Become a Member
Judaism

Why Orthodox rabbis must stop conversions

A radical solution to the increasing conflict over converts.

February 4, 2010 14:05
Entering the fold: a prospective convert appears before a rabbinical court in Israel

By

Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet,

Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet

4 min read

Tradition tells us that when the Israelites stood at Sinai and embraced the Torah, they were as converts. From that day till the present, the process of conversion entails a “Sinai moment”. By definition, just as the Israelites accepted upon themselves the obligation of mitzvot then, so too the modern-day convert must accept upon himself the same.

Over the past half a century the Jewish world has become mired in controversy over the definition of what that obligation entails. As the debate goes to the core of identifying who is a legitimate member of the Jewish faith, and as all Jewish people, without exceptions, are one entity, like one body with one heart and one soul, then the tragedy of this schism affects the totality of the Jewish people.

Until recently, I always placed the blame squarely on the shoulders of the heterodox movements. It is they who broke ranks by introducing a new form of conversion and thus a new means of Jewish identity. This caused an unprecedented split in the Jewish world. Rabbi Joseph Klein, who in 1961 helped author part of the policy by which Reform Judaism defines Jews, acknowledged this reality in a lecture delivered in 1986 by recanting his position and asking: “Why can’t we do everything we can that keeps us in harmony with our Orthodox brothers and sisters?”

Similarly, Dr Bernard Mandelbaum, Chancellor Emeritus of the (Conservative) Jewish Theological Seminary wrote in 1988: “Shouldn’t the continuity and consistency of a long heritage of Jewish law be binding on all Jews as to what makes a Jew? Isn’t this the only way to assure Jewish unity?”

To get more from judaism, click here to sign up for our free daily newsletter.