By Daniel Greenfield @ Sultan Knish Blog
The Chief Bee Whisperer, a leftist UCLA ‘rabbi’ who kicked a pro-Israel
Jewish woman, the lecturer behind ‘an Introduction to Islam for Jews’
and a rabbi who claimed Hamas is ready for ‘peaceful coexistence’ signed
a letter attacking Israel’s campaign against Hamas after Oct 7.
The
‘open letter’, billed as a “Jewish Orthodox response” and a “call for
moral clarity” against Israel has been written up by anti-Israel outlets
like the New York Times is mostly made up of anti-Israel activists and
leftists, appeasers and the completely deluded.
“In my assessment
it is possible to make peace with Hamas,” Rabbi Michael Melchior, the
fourth signatory (his sons Jair and Joav are also signatories) had
argued, claiming that the Muslim Brotherhood was open to co-existing
with Israel but “that of course has never been reported here, because it
doesn’t fit into our picture of Islam” and insisted that Hamas had
“always kept their parts of the agreements”.
After Oct 7,
Melchior claimed to be “shocked and disappointed” by the atrocities, but
went on defending Hamas. “It was a personal disappointment because I
know that there were very strong forces within Hamas who didn’t want the
attack.”
Another of the signatories is ‘Rabbi’ Chaim
Seidler-Feller, a former UCLA Hillel boss, currently with the fringe
leftist Shalom Hartman Institute, whose own moral clarity manifested
when he, in his own words, “hit, kicked and scratched” female pro-Israel journalist Rachel Neuwirth.
“I
saw my rabbi take swings to Neuwirth’s face and kicks to her legs,” one
eyewitness described after the assault provoked by the woman’s support
for Israel and opposition to terrorists. Seidler-Feller had to be pulled
off the diminutive woman by “three or four large college men.”
Since then, Seidler-Feller has continued signing letters condemning Israel for defending itself.
While
Seidler-Feller had attended an Orthodox seminary at Yeshiva University
in 1971, he stopped being an Orthodox Rabbi a few years later and was
not actually ordained until he was later sent an ordination certificate
in appreciation for soliciting money from Barbara Streisand.
This still makes Seidler-Feller more of an ‘Orthodox rabbi’ than many of the signatories.
A
quarter of the ‘rabbis’ signing on to the letter, like ‘Rabba Amalia
Haas’, the Chief Bee Whisperer of a company that “teaches about climate
change through Jewish texts”, Rabba Aliza Libman Baronofsky, Rabbi Dina
Najman, Rabba Melissa Scholten-Gutierrez, Rabbi Emily Goldberg Winer,
among 20 female ‘Rabbis’ signing on, were never Orthodox rabbis at all.
Orthodox
Judaism does not ordain or maintain female rabbis as a basic matter of
Torah, tradition and law. A significant number of the signatories to the
letter are therefore non-Orthodox clergy posing as Orthodox clergy in
order to undermine Israel’s fight against terrorism, and to make it
appear that there is actual opposition to the fight within the Orthodox
community.
Who’s actually behind the letter which falsely claims
that Israel is responsible for “starvation” and complains that “Israeli
extremists” responded to Oct 7 (which was backed by the vast majority of
the enemy population) with “blanket suspicion of the entire population
of Gaza”?
The anti-Israel letter was posted on the website of Torat Chayim, a front group for Uri L’Tzedek, a radical leftist spinoff
of Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, a non-orthodox social justice seminary
pretending to be Orthodox which is responsible for ordaining many of the
signatories.
Uri L’Tzedek was set up by ‘Rabbi Dr. Shmuly
Yanklowitz’, a leftist activist who had converted to Judaism, who had
previously laid out his vision for “an Orthodox Judaism rooted in social
justice” and who has claimed credit for working to produce the
anti-Israel letter while claiming that he has concerns about Israel’s
“moral compass” and the “humanitarian crisis in Gaza”.
Yanklowitz
had held study sessions with ‘Rabbi’ Jill Jacobs, the head and member
of anti-Israel groups, including J Street’s Rabbinic Cabinet and T’ruah
which promotes boycotts of parts of Israel. Some signatories of the
anti-Israel letter like ‘Rabbi’ Jonah Winer (He/Him) of T’ruah, are also
members of anti-Israel hate groups. (Jonah’s wife, ‘Rabbi’ Emily
Goldberg Winer of Beth Sholom is also a signatory.)
The
anti-Israel letter tears the mask off Uri L’Tzedek which after Oct 7 had
pretended to be pro-Israel. The group even fielded a ‘slate’ for the
World Zionist Congress under the completely misleading name of Dorshei
Torah Ve’Tzion (Seekers of Torah and Zion) which on a field of waving
Israeli flags laid out a platform that claimed to include ‘Zionism and
Support for Israel’ (alongside “LGBTQ Inclusion” and a call for
“security and dignity” for the “Palestinian people”.)
