| In general,
my sense is that current efforts are spearheading surgical strikes to infuse
new life into the younger sectors of an increasingly apathetic and unaffiliated
Jewish population. I am skeptical and it is within the consensus that it
will take a generation to know if these efforts work. This plan is geared
toward providing infrastructure to interface with the Jewish population
on a day to day basis that will greatly increase the odds of producing
permanent positive change. The vision: make Judaism and the feeling of
tribal membership more available to the average person.
As you will notice, I don't propose any additional
museums, monuments, coffee and music houses or trips to Israel. The focus
here is on daily life and bringing substantive Jewish opportunities to
the Jew in real-time either at home or in public spaces, albeit in a non-coercive
and non-doctrinal manner. I am not in the business of trying to convince
anyone that any version of Judaism, Zionism or Israeli policy is correct.
What I do personally is my own business. However, no attempt is made herein
to sugar-coat the content or to limit services to any particular age bracket
-- a large sector of the community remains underserved and a large amount
of the new services being provided are "cool" but devoid of Jewish content.
The above is not an "outreach" project any more than it is a community
project to keep already committed people within the daily loop. The point
is that we need to make the Jewish World accessible, keep people informed
and make them feel relevant. Attention is also given to long-term solutions
to the gaps that exist in Jewish leadership, particularly as it relates
to the new Middle East.
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I. Free Media. There is an absence of quality
free Jewish media. You can count the number of independent quality Jewish
newspapers on one hand in North America. The opinion in nearly all newspapers
is written by the same dozen syndicated columnists for the past thirty
years, none of whom are under age 40, and many of whom know what they read
more than what they have experienced. News is often reported and edited
by people who don't know very much about the subjects they cover. There
is nothing in terms of original thought, news or debate about Jewish subjects
that you can't find in non-Jewish media and there is no newspaper in the
North American Jewish World that will print a column on anything longer
than 800 words. Depth of analysis or debate of political, religious or
social issues is virtually non-existent because of inherent and political
restraints. The New York Times and the Economist expend more resources
covering the Jewish World than we do and they are a more enlightening read.
What I read in the Jewish media about the Middle East (save for certain
English language publications published in Israel but hardly noticed by
Jewish leaders or editors in the U.S.) is on another planet from what I
experience every day as I deal with the world as it is. The Holocaust is
a prominent feature and anti-semitism is a latent threat -- that much I
can predict each week in the Jewish media. Some great reasons to subscribe.
If a Jew is to look for information, education,
culture and inspiration in his or her daily life, resources need to be
directed toward creating free media available via television, print, radio
and internet. Proposed FCC licenses will allow for the creation of a not-for-profit
radio station to serve the upper east & west sides of Manhattan with
transmitting equipment costing about $1,000, according to the New York
Times (January 2000). Monthly inserts to existing newspapers targeted at
certain audiences with supplemental distribution by other means is a relatively
cheap way to enter and penetrate the world of print media. The television
medium is the best way to penetrate people's homes and the cost of producing
programs has become a fraction of what it once was. Cable and satellite
systems offer narrowcasting opportunities on a free or subscription basis
in ways never before contemplated, particularly with the advent of digital
broad band broadcasting. The fact that Jewish-interest programming is currently
limited to dancing chassidim and talking heads such as Leon Charney and
the Rebetzin Jungreis is not a reason to avoid this genre with a twenty-foot
poker. Buenos Aires has had a Jewish television channel for years. The
Jewish World demographic is an advertiser's gem not to be ignored.
Quality non-partisan "cool" media will showcase
new ideas and revitalize a stagnant intellectual and political debate which
has become irrelevant to most Jews. It is the first step toward making
"Jewish" a positive part of people's daily lives in this media-driven century.
It may even create a new range of holiday songs for us to sing and give
us new reasons to want to continue to exist.
II. "Jewish Pride" Festival. Ever hear of
Gay Pride? It's become the annual Purim for many gay people and it didn't
exist more than a decade ago; a disproportionate number of its top organizers
are Jews. The African-Americans and Puerto Ricans go all out on their festivals.
