New York – Fed-up Jewish Reform Leaders Are Thinking Twice About Their Donations To Israel

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    FILE - Daryl MessingerNew York – Daryl Messinger knows she’s going to visit Israel again. But the next time she flies there, it won’t be on El Al.

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    Messinger, the chair of the Union for Reform Judaism, will be boycotting Israel’s national airline as part of her protest of the Israeli government’s two votes last week that empowered its Orthodox sector at the expense of more liberal groups. She’s also going to make a point of buying non-kosher wines produced in Israel — a show of support for Jews who don’t observe traditional kosher laws.

    “I want to make sure my dollars are working for my needs and for a pluralistic Israel,” Messinger, of Palo Alto, California, told JTA on Wednesday. “The Israeli economy is the place where our American dollars are really impactful, so we need to be really clear about what goods and services we want to support and see thrive in Israel.”

    Like many liberal Jewish leaders, Messinger is angry about the recent Israeli Cabinet votes to suspend the expansion of a non-Orthodox prayer area at the Western Wall and to give Israel’s Chief Rabbinate sole authority over official Jewish conversions performed in the country.

    The votes have outraged American Jewry’s organizational elite, which sees them as a betrayal of Jewish pluralism and of Israel’s symbolic obligations to non-Orthodox Jews around the world. With limited leverage, Jewish leaders and pundits are now suggesting that they use the power of the purse to get their point across. Pundits have dared American Jews to stop giving money to Israeli causes — from tourist attractions to hospitals — and its national carrier. And Reform officials have called on their members to redirect their money to groups that advance their ideals.

    American Jews may not vote in Israel, but they do give money there. According to a 2014 analysis by the Forward, American Jewish groups give nearly $1.8 billion to Israel each year.

    “My original gut reaction when I read about what happened was to say, ‘The heck with this,’” said Henry Levy IV, treasurer of the Union for Reform Judaism, or URJ. “Why should I give my money to Israel if they don’t want to recognize me as a Jew, much less believe in egalitarian prayer? My only vote is with my pocketbook. I don’t have a vote as an Israeli.”

    Levy will not be suspending his giving to Israel, but he and Messinger are two of several active Reform Jewish donors who will be reapportioning their Israel philanthropy. A handful of members of URJ’s Oversight Committee — a 35-member body mostly elected from among the organization’s 253-member board — told JTA that they would be giving more to nonprofits that champion pluralism rather than large, general-interest Jewish fundraising bodies.

    Michael Price, a retired musical theater producer from Connecticut, gave frequently over the past six decades to his local Jewish federation, an umbrella for expansive Jewish giving. No more, he says. He’s going to donate more to Reform institutions in the U.S. and around the world, as well as to liberal Zionist organizations like the New Israel Fund and J Street, the dovish pro-Israel lobby.

    “I will be much more selective to make sure what I give will not be used against me, and by me I mean liberal Jews anywhere in the world,” Price said. “I will not let Israel fail, but I believe that the right-wing government of Israel, Netanyahu and the rabbinate in Israel are absolutely blind or mean-spirited, blind to the contributions of liberal Jews.”

    URJ officials aren’t the only ones to publicly question their giving to Israel.

    This week, Isaac “Ike” Fisher, a board member of the Israel lobby AIPAC from Coral Gables, Florida, threatened to suspend his Israel philanthropy and wrote in an email to JTA that he hopes “Jews in the Diaspora will recognize the threat that a creeping theocracy can have on a democratic state.”

    Steven Nasatir, president of the Chicago Jewish federation, told The Times of Israel that any lawmaker who votes for the conversion bill is not welcome in his community. (Bowing to such outrage, Israel’s Cabinet agreed to postpone the conversion law for six months. It has not taken further action on the Western Wall deal.) Nasatir later put out a statement with his federation’s chairman saying “we and our fellow Jewish community leaders will continue to actively engage with Israeli officials, lawmakers, civic and religious leaders, to raise our voices and our concerns.”

    Usually wary to wade into Israeli controversies and alienate any of their diverse donors, North American federations were nonetheless quick to criticize the Israeli government decisions last week.

    “We are outraged at two Israeli government actions today that would destroy the fundamental principle that Israel, our Jewish homeland, is a place where all Jews can and must feel at home,” the New York Jewish federation, the country’s largest, said in a statement.

    Like other federations, it warned Israel that the issue could rupture the relationship between Diaspora Jews and Israel, which is often measured in dollars and cents.

    “There’s been a remarkable change of stance by federations in North America backing away from what had previously been an unconditional support of the Israeli government,” said David Baskin, a URJ board member from Toronto. “Everyone is worried that liberal Jews in particular will stop giving to federations, to the extent that federations are supporting Israel, and that’s a well-founded fear.”

    Other Reform donors demurred from the idea of withholding money from mainstream Jewish groups as a pressure tactic. URJ Vice Chair Jennifer Kaufman said she would not ask anyone to stop giving to federations — just to consider giving to other organizations as well.

    “I’m not about to suggest that someone shouldn’t be giving money to where they’ve been giving money,” she said. “I think that’s something everyone has to decide for themselves. I would not be comfortable telling people what they should do with their philanthropic donations.”

    Even as they spoke of pressuring Israel financially, Reform donors denied any parallel to the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, or BDS, against Israel, and in its official form is anti-Zionist. Instead of isolating Israel economically, these donors are considering increasing their giving — but changing which Israelis get it.

