A
Lament for Rabinowitz
Kashrut, Community
and Jewish Identity
Parshat Sh'mini
April 17, 2004 / 26 Nisan 5764
By Rabbi Mark B Greenspan
Many
of us were shocked and dismayed this past week to discover that Rabinowitz,
our local kosher butcher had gone out of business quite suddenly. After
brisk sales on the eve of Pesach, we had no idea that the owners were
struggling to make ends meet. This week we found ourselves scurrying
to make other arrangements for our pre-Shabbat and post-Passover shopping.
While
this may be an inconvenience for some, for me the closing of the only
kosher butcher in Oceanside is nothing less than a disaster. While there
are many other places to shop on the South Shore of Long Island, I considered
Rabinowitz to be an important Jewish institution in our community, no
less significant than OJC, Temple Avodah, Young Israel or the JCC. Having
a successful kosher butcher in Oceanside was a sign that we are still
a thriving Jewish community that can afford to support all the amenities
of Jewish life.
While
the closing of the butcher may be a product of good old fashion competition
and free market enterprise more than anything else, it is also a statement
of our lack of support for the Jewish institutions right here in our
own community. Brock's or Super Sol in the five towns may have a wider
array of kosher products, but I've always felt that we have a responsibility
to support the kosher businesses close to home rather than seeking the
best price elsewhere.
It's
interesting to note that Mordechai Kaplan, the founder of the Reconstructionist
Movement, and one of the great Jewish visionaries of the last century,
suggested that Jewish communities have a responsibility to support the
basic needs of Jewish traditional practice including Kashrut. In his
classic work written seventy years ago, Judaism as a Civilization, Kaplan
suggested that federations must provide funds for services such as Shochtim,
ritual slaughterers, Mashgichim, Kashrut supervisors, and even kosher
butcher shops. These institutions are as much a part of Jewish life
as support for Jews abroad or providing counseling services here at
home. Ironically Kaplan held up the Jewish federations of Pittsburg
and Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (my former community) as an example of
such communal support. Today there is no kosher butcher in Harrisburg.
Of
course in the 1930's when Kaplan wrote his great work he believed that
Kashrut would soon disappear. Although he was an observant Jew himself,
he saw "the writing on the wall.' Only a small minority of Jews
continued to observe these traditions in the early part of the twentieth
century. Kaplan could not imagine that the kosher food industry would
become a profitable and a multimillion dollar industry some day. Today
you can get almost anything you want in kosher food from Chinese cuisine
to Oreo Cookies.
In
the end, however, Kashrut begins at home and it must be supported right
here in our own community. I believe the lesson to be learned from the
closure of Rabinowitz's is that it takes more than just the Orthodox
community to support the Kashrut institutions necessary for a Jewish
communal life. Conservative Judaism is committed to Kashrut in theory
but we are far too lackadaisical about this important aspect of our
tradition. Those who keep Kosher assume that Orthodox Jews will maintain
these institutions. The truth is Orthodox Jews can't do so without our
support. If we believe Kashrut is an important aspect of Jewish life,
then we have to be willing "to put our money where our mouth is.'
We must become actively involved in supporting and promoting Kashrut!
Those
who belong to Conservative Congregations who don't keep kosher need
to think hard about this important aspect of Halachah, Jewish law. Too
often they assume that this is something "Orthodox Jews" do,
not Conservative Jews. And this is a terrible and a damaging mistake
too many of Conservative Jews make.
Did
you know that Conservative Judaism began over the issue of Kashrut?
Toward the end of the nineteenth century, the infamous "Treifa
Banquet" took place which led to the creation of the Jewish Theological
Seminary and the Conservative Movement. It was all about Kashrut. The
story is that the first graduating class of Hebrew Union College (the
bastion of Reform Judaism) was celebrating its ordination in Cincinnati,
Ohio in 1885. These were the first ordained Rabbis in America. Rabbi
Isaac Meir Wise arranged for a celebratory dinner at a local French
restaurant to mark the occasion. When the meal turned out to be unabashedly
un-kosher several of the students and professors got up and stormed
out shouting, "Treif, treif!" And so the Jewish Theological
Seminary was born in New York a few years later!
