Categories: Emes Ve-Emunah
An Attempt to Export Failure
{Originally posted to the author's website, Emes Ve-Emunah}
I have been a fan of Rabbi Emanuel Feldman ever since I heard about him many years ago. He is one of the true heroes of Orthodox Judaism. He did in Atlanta what few Orthodox rabbis in his situation were able to do. In 1955, an era where many old line Orthodox Shuls were removing the Mechitza that separates men and women he installed one in his Shul after being hired a few years earlier.
Needless to say there were detractors. His initial attempt was rebuffed and the Mechitza removed the next day. Undaunted, Rabbi Feldman put his job on the line threatening to leave if the Mechitza was not reinstalled. It was and remains there to this day. How one may ask did he dare challenge the spirit of that time? Was he not worried about losing members that insisted on sitting together with their families in Shul?
I’m sure he was. But what was important to him was that the Halacha of separating men and women during prayer in a Shul setting – be restored in his Shul. He was - and is a man of principle who understands that when the spirit of the times clashes with Judaism, Judaism wins.
And as a man of principle he also understood that there are many voices in Judaism that deserve to be heard even if he didn’t agree with them. Which is why he was a long term editor of Tradition Magazine, a Journal of Orthodox thought. Tradition occasionally featured some controversial articles. It was during his tenure that Rabbi Shubert Spero wrote an article suggesting that because of the geological data to the contrary - perhaps the Mabul (the world-wide flood mentioned in Genesis) may never have actually happened and was only an allegory.
I’m pretty sure that Rabbi Feldman is not on board with Rabbi Spero’s thesis. As Rav Ahron Soloveichik said, this view is Karuv L’Apikursus – near heresy! And yet he allowed it to be published. I honestly don’t think I would have had the courage to do so - had I been in his shoes.
Rabbi Feldman retired from Tradition and his rabbinic position in Atlanta - and made Aliyah many years ago. He is now well into his 80s but remains active as a regular contributor to Mishpacha Magazine – writing about various issues of the day. Cross-Currents features one of his latest articles. It is one with which I whole-hardheartedly agree. And yet feel somewhat conflicted about. It deals with a theme featured here quite often.
Rabbi Feldman calls ludicrous the attempts by the Reform and Conservative Movements to insert themselves into official religious life in Israel. Although I don’t know that I would have chosen that word, I completely understand and agree with his argument, and have said much the same thing myself. And it bears repeating. Here is some of what he says:
Use of the word “ludicrous” is unavoidable when viewing some statistics. The Reform-Conservative brand has been dominant in American Jewish life for most of the 20th century, when the vast majority of affiliated American Jews were affiliated with them. It is instructive to examine what these groups achieved in America after a century of dominance. Let us look at the record. The just-issued Pew study provides a glimpse of American Jewish life today:
- 71% of US non-Orthodox are intermarried;
- two-thirds of the non-Orthodox belong to no synagogue;
- one third of non-Orthodox Jews declare that they do not believe in Gd;
- one-third of non -Orthodox Jews have Xmas trees;
- 34% of non-Orthodox Jews say that one can still be Jewish even if one believes in the founder of Xianity as the messiah and savior.










