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Ben Judah

ByBen Judah, Ben Judah

Opinion

Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews need to stand up for their Rabbinic tradition

Dominating over Orthodox Judaism is a yeshiva system that is structurally, culturally and halachically Ashkenazi

October 27, 2017 11:10
Sephardi Torah scrolls
3 min read

His name was Shmuel Ha-Nagid. He was a warrior. He was a vizier. He was a Jew. And when he rode into battle for Granada, his shochet trundled behind him with kosher meat. Now, a thousand years since, we should remember him — and the confidence with which this prince lived as both a talmudist, a politician and a poet — because in the twenty-first century, the approach to the Torah of this eleventh century commander of a Muslim army is foreign to mainstream Orthodoxy.

Shmuel Ha-Nagid’s approach was the Sephardic Torah — the Rabbinical approach born in the citadels of the golden age of Muslim Spain. The school of Rabbis like Maimonides and Yosef Caro who prized the rational and the practical as they interpreted Jewish law. Rabbis who never saw a contradiction between secular life — not even as a Sultan’s warrior vizier — and a life of study and devotion. Theirs was a worldly Torah: to the point Maimonides even objected to a paid Rabbinate.

Yet today, Orthodoxy has pushed the Sephardic Torah school to the margins. Dominating over Orthodox Judaism is a yeshiva system that is structurally, culturally and halachically Ashkenazi. This is true even in Israel despite precious exceptions like Kisse Rahamim in Bnei Brak. Even when Israeli yeshivot have Sephardi or Mizrahi inscribed over the entrance, even where their Rabbis have lovingly preserved the melodies and the minhag of lost Spain and Syria; the truth is that in practice, their approach to Torah, Talmud and Halakha has been wholly Ashkenazified. Despite nearly half of Israeli Jews identifying as Sephardi or Mizrahi the Halachic tradition of Maimonides is becoming more or less irrelevant.

The recent memoirs of Britain’s former Sephardi spiritual head Rabbi Abraham Levy — A Rocky Road — is an urgent “how to” manual for how Sephardim and Mizrahim can stand up for their traditions. Writing in 1970 after a visit to Israel the Rabbi asked in his searing pamphlet, A Question of Survival, whether the Sephardic Rabbinic outlook, committed as it always has been to leniency, moderation and synthesis would even survive. What Rabbi Levy did next should be an inspiration to all Sephardi Rabbis in Israel and the diaspora: he helped get British Sephardim back into the business of training their own Rabbis. Since 2006 the Montefiore Endowment has been training a new generation of homegrown modern Orthodox Rabbis for British Jews in the traditions of Maimonides. This is how you save your own halachah.