The American Babylonia
                   
                 
                   
  

By
Rabbi Beryl Wein
November
16, 2012
http://www.rabbiwein.com/blog/post-1409.html
I know that it is not
nice to kick anyone while that person is down. In fact, it is not nice
to kick anyone at all at anytime. A substantial portion of the American
Jewish community has sustained great physical and monetary,
psychological and social damage as a result of the devastation wrought
by hurricane Sandy. So now is perhaps an inauspicious time for an
article dealing with, what in my opinion, is  the troublesome
future of that community. But I have just recently done quite a bit of
study and research on the Jewish community of Babylonia in the previous
millennia and I was struck by certain similarities to the current
American Jewish community. 
 
After the eleventh
century the Babylonian Jewish community lost its preeminent place in
the Jewish world, and though a Jewish community continued to function
in Iraq/Babylonia until the 1950’s it never again was the force in
Jewish life that it once was for almost one thousand years. 
 
There were many reasons,
external and internal, that led to the decline of Babylonian Jewry but
I have noticed three main forces that sapped its strength and beclouded
its future. The first was the rise and spread of Karaism, a sect
founded in Babylonia and that later spread throughout the Jewish Middle
East and was especially strong in Egypt and Babylonia. 
 
The Karaites denied the
divinity and efficacy of the Oral Law and created a type of Judaism
that had new rules, new mores and was a distortion of Torah law and
Jewish tradition. Karaism has long since disappeared from being a force
in Jewish life but much of American Jewry today operates under a
so-called Judaism that bears little relationship to Torah knowledge,
Jewish observances, and true values. 
 
Instead it is inundated
with sloganeering and high-sounding phrases that bear little or no
relationship to Judaism. Intermarriage, ignorance and political faddism
are the Karaism of American Jewish society.
 
Secondly, Babylonian
Jewry, though possessed of great yeshivot and Torah scholars, did not
adjust to the demographic, economic and political changes that were
occurring. It did not foresee the coming of the Christian crusaders,
the decline of the spice and silk routes, the triumph of the Ottoman
Turks over the local Arabs, and the change in the location of the
fulcrum of Jewish life to Spain, France and Germany. 
 
It was smug in its own
traditional wealth and influence and did not sense that its central
position in the Jewish world was slowly eroding and fading. For many
decades American Jewry believed that Israel was dependent upon it for
its actual survival. Much of that mistaken notion was encouraged by
cynical Israeli leaders for various personal and political reasons. 
 
Today it should be clear
to all that in spite of all campaign rhetoric and hype, America
generally is in decline. There is a permanent economic and social
underclass that has been created and will not disappear. Eventually
this situation will affect American Jewry, currently so certain of its
status and confident in its no-longer-minority viewed position in
American society. The long exile of the Jewish people has allowed for
no exceptions to Jewish particularism, which leads to anti-Jewish
attitudes and behavior. It is certainly something to ponder.
 
Finally, Babylonian
Jewry was riven by internal disputes between its religious and temporal
leaders. Disputes, especially disputes that touch on religious matters
invariably lead to extremist views and unacceptable behavior – all
under the guise of following the will of Heaven. 
 
There is much extremism
under display in American Jewry today. Ah, but you will counter, how
about the extremism in the religious circles in Israel. But there is a
fundamental difference between Israel and America. Here in Israel the
extremism is political in nature - the quest for patronage and budget
allocations, and the personal ambitions of politicians for office and
power. 
 
With all of the
trappings of piety surrounding them, the contests here are basically
much more personal than ideological. The anti-Israel groupings in
Israel have waned in numbers and influence while, unfortunately, they
have increased in the American Jewish society. More and more, the
Charedi society in Israel sees itself as part of the general apparatus
of the state, and the nineteenth century battle over Zionism has ended
here. It is a moot question. 
 
Not so in American
Jewish society where actual hatred of the State of Israel exists in
many sections of that society, from the intellectual Left to the
extremists in the religious world on the Right. When Babylonia saw
itself as the substitute for Jerusalem as a safe haven for all
eternity, its decline immediately set in. 
 
It is always foolish to
predict the Jewish future so it could be that all I have written here
is nonsense. I certainly hope so. But studying about Babylonian Jewry
and seeing the parallels with American Jewry troubles
me.