Chicago’s Rebel Rabbi
By Eli Ungar-Sargon
July 17, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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"Jewschool"
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If you’ve heard of Rabbi Brant Rosen, chances are
that you know about his vocal and principled stance on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Rosen has been on a personal journey
ever since Israel’s 2008-2009 Operation Cast Lead, the brutality of
which compelled him to question his beliefs about the State of
Israel and Zionism. Much of this journey unfolded in public as Rosen
courageously wrote about his evolving views on Israel/Palestine in
his well-read blog,
Shalom Rav. These blog posts and some of the responses to them
formed the basis for his 2012 book
“Wrestling in the Daylight: A Rabbi’s Path To Palestinian
Solidarity.”Rosen is the founder of the
Jewish Voice For Peace Rabbinical Council and for 17 years he
was the Rabbi of the
Jewish Reconstructionist Congregation in Evanston. He stepped
down from this pulpit in September and took a position as the
Midwest Regional Director of the
American Friends Service Committee. On July 5th, he announced
the founding of a new community called
Tzedek Chicago. I contacted Rabbi Rosen earlier this week to
learn more about his politics, identity, and new community.
When did unquestioning support
for the State of Israel become a centerpiece of Jewish identity in
the United States? Why did this happen?
Israel became a centerpiece of Jewish identity
following the trauma of the Holocaust – an identity which became
more or less solidified following Israel’s military victory in the
Six Day War. In retrospect, it is staggering to contemplate how
quickly and thoroughly this new narrative has taken hold of the
Jewish community. In a nutshell, it is a narrative that teaches that
the traumas of the past will inevitably become our future unless the
Jewish people embrace the ways of empire, nationalism and
militarism. I do believe that this narrative is in many ways a
betrayal of a central narrative that has sustained the Jewish people
for centuries: the story of a people born out of the ashes of a
Temple destroyed by the world’s mightiest empire – who responded by
creating a tradition rooted in an allegiance to a Power yet greater
than any human power.
We have integrated this new narrative so
thoroughly that we rarely stop to consider its implications. There
are so many examples I could point to; to cite but one simple
instance: virtually every synagogue in America has a US and Israeli
flag on either side of the Aron Kodesh [the cabinet in a
Synagogue where the Torah scrolls are kept].In other words, in our
most sacred Jewish spaces, we are literally bowing down to physical
symbols of national power. This is a powerful demonstration of how
completely this new narrative has taken hold of post-Holocaust
Jewish identity. To my my mind, it is nothing short of idolatry –
and our inability to recognize it as such shows just how deeply we
have bought into a religious mindset that radically values
physical/military power over spiritual power.
What does solidarity with the
Palestinian people mean to you?
By standing in solidarity with the Palestinian
people, I believe I am fulfilling one of the central spiritual
directives of my religious tradition – namely that we must stand
with the oppressed and call out the oppressor. It’s really that
simple. Now of course, I’m not so naïve as to deny the enormous
complexities that are raised when Jews stand in solidarity with
Palestinians. I know full well that in the eyes of many in my
community, standing in solidarity with Palestinians is a profoundly
transgressive act.
Since so many frame this issue as a binary
conflict between “us and them,” to stand in solidarity with
Palestinians must mean that I am choosing not to stand with my own
people. I reject this binary meme in no uncertain terms. I believe
to my core that standing with the Palestinians is one of the most
Jewish things I can do. In the end, my solidarity is not with
Palestinians alone but with all who have suffered from prejudice,
oppression and structural racism. Needless to say, this has
historically included Jews as well. So in the end, I view solidarity
as an act that defies “zero sum attitudes.” It is ultimately an act
of love that will ensure a future of dignity and security for all.
How do you respond to people who
claim that the BDS Movement is antisemitic?
I defy anyone to read the 2005 Palestinian call
for Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions and explain to me how it is
rooted in anything other than values of equality and international
human rights – and it is certainly not anti-Semitic to hold Israel
to these standards. There is nothing anti-Semitic in the three
essential goals of BDS: namely, an end to the occupation, equal
rights for Palestinian citizens of Israel and a recognition of the
Palestinian right of return. And there is certainly nothing
anti-Semitic about the time honored nonviolent means by which the
BDS movement seeks these ends.
