closeicon

Keren David

Liberal Judaism is great — but it just isn’t for me

My heart is annoyingly Orthodox, even though my head takes me in a much more liberal direction

articlemain
June 30, 2022 11:41

I was recently asked to be an ambassador for Liberal Judaism in their fund-raising drive. You know the sort of thing: you write about how deserving the organisation is, and hopefully your friends are persuaded to put their hands in their pockets.

I dithered about being an ambassador, and I may even have said yes, but eventually I didn’t do it. I suspected my friends (in the main an interesting mix of Orthodox, secular and not Jewish at all) would have been slightly baffled by it, as I am not and have never been a member of the Liberal movement.

Being asked, though, did make me think about my own relationship with progressive Judaism.

In Welwyn Garden City, where I grew up, Christianity came in all varieties — Catholic, Church of England, a strong showing by the Quakers, and my friend’s mum was a Christian Scientist.

So I always thought of Christianity as a veritable buffet spread of choices. Judaism, not so much. Our shul was Orthodox, in a do-it-yourself, everyone’s welcome sort of way. The shuls I visited for family barmitzvahs were very similar, with added extras, such as ladies’ galleries.

However, there was one exception. We were invited to something called a “Confirmation” in a progressive synagogue (I have no idea which one). The participants were 16, not 13, and there was much English spoken. There were musical instruments. We all sat together as a family. It was nothing like any Jewish experience I had ever had. I was intrigued —but that was partly because I also knew that my mother highly disapproved.

And mainly out of respect from her, I never followed my interest in progressive Judaism, although we did go to the Liberal shul when we lived in Amsterdam — where the Dutch parts might as well have been Hebrew to us.

In recent years though, I’ve watched and admired greatly the way Liberal Judaism has welcomed and supported various friends of mine.

My friend and her three children were profoundly shocked and plunged into grief when her partner, their father, died suddenly, aged just 49. He’d been a long-standing member of the choir at the Liberal Synagogue in St John’s Wood, and the shul hosted a beautiful memorial service for him, all the more moving because neither he nor his family were Jewish.

Then there was the conversion process, undergone by another friend. Years of learning, guidance and encouragement, culminating in an emotional day at the Liberal Beth Din, during which I stood by her side as she was questioned with gentle respect. She’s been welcomed into several Liberal communities with open arms, and I was welcomed too — at her small “home” community  in Reading and again at the Liberal Synagogue in St John’s Wood, where she had her batmitzvah.

On that occasion,I was asked to read the haftorah. I pondered whether I would feel more engaged and involved with Judaism if that had been an option when I had my own batmitzvah, many decades ago. Probably, yes. The way in which women take a completely equal role within Liberal Judaism, and the respect paid to all kinds of people with all kinds of gender identities and sexualities impresses me, and highlights the gaps in my own experience (gaps I could have filled, but have never chosen to).

The person who helped me as I prepared to read the haftorah was Bob Kirk, whom I’d interviewed for the JC along with his wife Ann. Bob and Ann were Kindertransport refugees. They recalled how the Liberal community appealed for sponsors for children, and how they were nurtured by their community as they built new lives as young adults robbed of their own familes by the Shoah.

Further back, Lily Montagu is a name famous in Liberal Judaism as one of the founders of the movement in the UK, a philanthropist and activist for social justice and women’s suffrage. In my family, she’s known as the founder of the West Central Girls’ Club, which my grandmother loved when she was growing up in Ladbroke Grove.

So, with all my admiration for Liberal Judaism, why don’t I take the plunge? After all, the nearest community to my home is a Liberal one. The problem is not Liberal Judaism, it’s me. My Jewish heart does seem to be annoyingly Orthodox, even though my head leads me in a much more liberal direction.

Anyway, I’m delighted that despite my letting them down, Liberal Judaism raised £275,000, which will go to a variety of excellent projects.

And it’s not too late to add to that total. You can support Liberal Judaism here.

June 30, 2022 11:41

Want more from the JC?

To continue reading, we just need a few details...

Want more from
the JC?

To continue reading, we just
need a few details...

Get the best news and views from across the Jewish world Get subscriber-only offers from our partners Subscribe to get access to our e-paper and archive