one man is a crime that the civilized world cannot accept and humanity cannot accept.[8]

Antisemitic imagery is ubiquitous in the Arab press, in countries where nearly half of the population is illiterate and illustrates the intensity of the hatred toward Israel and the Jews by the ruling elites. Arab caricatures are direct, authentic, and a very clear example of how Arabs view the world. Caricatures regularly portray Jews as having satanic power. Israels army is depicted as German soldiers goose-stepping on their way to further conquests. [9]

Constant use of the swastika and the idea of Na-Zionism, a left-wing construct defining Zionism as a Judeo-Nazi fascist monster, are accepted themes in Arab propaganda. The Syrians and Egyptians adopted them after they were used in the Soviet press and were also influenced by Nazi migrs who found refuge in Nassers Egypt, Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere. Israel Uber Alles, read a caption in an Egyptian newspaper. [10]

Even today, the delegitimization of Israel as a recognized sovereign state is most Arabs final objective, since they say they believe Israels continued existence poses a threat to world peace. Caricatures of Jews in Arab propaganda lack any humor and portray all Jewish people as objects worthy of annihilation. [11]

Arab Antisemitism: The Most Dangerous Hatred since The 1930s

Arab antisemitism is the most perilous expression of hatred toward Jews since the late 1930s, according to Menahem Milson, professor of Arab literature at the Hebrew University. Because there is a close association between Western and Arab antisemites, with some differences between them, Arab antisemites refer to Jews as descendants of apes and pigs because the Koran says Jews who violated the Sabbath were turned into apes and pigs an effective means of dehumanizing Jews and validating their need for elimination.

This message is often transmitted in political writings and in Friday sermons to Arab worshipers. In a sermon, Saudi Sheikh Abd Al-Rahman Al-Sudayyis, imam and preacher at the Al-Haram mosquethe Kaba mosque in Mecca, the most important Muslim holy site, said: Read history and you will understand that the Jews of yesterday are the evil fathers of the Jews of today, who are evil offspring, infidels, distorters of [Gods] words, calf-worshippers, prophet-murderers, prophecy-deniers the scum of the human race whom Allah cursed and turned into apes and pigs These are the Jews, an ongoing continuum of deceit, obstinacy, licentiousness, evil, and corruption. [12]

The idea that Jews have been transmogrified into pigs, apes and other animals has become so ingrained in the mind of the Arab public, that children are deeply influenced by the images. In May 2002, Iqraa, the Saudi satellite television station, which strives to highlight aspects of Arab Islamic culture that inspire admiration to highlight the true, tolerant image of Islam and refute the accusations directed against it, interviewed a three-and-a-half-year-old real Muslim girl about Jews, on The Muslim Womens Magazine program. When the little girl was asked if she liked Jews she said, No. When asked why not, she replied that Jews were apes and pigs [and that] Our God had said this in the Quran. At the end of the segment, the interviewer noted with approval: No [parents] could wish for Allah to give them a more believing girl than she May Allah bless her and both her father and mother.[13]

A common antisemitic theme is The Promise of the Stone and the Tree, an extensively quoted hadith, (recorded sayings of Prophet Muhammad). It asserts that prior to the Day of Judgment, the Muslims will fight and kill the Jews. Seeking sanctuary, the Jews will hide behind stones and trees, and the stones and trees will exclaim, Oh Muslim, Oh Servant of Allah, a Jew is hiding behind me. Come and kill him. [14]

According to Kamal Ahmad On of the Tanta Institute in Egypt, Jews are responsible for their own suffering: One might ask why so many disasters and calamities befell those people in particular. The answer to this question is not difficult. Their wicked nature, which has always alienated them from mankind, lies at the bottom of this fact. This is borne out by their history. [15]

Palestinian children have assimilated the attitudes of the parents as evidenced by the trading cards they collect. Instead of baseball cards, they save cards of terrorist martyrs. During the first two years of the second intifada, six million cards were sold. Children who fill albums with 129 pictures on cardboard shaped like Israeli tanks can win bicycles, computers, or other items. Their role models and heroes are guerillas and suicide bombers. The head of the Balata teachers association says, Palestinian children are convinced that martyrdom is a holy thing, something worthy of the ultimate respect. They worship these pictures. I think it will lead them in the future to go out and do the same thing. [16]

