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The Tikvah Podcast

Elliott Abrams on Whether American Jewry Can Restore Its Sense of Peoplehood

The Tikvah Podcast

Tikvah

Judaism, Politics, Religion & Spirituality, News

4.6620 Ratings

🗓️ 11 October 2024

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

That the Jews have survived is one of the great mysteries of history, and for some theologians, Jewish survival is even an indication of God’s providence. The stronger the force against the Jews, the more miraculous their resilience and endurance.

But that mystery has another dimension to it–because in America, the Jewish community is not doing well at all. And that’s not because America is like Egypt or Spain or Germany–in fact it’s precisely because America is so decent, so good, and so welcoming that the Jewish community finds itself contracting and growing shallower.

There is a powerful countertrend among the Orthodox subpopulations of American Jewry. Their rates of generational retention and inmarriage are high. Jewish education is advanced, and even flourishing. The U.S.-Israel relationship tends to be a salient issue in their approach to public affairs. But the Orthodox segment of American Jewry is very small. What about the other 85 or 90 percent?

Elliott Abrams, the chairman of Tikvah and a distinguished foreign-policy expert, is the author of a new book addressing these topics, If You Will It: Rebuilding Jewish Peoplehood for the 21st Century. Abrams takes comprehensive stock of the available data on American Jewish communal life and then poses a question. The Orthodox Jews of America have a formula that works. But what can be done to strengthen the Jewish attachments and Jewish identities of the non-Orthodox? What do the data tell us? Abrams joins Mosaic‘s editor Jonathan Silver to discuss If You Will It.

Musical selections in this podcast are drawn from the Quintet for Clarinet and Strings, op. 31a, composed by Paul Ben-Haim and performed by the ARC Ensemble.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Think of all that the Jews have endured.

0:10.2

Egypt and Amalek, Bavel and Rome, the waves of persecution, Farhood and Pagram that have,

0:16.3

as the Passover Hagada puts it, risen up in every generation to threaten the Jewish people.

0:21.7

That the Jews have survived is one of the great mysteries of history, and for some

0:25.9

theologians, Jewish survival is even an indication of God's providence. The stronger the

0:31.4

force against the Jews, the more miraculous their resilience and endurance. But there's

0:36.8

another dimension to that mystery,

0:38.9

because in America, the Jewish community is not doing very well at all. And that's not because

0:45.2

America is like Egypt or Amalek or Bavel or Rome, not at all. In fact, it's precisely the

0:51.1

opposite. It's precisely because America is so decent, so good,

0:55.9

so welcoming, so wonderful, that the Jewish community finds itself contracting and growing shallower.

1:02.4

There's a powerful counter-trend among the Orthodox subpopulations of American Jewry,

1:07.4

among the Orthodox rates of generational retention and in marriage are high.

1:12.9

Jewish education is advanced and even flourishing. The U.S. Israel relationship tends to be a salient

1:19.3

issue in the Orthodox Jews approach to public affairs. But the Orthodox segment of American

1:25.2

jury is small. What about the other 85% or 90%?

1:30.4

Welcome to the Tikva podcast. I'm your host, Jonathan Silver.

1:34.3

This week, my guest is Elliot Abrams, Tickf's chairman,

1:37.7

Distinguished Foreign Policy Expert, and author of a new book,

1:41.3

If You Will It, Rebuilding Jewish Peoplehood for the 21st Century.

1:45.6

Elliot takes comprehensive stock of the available data on American Jewish communal life,

1:51.5

and then posits this question.

...

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