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Keeping Jewish culture alive is about more than fighting hatred

The fact that 3/4 Jews believe that fighting antisemitism comprises the core of their identity is a depressing sign

March 31, 2022 14:00
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Saturday Sabbath Havdala ceremony at the end of Jewish Saturday
3 min read

A few years ago, I attended a Jewish Book Week talk by the Canadian novelist David Bezmozgis. A misanthropic but insightful speaker, Bezmozgis made a statement that has stayed with me: If you aren’t frum and if you aren’t going to move to Israel and fulfil the promise of Zionism, then your Judaism is doomed. It’s not strong enough and in time will die out. 

I was reminded of this challenge recently while reading a fascinating new report on Jewish identity by the Institute for Jewish Policy Research. Written by two leading demographers, Daniel Staetsky and Sergio Della Pergola, the report investigates many aspects of Jewish life in Europe, such as the continued rise of the Charedim, and the pre-eminence of Seder night over Yom Kippur as the most widely observed Jewish holiday. 

But the report’s standout graph is one that asks its surveyees what aspect of their Jewish identity they consider “very important”. Top, by some distance, comes “remembering the Holocaust” with 78 per cent, followed by “combating antisemitism” with 73 per cent. “Jewish culture” on the other hand, comes much lower, with a measly 41 per cent calling it a very important part of their identity. This rather depressed me and brought back the words of Bezmozgis, the Canadian Cassandra. 

For while remembering the Holocaust and fighting antisemitism are of course central to any European Jewish identity, including mine, they are also a one-dimensional and frankly pretty miserable basis on which to build a Jewish life. Without a love of Jewish culture and ritual, it’s all a bit thin. And a bit dark. If your Jewish identity is a negative one, defined primarily by being despised and “othered”, why would you want to pass that on to your children? Why would they welcome such a legacy? We survived the Holocaust and do the hard, draining work of fending off the antisemites, for what exactly?