Footnotes

[1] Yehoshafat Harkabi, The Palestinian Covenant and Its Meaning, (Portland, Oregon: Vallentine Mitchell, 1979), 117; Robert Wistrich, A Lethal Obsession: Anti-Semitism from Antiquity to the Global Jihad (New York: Random House, 2010); Robert Wistrich, Muslim Anti-Semitism: A Clear and Present Danger (New York: The American Jewish Committee, 2001); Bernard Lewis, Semites and Anti-Semites: An Inquiry into Conflict and Prejudice (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1999).

[2] Yehoshafat Harkabi, Arab Attitudes To Israel, (Jerusalem: Israel Universities Press, 1974), 175.

[3] Harkabi, The Palestinian Covenant, op. cit. 12.

[4] Ibid; Shmuel Ettinger, Anti-Semitism in Our Time. The Jerusalem Quarterly, Number 23, (Spring 1982): 95-113.

[5] Harkabi, Arab Attitudes To Israel, op. cit. 171, 176.

[6] Ibid.

[7] Palestine Leader: Number of Jewish Victims in the Holocaust Might be Even Less Than a Million Zionist Movement Collaborated with Nazis to Expand the Mass Extermination, (Washington, D.C.: The Middle East Media Research Institute (MEMRI), Number 95. (May 30, 2002); Fatah Representative In Poland: The Holocaust Wasnt The Only Atrocity Committed During WWII; Israel Inflates The Number of Holocaust Victims To Justify Its Crimes, MEMRI Special Dispatch | 8553 (February 12, 2020); Friday Sermon By Australian Islamic Scholar Ismail Al-Wahwah: The Jews Exaggerate The Holocaust For Dirty Political Exploitation; Islam Will Conquer Rome and Moscow); MEMRI TV Clip No. 7788 (February 12, 2020).

[8] Ibid.

[9] Arieh Stav, Peace: The Arabian Caricature: A Study Of Anti-Semitic Imagery (Jerusalem: Gefen Publishing House, 1999), 18, 79, 183-184, 198-199, 240; Itamar Marcus and Barbara Crook, Visual Hate Messages in the PA Media May 2005, Palestinian Media Watch (June 15, 2005); Joel Kotek, Cartoons and Extremism Cartoons and the Jews in Arab and Western Media (Portland, Oregon Vallentine Mitchell, 2008); Israel is Coronavirus murdering Palestinians, in PA daily cartoon, Palestinian Media Watch (May 4, 2020); Nan Jacques Zilberdik and Itamar Marcus, PA Libel: Israel causing Corona holocaust in prisons op-ed in official PA daily, Palestinian Media Watch (March 31, 2020); Nan Jacques Zilberdik and Itamar Marcus, PA compares Israel to the Corona virus; after weeks of silence finally mentions cooperation with Israel, Palestinian Media Watch (March 18, 2020)

[10]Ibid; Nan Jacques Zilberdik, Netanyahu is Nazi propaganda minister Goebbels outstanding student, says PA TVs Israeli affairs expert, Palestinian Media Watch (November 24, 2019); Nan Jacques Zilberdik and Itamar Marcus, Abbas advisor praises Nazi collaborator as role model former Mufti of Palestine Haj Amin Al-Husseini, Palestinian Media Watch (July 12, 2019); Former Jordanian Education Minister Ibrahim Badran: Israels Nazi-Esque Racism And Barbarism Surpass Even Adolf Hitler; Palestinian Authority President Abbas Wrote Best Book On Mizrahi Jews, PhD Dissertation On Zionism-Nazism Connection, The MEMRI Daily: (August 1, 2019). Yemeni TV Host Hamid Rizq: Islamic Scholars Visit To Auschwitz Harsh Provocation Against Arab And Islamic World, MEMRI TV Clip No. 7760 (January 27, 2020).

