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The Rainbow Swastika (PDF book) - Scattered Seed Ministries

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<strong>The</strong> <strong>Rainbow</strong> <strong>Swastika</strong> - New Age Missionizing Among Jews<br />

heretical by the orthodox community. Such stray quotes are not given wide coverage. An example is one of Blu's comments in the<br />

_Genesis_ PBS TV series, where like Arthur Waskow she "re-invents" Torah: for her, the Flood "story is not about the accountability of<br />

human beings." Rather, "God was a perfectionist. In desperation, God would rather destroy His creation than accept it as less than<br />

perfect." (<strong>The</strong> entire statement isquoted with approval by an obscure Episcopalian vicar, but is not found at the _Genesis_ website where<br />

Blu's quotes on that episode are recorded.) Another example is her following statement in a BBC radio interview which was apparently<br />

never transcribed.<br />

Page 9 of 15<br />

5b. <strong>The</strong> "Orthodox Feminist" movement: BBC's World Service radio program, "Focus on Faith" (Feb. 20, 1997), featured Blu Greenberg<br />

in an interview [this was the first time I heard of her or her husband]. She was already known as a prolific writer, guest speaker and<br />

prominent spokesperson for orthodox women, but she was identified here only as "the wife of an orthodox rabbi" [which was all I knew<br />

about her when writing my original article, "Masters of the Blinding Light"]. <strong>The</strong> topic was an upcoming International Conference on<br />

Feminism and Orthodoxy, a forum on "women's equality in the context of Jewish law." Greenberg was advocating wider participation in<br />

synagogue prayers, a greater teaching role and other modest reforms. A minute later she was heard to say that because the Torah contains<br />

laws that "foster male domination and portray a masculine God... it's time to ask if the Torah is divine after all." [It's hard to imagine why<br />

someone who doubts this central pillar of orthodox Judaism would remain in it, except to enlist support from those inside to remove the<br />

offending pillar.] As it turned out, Greenberg's Feminist Conference itself drew more fire from the mainstream orthodox community than her<br />

anti-Torah statement on the BBC. [Either that, or none heard that broadcast except myself. Unfortunately, I was told by the BBC's Religious<br />

Programming Department that a transcript was not available. After a survey of Greenberg's public statements, I have concluded that this was<br />

a rare occurrence for her, and was possibly a comment to the reporter not even meant for inclusion in the broadcast.]<br />

A sampling of the Jewish press covering the Feminist Conference indicates that Jewish leaders who sensed something was wrong did not dig<br />

deep enough to discover the NA roots. Controversy remained at the surface, revolving around the various proposals tabled for female<br />

community leadership (some halachically prohibited and some not). Even at that level, rebuttals from the orthodox leadership were hasty,<br />

contradictory, and appeared to be less concerned with Jewish women's needs than with justifying the status quo, right or wrong. [A condition<br />

I noted earlier - perfect for the agenda of NA "change agents". I would suggest that NA missionaries noted this achilles heel in orthodox<br />

Judaism years ago, and planned how to exploit the standard defensive reaction which fears to acknowledge any shortcomings.] Through<br />

articles bearing titles like "Seeking to Silence Women" (_<strong>The</strong> Jewish Week_, Mar. 7, 1997) and "Ban on Women's Prayer Groups" (_Daily<br />

News Bulletin_, Feb. 5, 1997), the orthodox feminists were portrayed as a second-class group challenging an inflexible power clique which is<br />

too threatened to even implement reforms permitted by Jewish law. <strong>The</strong> Rabbinical Council of Queens made matters even worse when they<br />

issued a hasty ruling only to change it a few months later, and then justified the "mistake" of their earlier ruling by pleading ignorance<br />

concerning the discontent among orthodox women: "We looked at this as a local issue. We never dreamt it would be an international<br />

cause." ("Queens Rabbis Affirm Ban", _<strong>The</strong> Jewish Week_, Mar. 7, 1997)<br />

Closer to the heart of the matter, haredi (ultra-orthodox) writer Levi Reisman ("Feminism - A Force That Will Split Orthodoxy?", _<strong>The</strong><br />