The Uri
L’Tzedek, Eshel (LGBTQ), JOFA (feminist) and Yeshivat Maharat (a
feminist seminary) slate included multiple signatories to the
anti-Israel letter including ‘Rabbi’ Aliza Libman Baronofsky, Rabbanit
Leah Sarna, Rabbi Max Davis and Rabbi Barry Dolinger.
Uri
L’Tzedek, like other post-Orthodox groups, claim that it draws support
from an underrepresented part of the Orthodox Jewish community, but
who’s really funding it?
The list of sponsors for Uri L’Tzedek
consists of non-Orthodox leftist groups and includes the Nathan Cummings
Foundation, tied to the Soros network, and was the funder for a variety
of anti-Israel groups including J Street, the Israel Policy Forum and
Americans for Peace Now.
Other backers include the liberal Koch’s
Stand Together Foundation. The Koch libertarian network does not
normally back Jewish groups with the exception of anti-Israel ones.
Finally, Uri L’Tzedek is funded by one of the most notorious backers of the most extreme anti-Israel groups: the Puffin Foundation. Puffin, which blatantly celebrates Communism
as an ideal, funds Jewish Currents, a spinoff of the old Communist
Party’s Yiddish paper, which accused Israel of “genocide” and described
Hamas atrocities as “resistance”.
Simone Zimmerman, a former
employee of Uri L’Tzedek and a founder of the anti-Israel hate group If
Not Now, wrote in the publication, calling for a communal endorsement of
BDS and declaring that “Jewish communities should ask themselves ‘What
would you have done to stop the annihilation of the Jews of Europe?’ and
should do just that for Palestinians now. You are either for genocide
or against it.”
Uri L’Tzedek vet Zimmerman had described
immigration authorities as “the American Gestapo” for deporting Hamas
supporters and slurred Jews fighting antisemitism as “Nazi
collaborators” for supporting Jewish students being assaulted by
antisemitic mobs on college campuses.
This is the money and the real agenda lurking behind the latest anti-Israel letter.
Despite
the media hype, the anti-Israel letter does not represent Orthodox Jews
or any kind of legitimate rabbinic movement. Many of the ‘rabbis’
signing the letter are not qualified to be Orthodox rabbis, their
ordination disproportionately comes from the non-Orthodox Yeshivat
Chovevei Torah social justice institution, or from Yeshivat Maharat,
which had been set up by the YCT network to ordain female rabbis. Many
are not practicing rabbis, but are academics and activists who use a
‘rabbi’ title to bolster their credibility. Some have entirely different
professions in medicine or law. Few actually have functioning
congregations. A number are ‘campus rabbis’ or teach at various
non-Orthodox institutions where there are no religious standards.
Their views are not those of Torah or the Orthodox Jewish religious tradition.
Despite
claiming to be Orthodox rabbis, a number are affiliated with
non-Orthodox institutions like ‘Rabbi Wendy Zierler, PhD she/her’ who
teaches Feminist Studies at the Reform movement’s Hebrew Union College.
Rabbi Dr. Michael Chernick also teaches at HUC.
As the Coalition for Jewish Values, an actual Orthodox Jewish organization notes, the signatories include
“several openly gay clergy” like Steven Greenberg, a gay man, as well
as Rabbi Daniel Landes who had ordained a gay man, also incompatible
with traditional Jewish practice. Rabba Melissa Scholten-Gutierrez
serves on the National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW), a group that
defended collaborating with anti-semitic and anti-Israel activists
Rabbis for Repro Advisory Board and has advocated for abortion as a
“Jewish right”.
The list is full of fringe leftists involved in
feminist theory, gender theory and queer theory like Tyson Herberger,
who studies “queer issues in Judaism”. Rabbi Dr. Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz
is a feminist scholar who offers online courses such as ‘An
Introduction to Islam for Jews’. Rabbi Dr. Joshua Feigelson runs the
Institute for Jewish Spirituality which promotes mindfulness and
meditation. Rabbi Dr. Alon Goshen-Gottstein has promoted using Hinduism
to “stretch Jewish thought”. Rabba Aliza Libman Baronofsky claims to be
the parent of a “non-binary child”.
All of these are fringe views that are as representative of Orthodox Judaism as a ham sandwich.
The
vast majority of Orthodox Jews stand with Israel. Just as the vast
majority support President Trump. Unlike the majority of American Jews,
they do not believe that Judaism must defer to liberalism and that it
must adopt leftist definitions of justice to be a moral foundation. And
the more they stand strong, the more the Left, under its various guises,
tries to get in.
The New York Times may promote the lie that
these leftist front groups taking a stand against Israel represent
Orthodox Judaism, but actual Orthodox Jews will always know better.
Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine. Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation. Thank you for reading.
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