Conservative Movement in US blasts Chief Rabbi Lau for ‘ignorant’ remarks against Bennett
рус   |   eng
Search
Sign in   Register
Help |  RSS |  Subscribe
Euroasian Jewish News
    World Jewish News
      Analytics
        Activity Leadership Partners
          Mass Media
            Xenophobia Monitoring
              Reading Room
                Contact Us

                  World Jewish News

                  Conservative Movement in US blasts Chief Rabbi Lau for ‘ignorant’ remarks against Bennett

                  David Lau. (photo credit:MARC ISRAEL SELLEM/THE JERUSALEM POST)

                  Conservative Movement in US blasts Chief Rabbi Lau for ‘ignorant’ remarks against Bennett

                  10.12.2015, Community Life

                  The Conservative (Masorti) Movement in the US has reacted fiercely to comments made by Chief Rabbi David Lau against the denomination in his criticism of Education Minister Naftali Bennett on Wednesday.

                  In reference to a visit Bennett made to one of the Soloman Schechter schools of the Conservative Movement in New York earlier this month, Lau said that it was “forbidden” to deliberately speak to the Conservative community in such a manner, that education in Conservative schools “distances Jews” from their tradition, and that the movement was “losing its children and grandchildren.”

                  The Rabbinical Assembly, the international association of Conservative/Masorti rabbis, labeled Lau’s comments “insulting and inaccurate” and asserted that his perceptions of the Conservative Movement and its congregants was erroneous.

                  “We are a stream that engages our brethren and keeps our congregants and peers involved in Jewish life, both inside and outside the synagogue,” reads the Rabbinical Assembly statement issued on Thursday.

                  The Conservative rabbis also pointed out that Conservative Jews make up nearly one-fifth of the American Jewish population, and that according to the 2013 Pew report on US Jewry, “98 percent of self-identifying Conservative Jews are ‘proud’ to be Jewish, 93 percent feel that ‘being Jewish’ is ‘important’ to their lives, and 90 percent regard Israel as ‘an important part of being Jewish.’”

                  “Chief Rabbi Lau's recent comment that the Conservative movement 'distances Jews from the path of the Jewish people' is not only misinformed but offensive,” continued the Rabbinical Assembly statement, while welcoming Bennett’s visit and saying that Lau should follow the sentiment of the Education minister and embrace not distance Jews from one another.

                  “As Rabbi Lau speaks out on threats to the Jewish future, he must first look at how his ignorant and narrow-minded remarks such as these are alienating young Jews in the Diaspora,” concluded the Rabbinical Assembly. “Only through engaging the Diaspora community worldwide will we maintain our strength as a Jewish people. As Hillel taught in Avot 1:12, '[love] your fellow creatures and [attract] them to the study of Torah.’"

                  Lau himself visited a pluralistic school in Washington DC in October during a visit of his own to the US. According to the Washington Jewish Week, the chief rabbi made a stop at the Jewish Primary Day School of the Nation’s Capital and spoke with pupils “about the connectedness of all Jewish people.”

                  The school describes itself as “an independent, pluralistic Jewish day school” and “non-denominational,” although it was founded at the Adas Israel Conservative Congregation in Washington DC in 1988.

                  Lau’s comments come following strained tensions between the non-Orthodox Jewish movements in the Diaspora and in Israel and the Israeli religious establishment.

                  Religious Services Minister David Azoulay of the haredi Shas party criticised non-Orthodox Jews on two separate occasions, while a recent promise by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to provide the Reform and Conservative movements in Israel with government funds evinced outrage from United Torah Judaism MKs who took the opportunity to berate non-Orthodox Jewish denominations and pledged to halt such funding.

                  By JEREMY SHARON

                  JPost.com