Jewish Observer_, May 1998, p.37) astutely recognized the potential danger in this movement to erase vital Torah boundaries. Yet he gives<br />

similarly mixed signals by trying to blacklist feminism across the board: denying any halachic support for various proposals to expand female<br />

leadership, while dismissing each [non-existent] halachic support as either a minority opinion, or a temporary endorsement later retracted, or<br />

just irrelevant. But to his credit, Reisman notes that any orthodox traditions which tend to "diminish" women are not in keeping with true<br />

halachah (Jewish law); he urges, "We need to communicate this message not only to our women but to our men as well." He also agrees with<br />

the feminist charge that minyanim (quorums for public prayer) are not easily available to women, and criticizes women's sections in orthodox<br />

synagogues as "too often cramped, uncomfortable and totally isolated". [I add to this my own discovery that some synagogues in Israel have<br />

no women's section.] He cites with approval two haredi synagogues which responded to the feminist challenge by prompting finding creative<br />

solutions for their own women. [If enough orthodox leaders would follow suit, as well as crack down on abusive husbands and other Torahbreakers<br />

in matters relating to women, the "orthodox feminist" cause would lose much of its appeal for Torah-observant women.]<br />

Having gotten the message that change was not forthcoming from the Torah sages, observant Jewish women came flocking to Greenberg's<br />

call to initiate change themselves. <strong>The</strong> first Feminist Conference expected 300-400 participants and were overwhelmed by over 1000; a year<br />

later, Feb. 1998, the second Conference planned for 1400 and over 2000 women showed up. Moreover, the original backing by a handful of<br />

orthodox leaders was supplemented the second year by prominent names like Dr. Mandell Ganchrow (President of the Orthodox Union<br />

kashrut authority), Rabbis Haskel Lookstein (Cong. Kehilath Jeshurun), Adam Mintz (Lincoln Square) and Shlomo Riskin (Efrat, Israel).<br />

<strong>The</strong>ir support seemed only to confirm Blu Greenberg's comment, "We're part of the mainstream now." ("Orthodox Feminists Move From<br />

Fringes", _JTA_, Feb. 17, 1998) <strong>The</strong> formation of a new "Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance" was a direct result, and response has been<br />

strong and multi-national. So far, rabbinic leaders in the opposition have failed to offer an alternative, and in some cases have further<br />

betrayed the trust placed in them, compounding the dilemma for women who want to remain submitted to rabbinic authority. A case in point<br />

is the open letter to haredi criminal Rabbi Aryeh Deri, written by influential orthodox writer Naomi Ragen: "<strong>The</strong> noted rabbis who stood<br />

beside you at the prison gates, blessing you and comparing you to [Biblical] Joseph, undermined any reason for women to continue honoring<br />

a partriarchy whose male leadership behaves so disgracefully." ("Hiding Behind the Torah", _Jerusalem Post_, Sep.8, 2000) [How sad that<br />

this writer, whose novels always portray both the negative and the positive of haredi life, is so provoked by rabbinic whitewashing of a<br />

convicted Torah-breaker that she plays right into feminist hands, actually supporting the NA agenda to dismantle orthodox Judaism. How sad<br />

that no response was published to answer her reasonable challenge. <strong>The</strong> NA missionaries win this round by default.]<br />

In the midst of all the smoke and noise over whether women have adequate opportunity within today's Orthodox Judaism to express their<br />

(feminine) Jewishness, nearly all of the community is missing the more covert [and far more destructive] "orthodox feminist" agenda. Blu<br />

Greenberg only hints at this larger program, commenting that the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance "plans to network with women from<br />

Judaism's other denominations", from whom she says "I learn a tremendous amount." ("Successful Conference Spawns New Orthodox<br />

Feminist Alliance", Jewish Telegraph Agency, Jul. 3, 1997) Blu does not elaborate on how she deals the goals of those other Jewish feminists<br />

which are militantly hostile to orthodox Judaism. But the organization founded and still guided by husband Yitz Greenberg, CLAL,<br />

promotes these anti-Torah goals in their "Encore" archival collection. An example is "Feminism: Giving Birth to a New Judaism", a 1981<br />

essay published in the 1990s by CLAL and promoted in 2000 on their website. In it, feminist Martha Ackelsberg shares a "new vision" of a<br />

"Judaism" purged from the "patriarchal" and "sexist" language of "traditional Jewish liturgy" [Since nearly all traditional Jewish liturgy<br />

quotes directly from the Torah, Prophets or Writings, the offensive Bible will have to go also.] <strong>The</strong> "New Judaism" must reject "the image of<br />

God expressed in it [this liturgy, and by extension, Torah] and the relationship between God and the people of Israel conveyed through it" as<br />

similarly tainted. Ackelsberg emphasizes that a sexless translation of Hebrew prayers will not suffice [certainly not for those who pray in<br />

Hebrew, where gender is unmistakable...]; it will take nothing less than "new modes of religious expression which incorporate the femaleness<br />

of God", and eventually "a liturgy which can address a genderless, non-personal God." [Thus, the efforts of the Greenbergs combine to<br />

http://philologos.org/__eb-trs/naI.htm<br />

2/26/2012

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