[11] Ibid; Bernard Lewis, The Arab World Discovers Anti-Semitism, Commentary (May 1986): 52.

[12] Menahem Milson, What Is Arab Antisemitism? MEMRI Special Report Number 26 (February 27, 2004); Itamar Marcus and Nan Jacques Zilberdik, Deception: Betraying the Peace Process (Jerusalem: Palestinian Media Watch, 2011).

[13] Milson, op.cit.

[14] Ibid.

[15] Quoted in Arieh Stav, op. cit. 99; See also MEMRI Special Dispatch, Number 86 (April 12, 2000),

[16] Palestinian kids collect terrorist cards, The Jerusalem Post (December 25, 2003), Online; Educating children for hatred and terrorism: encouragement for suicide bombing attacks and hatred for Israel and the Jews spread via the Internet on Hamas online childrens magazine (Al-Fateh), C.S.S (October, 2004); Matthew McAllester, The Roots of Hatred: Decades after the Holocaust, a different anti-Semitism prevails, Newsday.com (January 18, 2004) ; Israel/Occupied Territories: Palestinian armed groups must not use children, Amnesty International (May 23, 2005); Joseph Dan, Jewish Sovereignty as a Theological Problem. Azure (Winter 2004); Nan Jacques Zilberdik, Strike Tel Aviv terrify the Zionist is actors ringtone in PA TV comedy, Palestinian Media Watch (May 5, 2020); Nan Jacques Zilberdik, More child abuse: Fatah promotes child soldiers and child martyrdom! The Palestinian Media Watch (February 19, 2020); Nan Jacques Zilberdik and Itamar Marcus, Palestinian child abuse! Mom tells her son he is ammunition, destined for Martyrdom in girls poem, Palestinian Media Watch (November 28, 2019).

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Zionism as the Root of All Evil - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

U.S., Israel Walk Out of United Nations Meeting After Zionism Likened to Racism – Newsweek

Posted By on September 28, 2021

After a draft resolution was introduced at the United Nations General Assembly that likened Zionism to racism, the U.S. and Israel walked out of the annual meeting, the Associated Press reported. The provision, which also singled out Israel for criticism, was eventually discarded.

Zionism is "the Jewish national movement of self-determination in the land of Israel the historical birthplace and biblical homeland of the Jewish people," according to the Anti-Defamation League. The assembly was scheduled on Wednesday to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the U.N. World Conference Against Racism in Durban, South Africa, a controversial gathering that saw disputes over the Middle East and slavery's legacy, AP reported.

Twenty countries made the decision to boycott the commemoration, according to the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. The organization called on additional countries to join their efforts "in continuing to fight racism, bigotry, and anti-Semitism."

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.

For the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic began early last year, more than two dozen world leaders appeared in person at the U.N. General Assembly on the opening day of their annual high-level meeting Tuesday. In speech after speech, the atmosphere was somber, angry and dire.

Chinese President Xi Jinping warned that "the world has entered a period of new turbulence and transformation." Finland President Sauli Niinist said: "We are indeed at a critical juncture." And Costa Rican President Carlos Alvarado Quesada declared: "The future is raising its voice at us: Less military weaponry, more investment in peace!"

Speaker after speaker at Tuesday's opening of the nearly week-long meeting decried the inequalities and deep divisions that have prevented united global action to end the COVID-19 pandemic, which has claimed nearly 4.6 million lives and is still raging, and the failure to sufficiently tackle the climate crisis threatening the planet.

COVID-19 and climate are certain to remain top issues for heads of state and government.

Following the commemoration for the U.N. World Conference Against Racism, heads of state will start delivering their annual addresses again in the vast General Assembly hall. Speakers include King Abdullah II of Jordan, Indonesian President Joko Widodo and Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta.

Perhaps the harshest assessment of the current global crisis came from U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who opened his state of the world address sounding an "alarm" that "the world must wake up."

"Our world has never been more threatened or more divided," he said. "We face the greatest cascade of crises in our lifetimes."