Now I know there are those who claim that the
“double standard” created by BDS is somehow anti-Semitic; in other
words of all the odious regimes in the world, why is Israel being
singled out for this treatment? This claim utterly misunderstands
the nature of the BDS call – and of the nature of solidarity itself.
The BDS call was a call that came from Palestinians themselves. It
comes from a myriad of Palestinian civil society organizations and
institutions that are asking the international community to give
popular support to their cause. The BDS call was not initiated by
campus organizers, Protestant church groups, or international
solidarity organizations. On the contrary, these groups have made
the decision, in many cases after considerable deliberation, to
respond to the Palestinian call for support and solidarity. So the
real question, it seems to me, is not “What about all these other
horrible countries?” but rather: “In the face of international
political inaction to solve this unjust situation, the Palestinians
have put out a call and are asking for our support and solidarity.
Do we believe their call is worth responding to or not?”
In September you announced that
you would be stepping down from your pulpit at the Jewish
Reconstructionist Congregation in Evanston. What precipitated this
move?
I made the decision to resign from JRC because my
activism on the issue of Israel-Palestine had created too much
stress for my congregation – and for me as well. For the past
several years, I have become a increasingly high profile Palestine
solidarity activist and we had been doing our best to manage this
complicated reality for many years. To their credit, JRC’s
congregational leadership consistently and courageously supported my
right and responsibility to speak my conscience on this issue even
when most of them did not agree with me politically. In the end,
however, I think my activism was just too painful for some members
of my congregation. Last year, they became more vocal and organized
in expressing their upset – and the atmosphere soon became so
intolerable that it became impossible for me to do my job any more.
I want to stress that my decision to leave was mine and mine
alone. It was not easy for me to leave a congregation to which I had
been devoted and that had been home to me and my family for almost
twenty years. But if I’m truly honest with myself, I don’t know that
it could have ended any other way, given the circumstances.
Do you have any regrets about
leaving?
I have great sadness about leaving JRC, but no
regrets. Given my current path, I don’t think it would be fair to
the congregation – or to me – for me to remain there. While it was a
traumatic break for us, I have incredible fondness for the
congregation and its members and am proud of what we were able to
accomplish there. I wish them nothing but the best.
What is Tzedek Chicago?
Tzedek Chicago is an avowedly non-Zionist
congregation rooted in core values of spiritual openness,
anti-racism, universalism and solidarity with the oppressed. It is a
conscious attempt to create a Jewish spiritual community that
celebrates Judaism as a global diaspora-based spiritual peoplehood.
I will be serving as its rabbi part time while continuing to work in
my full time capacity at AFSC.
Most liberal congregations describe themselves
with words such as “open,” “inclusive,” and “welcoming.” Although it
might sound odd to say, Tzedek Chicago is really not an inclusive
community. We’re an intentional community rooted in very specific
values. We’re not for everyone and we don’t pretend to be.
At this point in my career, I’m not interested in
creating another liberal Jewish congregation. There are plenty of
them out there and some of them do wonderful, creative, important
work. However, over the years I’ve increasingly met people who seek
Jewish community but are kept at bay from congregational life
because Zionism and support for the State of Israel assumes such a
prominent role in virtually every American synagogue. I’m meeting
more and more Jews who have no interest at all in enrolling their
children in a religious school that considers a personal connection
with the State of Israel to be a core Jewish educational value.
Quite frankly, many Jews – particularly younger generations of Jews
– are asking what this over-militarized ethnic nation state has to
do with their Jewish identity.
Now for those who do place a high value on Israel
and Zionism, there are a myriad of synagogues to choose from. But
for those who do not, there really are no choices at all to speak
of. Tzedek Chicago really is an attempt to create a Jewish
congregational community for those whose Judaism is not dependent
upon identification with Jewish nation-statism. And by extension for
those who seek a Judaism rooted in sacred values of such as
nonviolence, anti-racism and universalism.
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