JEWISH CULTURE
February 26, 2016
"Culture is to humans
what instinct is to animals," wrote anthropologist Clifford Geertz.
Culture tells us how to think about important decisions and whom to love.
Culture is the mental illustrations we use and the values we embrace. It is our
art, our sports, our entertainment and our beliefs. Culture expresses and
shapes the value system by which we live, and the images, rituals, symbols and
myths by which we explain our lives to ourselves and others. Culture is our
meaning system, because we are unique animals who require meaning to live.
Liberal Jews attempt
to live in two cultures, in our case: American and Jewish. We immerse ourselves
in American culture and absorb every detail. We think by American images and
illustrate our conversations with American cultural icons, like sports and
television references in everyday conversations.
Identity consists
largely of the culture by which we think. But liberal American Jews primarily
use American cultural symbols.
There are Jewish myths
by which we live, also. Every Jew I have ever met thinks of him/herself as once
having been a slave in Egypt, for instance. Often we are motivated to feed the
hungry and provide a safety net for the poor out of our Jewish identity,
identifying with what it's like to be downtrodden through history, even though
most of us, personally, have never been oppressed. How many times have I said
from the pulpit, "The most frequently cited line in the Torah is, 'You
shall love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt,'" and
gotten a favorable response? Essential Jewish mythology matters in our lives.
It motivates us to do real things, like provide food for the poor and serve
meals at the reStart Shelter. But it's a mixed bag.
Most people I know
don't primarily think of Jewish examples when making critical decisions in
their lives. They don't think Purim's coming, what am I going to send people
for shalach manot; or what does
Judaism say about this health care decision I am about to make? We divide
between Jewish and American culture, although Judaism actually provides answers
for all of life's questions. Many people form friendships based on ethnic
familiarity, but the lower the age group the less likely that is to happen. For
American Jews, most personal culture is actually American, and their individual
mental images are American examples, often taken from sports or other
entertainment.
This is the first of
a series of articles I will write and post here. I intend to examine how Jewish
culture works, using the upcoming seders as my example. I'll look at Jewish law
and lore, halakhah and midrash, as well as art found in the haggdah. My point
is this: Jews who lived in an entirely Jewish milieu thought Jewishly,
utilizing Jewish symbols, narratives and rituals in their lives. We may be less
definitive about out theologies, but we don't have to be less determined about
our Jewish culture. Being steeped in Jewish images, like the matzah on the
seder plate, the 4 cups of wine or opening the door for Elijah, and using them
as examples in our lives, is very possible for liberal as well as traditional
Jews. We just need to emphasize Jewish culture more consciously.
I'll talk about how
we might do that, and hopefully, there'll be lots of comments and some
discussion back and forth.
Shabbat shalom.
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