"We are on the edge of an abyssand moving in the wrong direction," the secretary-general warned.

Guterres pointed to "supersized glaring inequalities" in addressing COVID-19, "climate alarm bells...ringing at fever pitch," upheavals from Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Yemen and beyond thwarting peace, and "a surge of mistrust and misinformation (that) is polarizing people and paralyzing societies."

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the pandemic was a reminder "that the entire world are part of a big family."

"But the solidarity test that we were put to failed us miserably," he said. "It is a disgrace for humanity that vaccine nationalism is still being carried on through different methods," and underdeveloped countries and poor segments of societies have been "literally left to their fate in the face of the pandemic."

As for the climate crisis, Erdogan said whoever did the most damage to nature, the atmosphere and water, "and whoever has wildly exploited natural resources" should make the greatest contribution to fighting global warming.

"Unlike the past, this time no one can afford the luxury to say, 'I'm powerful so I will not pay the bill' because climate change will treat mankind quite equally," the Turkish leader said. "The duty for all of us is to take measures against this enormous threat, with a fair burden-sharing."

Romania's President Klaus Iohannis did find something positive from the COVID-19 crisis.

"While the pandemic affected almost all aspects of our lives," he said, "it also provided us with opportunities to learn, adapt and do things better."

Two of the most closely watched speeches on Tuesday were delivered by U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

In an AP interview on Saturday, Guterres warned that the world could plunge into a new and probably more dangerous Cold War if China and the United States don't repair their "completely dysfunctional" relationship. "Unfortunately, today we only have confrontation," he said.

Biden said in his U.N. address that the United States was not attempting to be divisive or confrontational.

"We are not seeking a new Cold War or a world divided into rigid blocs," he said. "The United States is ready to work with any nation that steps up and pursues peaceful resolution to shared challenges even if we have intense disagreements in other areas."

Speaking later, Xi said disputes among countries "need to be handled through dialogue and cooperation."

"One country's success does not have to mean another country's failure," Xi said. "The world is big enough to accommodate common development and progress of all countries."

By tradition, the first country to speak was Brazil, whose president, Jair Bolsonaro rebuffed criticism of his handling of the pandemic and touted recent data indicating less Amazon deforestation. He said he was seeking to counter the image of Brazil portrayed in the media, touting it as a great place for investment and praising his pandemic welfare program, which helped avoid a worse recession last year.

Bolsonaro said that his government has successfully distributed first doses to the majority of adults, but doesn't support vaccine passports or forcing anyone to have a shot. He has said several times in the past week that he remains unvaccinated. He had COVID-19 last year.

Brazil's health minister, Marcelo Quiroga, who was with Bolsonaro, later tested positive for the coronavirus and will remain in isolation in the United States, the government said. Quiroga got his first shot of coronavirus vaccine in January.

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U.S., Israel Walk Out of United Nations Meeting After Zionism Likened to Racism - Newsweek

The U.S. departure will ensure that the Zionist entity is removed and Palestine is liberated – Tehran Times

Posted By on September 28, 2021

TEHRAN- On January 2, 2020, the U.S. committed an atrocity, one of countless it has committed, but this specific atrocity was different. On January 2, 2020, the U.S. Empire signed its death certificate with the murder of the Commander of the Hearts, Hajj Qassem Soleimani.

Following this unforgivable crime, all the free people of the world began a cry in unison for Severe Revenge against the U.S. regime and all those who were party to this crime. The first to make this call was the leader of the Islamic Revolution, Imam Khamenei in his message following the murder of Hajj Qassem.

The secretary-general of Hizbullah, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, in his speech dated January 5, 2020, said in no uncertain terms that the U.S. has a choice to leave the region, either vertically or horizontally; but their leaving the region is a certainty, just its manner is a choice.

In fact, in interviews given before the atrocities on January 2, 2020, the various leaders of the Islamic Resistance had said that the U.S. will be compelled to leave the region; and like it has left other regions, it will do so humiliated.

Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah said that the U.S. has a choice to leave the region, either vertically or horizontallyAt the start of the 21st Century, the U.S. regime, along with its vassals (such as the UK, France, Australia, and others), made a move to again colonise the West Asia region. A pretext was created to start a series of invasions and occupations, following which, the U.S. (with its allies), decided to invade Afghanistan and Iraq (of course, the reason for the invasion was supposedly a combination of weapons of mass destruction; which have never been found, as well as removing a terrorist regime; which has now been handed Afghanistan, but more on that later).

Before the invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq, while both countries had problems and oppressive governments, what the U.S. brought (dressed up as democracy) was significantly worse. The U.S. created the circumstances for the manufacture of the DAESH cult, with huge funding from U.S. allies Saudi Arabia, the UAE and other such oil fields and shopping malls with flags. This is a matter of public record and not a conspiracy theory.

Following these invasions and occupations; the U.S. proceeded to commit heinous crimes against the people of these countries; torture, mass murder (under the guise of fighting terror), arbitrary arrests and so on. Crimes that, interestingly, are the same crimes that the Zionist entity occupying Palestine has been committing since its manufacture more than 70 years ago.

The U.S. was then surprised when there was resistance to its occupation. The U.S. then, as mentioned earlier, manufactured its terrorist groups; in a manner that appeared to be organic; and unleashed them, initially upon Syria, but then on Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Naturally, there was a real, not manufactured, resistance that came about following the insertion of DAESH into Syria, Iraq and elsewhere. A resistance that was led by the Islamic Republic of Iran, and more specifically, under the instructions of Imam Khamenei, by Hajj Qassem Soleimani.

Hajj Qassem united multiple tribes and peoples. He was pivotal in the creation of the PMU forces that have protected and continue to protect Iraq, as well as his advice and guidance, strategic support and more to Syria and Hizbullah in defeating the U.S. project of DAESH.

Let us be very clear about one important fact. While the U.S. media constantly screams that it has defeated DAESH; this is purely for public consumption and is little more than a lie. To suggest that the U.S. defeated DAESH; would be to suggest that the U.S. decided to amputate its right hand, then put some sauce on it, barbeque it and eat it for breakfast! It is a ludicrous and ignorant claim, but one that the West continues to make.

But moving on from that; the West and the Western media are famous for their lies; and if we were to discuss that, this paper would become excessively lengthy, and remain incomplete!Onwards to today.

Following the murder of Hajj Qassem, following the Day of Allah (Yawm Allah) of January 2, 2020; the movement gained a new impetus; to ensure that the U.S. regime and its minions leave the region. Such a departure by the U.S. will ensure that the tumour that the British injected, and that the Americans nurtured (and continues to nurture) in the West Asia region; nay the world; the Zionist entity occupying Palestine, is removed and the land of Palestine is liberated.

Liberated and free for all the Jews, Christians and Muslims of the world to visit, honor and worship in. Free such that every Palestinian who has been exiled illegally by the Zionist project can return, and claim every grain of sand stolen from them. This is a reality that is going to happen; there is no doubt in this.

We saw the start of this movement in 1979, when the great supporter of the Zionist entity, the now dead, Shah of Iran, was evicted from his Peacock Throne by the heroic people of Iran, under the leadership of Imam Khomeini; another phase of this was in 1988; when the Islamic Republic of Iran stood firm and refused capitulation in the face of the eight-year imposed war; known as the Sacred Defence. It was furthered in 2000 when the Islamic Resistance in Lebanon evicted the Zionists from the South of Lebanon. An eviction wherein the Zionists placed their tail firmly between their legs, and in the dark of night ran away, declaring that Lebanon had become a hell for them.

The pace then gathered; as the Empire began to further its games and make the invasions that I have mentioned earlier; in 2006, another adventure by the Zionists against Lebanon was thwarted; and the defeat of the US-Zionist Axis was repeated. A defeat so profound, that to this day, the Zionist tremble at the mere thought of looking in the direction of Lebanon (though they try to maintain a faade of bravado using their media. However, let it be understood saying something, and it being a reality, are not synonymous).