Why shouldn't we Jews have a Pride festival (and keep a straight face while
thinking about it)? This would be an annual celebration of things Jewish
with educational, cultural and communal offerings. The closest we have
is the Israel Day Parade which has become a political animal and does not
attract people who aren't Israel-centric, an increasingly important fact
as Israel becomes less central to segments of the Jewish population. A
model worth emulating in part is the Limmud conference held annually in
Britain, a 5-day "open university and cultural experience" during Christmas-New
Year's week attended by roughly 1,200 lay people between the age of 10
and 90, which has succeeded in attracting participation by nearly all community
sectors. This type of activity done right can attract participants from
all over the country or be duplicated around the country.
An adjunct would be to create a stage-show geared
toward presenting a picture of the Jewish World to younger people that
would be in the Disney/Bowl Halftime mold B a real knock your socks off
kinda show. Such a spectacle could tour and break even on ticket sales
and corporate sponsorships. It would make a powerful impression on many
young people just as the Hineni road show made an impression when it came
to visit places such as Miami 25 years ago when it was the biggest thing
we had going all year. Today the only kid idol in the Jewish World is Uncle
Moshe and his repertoire is suitable for a narrow audience. Why not create
our own version of In Sync? Our people certainly know how to create most
of the other teen fads in existence.
III. Yom Kippur Takeaway. When people leave
synagogue this Yom Kippur, they should receive a 354 page book and resolve
to study a page of it a day for the coming Jewish year. Each day's lesson
would contain an excerpt from a religious text followed by commentary and
discussion questions. The curriculum would be designed so that every Jew
from every denomination and level would find the daily reader engaging.
All Jews would be on the same page every day and would have something in
common to talk about to each other, much like the Daf Yomi creates a certain
universality among those who study Talmud. Properly augmented with such
adjuncts as Internet chat and lotteries (ie: scratch-off sheets tucked
into the books), this could become an exciting program that would do wonders
for intra-communal relations. This is also the easiest program to replicate
all over the world on a real-time basis.
IV. Leadership University. Once upon a time,
Yeshiva College was for the most part a college engaged in a ecumenical
struggle over its soul. Now it's a Yeshiva without any pretense of being
otherwise. It is not a place to inspire people who will step out of the
box and dare to be creative and integrationist with the world at large.
A prototype undergraduate or graduate institution such as the original
Cooper Union would take only the best and brightest on full scholarship
geared specifically to train future communal, political and business leaders
B even if only 100 students per year Band will make a crucial difference
for the next generation and probably produce the first American Jewish
president. It will produce leaders we and the world can be proud of, not
ones we settle for. With innovative thinking by business-oriented people
who are not career academics, the models that have produced wasteful sprawling
universities that bear no relation to a market resource can be refashioned
to create institutions that will not be an irrational drain on financial
resources and produce products the market can use. Such a prototype might
also produce dividends in the reformation of universities in general.
V. Middle East Young Professionals. If peace
will exist in the Middle East, it must be between people. Israelis don=t
know Arabs and American Jews know neither. Future Generation leaders of
the various countries need to be given opportunities to meet each other
and form personal relationships, and it is amazing that 30-somethings are
taking over the Arab world while American Jews and Israelis remain clueless
of professionals within this segment of people. No doubt 30-somethings
on the Arab side are getting more backing from their leaders than 30-somethings
on the Jewish side who are for the most part being ignored and not given
meaningful responsibilities. The greatest impediment is that people on
both sides of the divide don't have contacts of their own to visit and
many of the Arabs from the poorer countries have financial and bureaucratic
problems visiting Israel. Strategic assistance in financing and shepherding
cross-border visits between targeted people -- a sort of Chamber of Commerce
program being pushed from behind -- will make the difference in cementing
the peace for the next generation.
Details, Details: For the "How" click on the
appropriate link below.
Yom Kippur Takeaway Project
Jewish Pride Weekend
The Case for a TV Network
and its Implementation
Radio One: A Jewish Radio
Station for Manhattan's Upper East/West Side
The Jewish Version of
a Renaissance Weekend
Jewish Leadership University |