    “This is about redirecting funds strategically,” Messinger said. “It’s not about spending less. It’s about investing in areas where it’s clearly promoting democratic, pluralistic Israel — an Israel we’d like to all be part of.”


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    16 Comments
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    RobertS
    RobertS
    6 years ago

    They want a “pluralistic” Israel. Because, you know, pluralistic Judaism in the USA has so greatly succeeded in increasing their commitment to Judaism and the Jewish state. Let them keep their donations. Better they should use the money to keep their temples and NGOs alive and pay the non-salaries of their Pied Piper “rabbis” so they don’t have to collect unemployment insurance benefits.

    favish
    favish
    6 years ago

    and if reform ‘miss-leaders’ will decide to read the New..Test at the kosel we will have to be ‘tolerant’?

    savtat
    savtat
    6 years ago

    Maybe they can arrange private areas to pray where one person goes in at a time.

    triumphinwhitehouse
    triumphinwhitehouse
    6 years ago

    These same people don’t let us cut funding to Brooklyn college for its support of bds due to their so called support of academic freedom typical liberals.

    6 years ago

    Daryl Messinger will be welcomed with open arms in Gaza!

    grandbear
    grandbear
    6 years ago

    Unfortunately the truth is showing up now after more than 100 years of their wreaking havoc in judaism .They have denied the torah and mitzvot and now they are cutting themselves away from true judaism because of a minor problem. If they refuse to believe in kashruth and shabbos and family purity all the have left is being true liberals who support the disenfranchised poor palestinians.

    Unfortunatly the true intent of these rebels

    6 years ago

    The archives don’t lie. Google Elchonon Ebert. An article from 1986 Chicago Tribune will appear. The Steve Nassiter mentioned in the article had me arrested for telling the converts that reform and conservative conversions being done in the ORTHODOX MIKVA OF CHICAGO were fraudulent. Technically by using a bullhorn on private property it was disturbing the peace. The more yeshivish roshei yeshiva backed the policy and still do .It is a bizoyin that this prominent rosh yeshiva and the controversial Posek from Chicago still have not changed the policy of allowing the ORTHODOX MIKVA to take money to rent out the mikva by day to reform They gave a letter to the reform to have me ARRESTED . I have a copy of this letter with these chosheve Rosh yeshiva and posek listed as the Rabbinical advisory board on the officialORTODOX MIKVA stationary. This despite my Rosh Yeshiva Harv Shmuel Berenbaum zl encouraged me to stand against this travesty.Harav Elya Svei zl
    also was aghast at this krumkeit and explicitly endorsed my protest. The more right wing orthodox ignored Harav Aron Solovechik zl of Chicago who wrote an extensive tshuva that it is ossur to rent out the mikva to reform . It is about time CHICAGO RABOMIM STOP THE CHILUL HASHEM POLICY .

    6 years ago

    What do these so called Jews want? Pick and choose what you wanna observe? The entire Torah and its commandmants dont exist by them but somehow they have an interesting connection/feeling to the kotel. What for? Judaism is a lot more than the kotel. These people are so misguided you can just cry for them.

    6 years ago

    Better use your dollars in Jenin, Shuafat & Ramallah, then. NEWSFLASH…. we don’t care about your money. We don’t care if you come here or not. We don’t care about your opinions either. YOU ARE IRRELEVANT.

    Shimon
    Shimon
    6 years ago

    Yeah, keep your money and send it to the dem part, the main branch of reform judaism.

    TruthIsIt
    TruthIsIt
    6 years ago

    By the way, did anyone tell her “from where and from who does the dollar belong to ” ?

    MayerAlter
    MayerAlter
    6 years ago

    As a way of showing just how stupid you are and what a small mind you have Ms. Messinger has hit the rights buttons. El Al is a private company not a branch of the Israeli Government. Does she not know that or is really just an idiot? By insisting on buying non kosher wines, she is simply showing how right the sensible moves by the Israeli Government over the Kossel and conversions are. The Government is seeking to uphold basic Jewish values as they were given to us on Mt Sinai. She doesn’t care about those values. Keep your money and you don’t need to come here either. There are enough non Jewish tourists who respect our value, starting off with the President of the United States.

    Haroldk0715
    Haroldk0715
    6 years ago

    WOW the reform /conservatives finally showed their true colors.
    No more fooling the public anymore

    grandpajoe
    grandpajoe
    6 years ago

    I always wondered why even the modern orthodox Rabbaim forbid the davening in a conservative or reform shule – you can take the ten men out into the parking lot, and daven “OUTSIDE” but not in the shule – when I was an Avail, working on Long Island – needing to say Kaddish – all the shules in the area were conservative, and my rav said better not to say the kaddish, then say it in the ‘shule’ – I guess with this recent ‘stupidity’ I can see why

    jack-l
    jack-l
    6 years ago

    what goes round comes round. Her great grandfather might have been a reform jew. He would have urged Roosvelt not to upset the apple cart by letting any jews, to not distract the military, or show any favouritism by bombing the railway lines. Better to dump the unused bombs in the English channel. After that the reform movement became the denomination that contributed the very least to the newly founded state. both in money and manpower. Jerusalem omitted from their prayer books.
    Better let her use her money cleaning up the cesspool reform has created for whats left of the reform and egalitarian jews in America.
    Hashem Yerachem.