Onto 2021, less than 20 years after it invaded and occupied Afghanistan under manufactured pretences; the U.S. was forced to leave, just like the Zionists; tail between its legs. What is more interesting is that the U.S. didnt care for those who it had corrupted in Afghanistan to help in its occupation; it abandoned them. An important lesson and example to those who choose to ally themselves with illegal occupiers.In todays world, the U.S. is less and less relevant; as we see the Islamic Republic of Iran, the most sanctioned country in history, still standing tall, and being able to break any sanctions, by sending support and aid, oil and medicines, to both Venezuela and more recently, to Lebanon, by way of Syria; another monumental event that renders U.S. sanctions completely impotent.

The U.S. sanctions only have value; if the U.S. is considered an entity of trust, of credibility; a notion that is rapidly fading; the U.S. is a universally despised entity; its regime is known as being unreliable; even by its allies. The recent move to side-line France in supplying submarines to Australia is an important example of this.

The U.S. media is known to be operated and populated by pathological liars, who portray fiction as fact, and fact as fiction; and much more besides.

As the U.S. fades into irrelevance, we can see the world moving to a true and fairer order; one where the Islamic Republic of Iran, as well as the Resistance Axis, are front and centre.

The U.S. can make all the claims it wants; its paid liars from the mainstream media, can say what they want, their platforms can block all that they want; the reality is that the game is up; the Truth is unstoppable; and as we say in an important supplication, recited every morning, as well as in the Holy Quran: Is not the dawn very close (Surah Hud (11), Verse 81) and They see it as far, but we know it as near (Surah al-Maarij (70), Verses 6-7).

And from Him alone is all ability and He has authority over all things.

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The U.S. departure will ensure that the Zionist entity is removed and Palestine is liberated - Tehran Times

Man Allegedly Tried To Run Over Members Of A Fairfax Synagogue With His Car Wednesday – CBS Los Angeles

Posted By on September 28, 2021

FAIRFAX DISTRICT (CBSLA) A man who witnesses say was yelling anti-Semitic threats to dozens of people at a synagogue Wednesday allegedly tried to drive his car into the crowd.

On what was supposed to be an evening of celebration and faith, members of Fairfax area synagogue say a man they had never seen before disrupted their concert Wednesday and began making threats.

He was in an absolute rage and he was screaming, Im a real Muslim and Ill show you what real terrorism looks like, and my wife and kids are this event, said security guard David K.

A member of the community and a trained security guard, David was at Wednesdays concert outside at the Shaarei Tefila Synagogue.

He was shouting that he was going F all the Jews ,and I could see it in his eyes that he wanted to attack, David said.

People who were nearby also saw the man shouting. They said he was walking two dogs and confronting the worshipers.

A man working as a valet across the street said he heard the violent exchange, with the stranger cursing, saying, Im going to come back.

About 30 minutes later, witnesses said the would-be attacker got into his car and drove directly at the crowd of people.

Floored it down an alley, which was blocked by the concert and people jumped out of the way, David K. said.

No one was hurt, but the group called the police and took video of the person they say is responsible before he drove away.

When stuff like this happens, we come out in force, Remington Franklin, with Shabbat Angels, said.

Franklin heads up a group of trained martial artists and veterans who escort members of the orthodox community as they walk the city streets. He showed up Friday night as way to make people here feel safe.

People see us, they know [were] there. They see us walking people home, Franklin said.

Its not the first time Jewish residents have been targeted nearby. A group of diners was attacked as they ate outside in Beverly Grove. The attackers have since been charged with a hate crime.

In another instance, an Orthodox man was chased by a group of protestors as he walked to his synagogue.

Many in the community feel that they are being targeted and hope that the violence will end.

Theres always a threat, David K. said. Right now, were under attack. We have someone who threatened real terrorism and has yet to be apprehended.

The Los Angeles Police Department confirmed that a police report was filed regarding Wednesdays incident, but said the matter is still under investigation and that, so far, no one has been arrested.

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Man Allegedly Tried To Run Over Members Of A Fairfax Synagogue With His Car Wednesday - CBS Los Angeles


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