Anglo-Jewry: Maccabi football, fishballs and anti-semitism - what else?


By DaddyDay
January 18, 2010
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In his sermon on Shabbat, Rabbi Naftali Brawer claimed that an alien parachuted into the Anglo-Jewish community for a weekend - who would read the JC on Friday night, go to shul, and listen to conversations - would conclude that "Judaism is about three things - Maccabi football, fishballs and anti-semitism."

The claim was made to illustrate the wider point that Anglo-Jewry "lacks a spiritual vocabulary, our judaism is defined by limiting notions, and We lack a positive sense of spiritual mission."

Sitting in shul listening to this, I was somewhat shocked and taken aback (as were several people around me, who expressed similar sentiments to my own).

Firstly, no Shabbat experience is ever the same from one household to the next. If, as Rabbi Brawer aserts, the alien had been fortunate enough to end up in a household where going to shul on Shabbat morning was part of the weekend, no doubt the alien would have come across a few other key elements of Anglo-Jewry - the education of our children; the traditions we hold dearly through prayer, song and food; and our contribution to wider society, amongst other things. Why, therefore, would football, fishballs and anti-semitism be the redeeming features of a Shabbat in the UK? One shouldn't let parts of the Jewish Chronicle cloud their judgement of the actual goings on of the Jewish community.

Such a conclusion does a huge disservice to many, and is not a message to inspire people to attain a "positive sense of spiritual mission". Instead, perhaps a focus on the positive points of Anglo-Jewry would provide the stimulus for people to move away from the apparent continuous in-fighting, and concentrate on what is good and how further progress can be made.

It is here, I believe, that spiritual leaders, such as our communal rabbis, should be playing a key part, motivating their congregants through messages of hope and achievement, rather than criticism and failure.

COMMENTS

moshetzarfati2

18 January, 2010 - 11:42

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But DaddyDay, what if Rabbi Brawer has it spot on? The community seems to have been hijacked by those who define themselves by the negative rather than looking to the positive. Some even make a living out of spreading fear. Without the fear, they'd be nowhere.
I don't know whether Rabbi Brawer was at Limmud -- and it might be presumptuous of me to think he wasn't because of his United Synagogue membership -- but there, at least, there was a positive sense of a spiritual mission.


DaddyDay

18 January, 2010 - 11:58

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Yes, he was at Limmud and praised it highly in a sermon the previous week, describing it as a "parallel universe" to what's actually going on in Anglo-Jewry.


Oy Va Goy

18 January, 2010 - 12:59

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Interesting article Damian. I don't recall discussing either fishballs or football at any of our shabbat lunches together!


am999

19 January, 2010 - 08:17

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DD - I've been following your writings for a while - but finally you've managed to make me react... :)
I think, that up to a point, RB had it spot on. Instead of looking at yourself, an active, enthusiastic and involved member of the community, look at the mainstream of US Jewry, and be honest with yourself about it.
How many homes are exactly like that? They say they're Jewish, and to prove it they buy a JC every week, and go to shul 3 times a year? Or once a month? Or even if it is once a week, but then spend the whole time that they are in shul discussing the JC and its back pages, rather than getting to know their religion better, or becoming a more active part of it?
As a member of the community (and on the whole a fan of RB), I see it all the time. Amongst not only those who turn up high days, holy days and family parties *ahem*, but amongst the "regulars" too, many of whom I call my friends. We forget that in order to keep up our Judaism, we need to work at it. Not just be a laid back, passive member. Often I'm equally as guilty - I don't want this to sound like another sermon... Judaism should not only be a religion, but also a movement. That way we have a good chance of strengthening our own beliefs, showing that strength to the world instead of being apologetic towards it, and passing it on to our children, imparting them with the beliefs that we hold true and dear.
I agree that there are many positives that could be concentrated on, but unfortunately those negatives are still out there, and in abundance. And I agree that they need to be mentioned, commented on, and worked at!
PS - Apologies that this turned into a bit more of a rant than intended...
Keep up the good work! AM


Jonathan Hoffman

19 January, 2010 - 08:35

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Some even make a living out of spreading fear. Without the fear, they'd be nowhere.

Usual mendacious rubbish from this lying Troll. Next he'll be saying that the police 'make a living from spreading fear'....


moshetzarfati2

19 January, 2010 - 09:13

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erm... no. The Police, errr... police. They do not spread fear. But there are those among us who would be nowhere and have nothing if they didn't spread fear. Shameful, really. And as for mendacity... take a look in the mirror is all I can and will suggest.
Still, as they say in Hebrew: al rosh ha'ganav bo'er ha'kova. I'm glad you recognised yourself amongst those who make a living out of spreading fear. This kind of recognition is the first step to recovery.

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