It's
no accident, then, that we're called the Conservative Movement. We are
Conservative Jews not because we aren't Orthodox, but because we were
trying to conserve and preserve Jewish traditions that fell by the way
side in the nascent Reform Movement. We are Conservative Jews because
we are committed to Jewish tradition!
Today,
of course, some of my best friends are Reform Jews who keep kosher so
we are left wondering "Mah Nishtana," what makes us different
from them? Indeed, Rabbi Paul Menitoff, the Executive director of the
CCAR, the Central Conference of American Rabbis, the rabbinic association
of the Reform movement, recently suggested that within the next decade
or two, Conservative Judaism will disappear as our laity either joins
modern Orthodoxy or Reform Judaism. He argued that there is no longer
any need for a centrist movement. Beside the fact that Rabbi Menitoff
showed tremendous Huzpah in making such public judgments of his sister
movements, I think he is completely wrong.
For
us, Kashrut is not a convenience but a commandment. The fact that all
Conservative Jews don't keep Kosher doesn't mean that they don't feel
deep down that this is so. And I know any number of Conservative Jews
who now keep kosher homes who did not necessarily grow up in such homes.
What
Conservative Judaism offers that I think is lacking in both Orthodoxy
and Reform Judaism is a way to aspire toward Kashrut. Judaism need not
be all or nothing. There is a ladder of observance that we can climb
as a way of constantly increasing and improving our personal observance.
Being a Conservative Jew, then, means that you have a commitment to
stand on the ladder. Some may be higher up than others but we all hold
the standards as something to aspire towards.
In
our new Humash, Etz Hayim, we find the following comment: "The
dietary laws are given incrementally in the Torah, forbidding boiling
a kid in its mother's milk; then prohibiting the ingestion of blood;
then declaring certain species of mammal, fish, and fowl unfit for consumption.
Similarly, many Jews who begin from a position of limited observance
can commit themselves to sanctifying their mealtimes in an incremental
manner. "No one need feel like a hypocrite for not keeping all
of the commandments immediately." What is important is to be on
the path of observance, to be, in the words of Emet Ve-Emumah, a "striving"
Jew.
So
we Conservative Jews need to get serious about Kashrut. Or in the word
of Nike, we need to "Just do it!" If you are not there yet,
that's OK; you shouldn't feel threatened or judged. All I ask is that
you remain open minded and willing to wrestle with our tradition. What
makes Conservative Judaism dynamic is that we're constantly in transition,
constantly growing and measuring our lives by the standards of Jewish
living. In the words of Franz Rosensweig we are "Not yet"
there. We are "not yet" fully Jewish.
And
if you're looking for a spiritual discipline to enrich your life, then
there is none more powerful than Kashrut. There is no instinct more
common than the biological need to consume food. We all do it every
day. Kashrut allows us to sanctify the act of eating; it allows us to
turn the dinner table into an altar; it gives us the ability to truly
embrace the gifts that God has given us so that we take nothing for
granted. And keeping Kosher is the single most powerful tool for creating
a deep and abiding sense of Jewish identity. Kashrut sanctifies our
daily lives and puts us in the presence of God.
Most
of all, the more people who keep kosher, the stronger we become as a
community. Orthodox Judaism is strong today but without the support
and involvement of committed Conservative Jews who keep kosher, I just
don't think there are enough people to maintain the institutions necessary
for an observant Jewish community. We need to stop demeaning our role
and importance in this regard. We have much to contribute and we should
keep Kosher on our own terms.
Rabinowitz
is gone and I can only hope that we will lure a new kosher butcher into
our community. But that depends on you and me.
We
need to recognize that this is a fundamental and basic step on the ladder
of Jewish life.
Shabbat
Shalom
"All it takes to study Torah is an open heart, a curious mind
and a desire to grow a Jewish soul."