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We will have to adjust to growing diversity over Israel

Just as in the United States, our Jewish leaders face the challenge of a more complex community

September 25, 2024 07:57
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Anti-reform bill protests in Tel Aviv (Flash 90)
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Has British Jewry been more influenced by Israel or by American Jewry? Whatever you think, what can’t be denied is that what goes on in the world’s largest diaspora community sends ripples across the Atlantic. So a new book on the state of US Jewry should naturally be of interest here.

Shattered Tablets is an eloquent personal exploration of American Jewish religion and politics by 30-year-old Joshua Leifer, a journalist and PhD student who is a contributing editor to the left-wing magazine Jewish Currents. A product of a religiously Conservative, Zionist day school and a pre-university mechinah programme in Israel, he is among a growing wave of young American Jews who, dismayed at Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and successive Gaza wars, have embraced a far more critical stance towards Israel than their elders.

Groups such as Jewish Voice for Peace and IfNotNow, if still relatively small, have been making their presence felt, reflecting a process of radicalisation sharpened by alarm at the 2016 election of Donald Trump.

Leifer points out that by the middle of the century Israel will comprise the dominant population of world Jewry and believes that Jews elsewhere have no other option morally than to reckon with it. He is unusual, though not alone, in combining his left-wing views with a halachically observant lifestyle.