WEB SITE WITH BRAINS
AMIGO
SPLIT ROCK
FUNDRAISING SEMINAR
Jewish Press.com Home page
 
Israel's Reply To Goldstone Takes Conciliatory Tone Ron Kampeas
 
 
Fighting Even Where It's Uncomfortable: Why The OU Voted As It Did At JCPA

         Orthodox Jews are not a majority of the American Jewish population. It follows, therefore, that major communal institutions that claim to represent the views of American Jewry in the public square frequently do not voice the views and values of those committed to Torah-informed Judaism.
 
         For decades, based on guidance from Rav Soloveitchik, zt"l, the Orthodox Union has sought to influence the actions and statements of these "representative" institutions - such as the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations, United Jewish Communities, the Jewish Council of Public Affairs and others - by participating in their meetings and deliberations.
 
         In late February, delegates of the Orthodox Union traveled to Atlanta to participate in the annual conference of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs (JCPA) - an umbrella organization of the more than one hundred Jewish Community Relations Councils (JCRCs) and fourteen national Jewish organizations (such as the ADL, American Jewish Committee, Hadassah, etc.).
 
         Among the items on the agenda for this meeting was a proposed resolution commenting on the "Israeli-Palestinian Peace Process." As in the past, the OU delegation worked to represent the views of the OU community in these deliberations. And as in the past, we had some successes (despite being vastly outnumbered) and some setbacks (because of being outnumbered).
Advertisement
HILTON RARITAN CENTER
 
         The OU delegation succeeded in having this resolution call on American Jewry to "support the Government of Israel's insistence that the Palestinian Authority recognize Israel as a Jewish State." We also succeeded in defeating an amendment by the Reform movement's delegation to call on American Jewry to view Israeli settlements as "impediments to peace" with the Palestinians.
 
         The OU delegation failed to block the resolution's call for American Jewry to support an Israeli government's willingness to make concessions on Jerusalem and, as has been widely reported, we failed to remove the resolution's call for American Jewry to support the "two state solution" to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
 
         The OU delegation was able to insert into this latter portion of the resolution a statement that recognizes that Israel's offers to engage in peaceful negotiations with the Palestinians has "been met, time after time, by violence, incitement and terror." In a nightmarish turn of events, this statement would be fulfilled once again in Jerusalem ten days later in the murderous attack at Yeshivat Mercaz HaRav.
 
         (Deeply disturbing as well is that even had this tragic event occurred prior to the debate at JCPA over this resolution, it is likely that the call for support of the "two state solution" would have still been adopted. The majority of American Jewish organizations and their representatives automatically support the policies of the Israeli government - which remains, at least theoretically, committed to the "two state solution," even in the face of such heinous attacks.)
 
         When the resolution came to a final vote containing the mixed set of results listed above, the OU delegation abstained from voting yea or nay, but announced that, in keeping with JCPA procedure, the OU would file a dissent from the portions of the resolution with which we disagree.
 
         The rationale for this action is that it does not put the OU in the position of voting against the provisions of the resolution we support, yet permits the OU to explicitly differ with those we object to, such as the call for American support for the "two state solution."
 
         Moreover, whenever JCPA circulates the resolution's text to its member JCRCs or others, it will have to circulate the OU dissent along with it. The OU filed its dissent to the resolution last week, and it is available on the OU website.
 
         In the wake of the adoption of the resolution, many OU constituents have asked why the OU would remain in JCPA. This is an excellent question - and one the OU's leadership grapples with regularly with regard to its participation in JCPA and other communal umbrella organizations.
 
         The short, albeit not simple, answer is that the OU believes our community's values and interests are better protected by our being at the table as opposed to abandoning it. If the OU delegation is not at fora such as JCPA, who will speak out against the re-division of Jerusalem? Who will speak out against the perils of the "two state solution?" Who will speak out for Torah values on an array of other issues including aid to day schools, "civil rights" for gays and so many more?
 
         It is not comfortable for the OU to participate in entities like JCPA. We must make sure that we remain firm in our values and principles while engaging with those who not only disagree with us but who do not comprehend the worldview we bring to the discussion.
 
         But the Orthodox Union is not content to remain within our comfortable communities and leave the rest of Jewry and the world to chance. The OU's mission is to enhance Jewish life for those within our community and to promote the message of Torah Judaism to those beyond it. While the OU might not always succeed in every attempt at fulfilling this mission, we always make our maximal effort in service of Torah and our community.
 

         Nathan J. Diament is director of the Orthodox Union's Institute for Public Affairs.

Read Comments (4)
Back to Top of Article




OU is dead wrong on its vote
Date 11:03, 03-19, 08

It is an absolute disgrace to the Orthodox communuty that the OU (Orthodox Union) abstained on the vote to recognize a PLO State. The OU is pandering to the defeatist Olmert government and caving in to Olmert's corrupt appeasement policy (see OLMERTMUSTGO website for more on Olmerts defeatism.
A seat at the table
Date 12:03, 03-21, 08

As a Reform Jew, I applaud the OU's recognition that without a seat at the table, it won't have any impact on the policy statements that emerge from mainstream Jewish America.

What the statement omits (as is so often the case in OU statements) is any recognition of eilu v'eilu -- these and these are the living words of HaShem. Is it possible thaton the points where the OU position did not prevail, it was not because they were outnumbered, but because they were wrong? That the mainstream, in Israel as in America, recognizes there are things we do mipney darchei shalom, for the sake of peace, which across the movements is a primary religious value?

Laurence Kaufman
Evanston IL
very wise
Date 11:03, 03-22, 08

the OU shows wisdom and forethought in this decision.
OU and Ralph Nader
Date 10:03, 03-22, 08

Just like Ralph Nader has acted as spoiler by diverting enough
super-idealistic votes to prevent a change to the present ruinous
Administration in 2004 and promises to continue that action in
2008, so the OU, though in many ways anti-Zionist, backs the extremist Orthodox West Bank settler position of a Jewish State
with Biblical borders. OU is willing to split the consensus of American Jewish organizations for the sake of their "principles".











  Ads By Google
Previous Articles in OP-ED

Read Comments(4)
TOOLS
Font Size:   A | A | A
Font Style:   Arial | Times

TWERSKY PESACH TOURS 2010
Copyright JewishPress.com 2008 Powered By BottomLineMG.com |  Contact Us |  About Us