Bernie
Sanders is the most successful Jewish candidate for
the presidency ever. It’s a rare sign of the health of our republic that no one
seems to much care or even notice. Least of all, Sanders himself. Which
prompted Anderson Cooper in arecent Democratic debate to ask Sanders
whether he was intentionally keeping his Judaism under wraps.
“No,”
answered Sanders: “I am very proud to be Jewish.” He then explained that the Holocaust
had wiped out his father’s family. And that he remembered as a child seeing
neighbors with concentration camp numbers tattooed on their arms. Being
Jewish, he declared, “is an essential part of who I am as a human
being.”
A
fascinating answer, irrelevant to presidential politics but quite revealing
about the state of Jewish identity in contemporary America.
Think
about it. There are several alternate ways American Jews commonly explain the
role Judaism plays in their lives.
1.
Practice: Judaism as embedded in their life through religious practice or the
transmission of Jewish culture by way of teaching or scholarship. Think Joe
Lieberman or the neighborhood rabbi.
2.
Tikkun: Seeing Judaism as an expression of the prophetic ideal of social
justice. Love thy neighbor, clothe the naked, walk with God, beat swords into
plowshares. As ritual and practice have fallen away over the generations, this
has become the core identity of liberal Judaism. Its central mission is nothing
less than to repair the world (“Tikkun olam”).
Which,
incidentally, is the answer to the perennial question, “Why is it that Jews
vote overwhelmingly Democratic?” Because, for the majority of Jews, the social
ideals of liberalism are the most tangible expressions of their prophetic
Jewish faith.
When
Sanders was asked about his Jewish identity, I was sure his answer would be
some variation of Tikkun. On the stump, he plays the Old Testament prophet
railing against the powerful and denouncing their treatment of the widow and
the orphan. Yet Sanders gave an entirely different answer.
3. The
Holocaust. What a strange reply — yet it doesn’t seem so to us because it has
become increasingly common for American Jews to locate their identity in the
Holocaust.
For
example, it’s become a growing emphasis in Jewish pedagogy from the Sunday
schools to Holocaust studies programs in
the various universities. Additionally, Jewish groups organize visits for young
people to the concentration camps of Europe.
The
memories created are indelible. And deeply valuable. Indeed, though my own
family was largely spared, the Holocaust forms an ineradicable element of my
own Jewish consciousness. But I worry about the balance. As Jewish practice,
learning and knowledge diminish over time, my concern is that Holocaust memory
is emerging as the dominant feature of Jewishness in America.
I worry
that a people with a 3,000-year history of creative genius, enriched by
intimate relations with every culture from Paris to Patagonia, should be
placing such weight on martyrdom — and indeed, for this generation, martyrdom
once removed.
I’m not
criticizing Sanders. I credit him with sincerity and authenticity. But it is
precisely that sincerity and authenticity — and the implications for future
generations — that so concern me. Sanders is 74, but I suspect a growing number
of young Jews would give an answer similar to his.
We must
of course remain dedicated to keeping alive the memory and the truth of the Holocaust,
particularly when they are under assault from so many quarters. Which is why,
though I initially opposed having a Holocaust museum as the sole
representation of the Jewish experience in the center of Washington, I came to
see the virtue of having so sacred yet vulnerable a legacy placed at the
monumental core of — and thus entrusted to the protection of — the most
tolerant and open nation on earth.
Nonetheless,
there must be balance. It would be a tragedy for American Jews to make the
Holocaust the principal legacy bequeathed to their children. After all, the
Jewish people are living through a miraculous age: the rebirth of Jewish
sovereignty, the revival of Hebrew (a cultural resurrection unique in human
history), the flowering of a new Hebraic culture radiating throughout the
Jewish world.
Memory
is sacred, but victimhood cannot be the foundation stone of Jewish identity.
Traditional Judaism has 613 commandments. The philosopher Emil Fackenheim famously said that the 614th is
to deny Hitler any posthumous victories. The reduction of Jewish identity to
victimhood would be one such victory. It must not be permitted.
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