Great Britain’s new chief rabbi, Ephraim Mirvis, announced
on Monday that he would be attending Limmud, Britain’s largest and oldest
festival of Jewish learning and culture. Rabbi Mirvis’ announcement may have
been expected, but it is still significant for the future of Britain’s rapidly
fracturing Jewish community.
Mirvis’ predecessor, Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, had been an early
supporter of Limmud back in the day when it was mainly an educators’
conference, but during his 22 years as chief rabbi, he bowed to pressure from
his ultra-Orthodox colleagues and did not appear at the Limmud conference.
In a statement put out by his office, Mirvis, who was
inaugurated as chief rabbi only two weeks ago, said that for him, speaking at
Limmud fulfills “one of my primary functions as teacher of the community. I see
Limmud as an opportunity to teach Torah to large numbers of people who want to
learn.”
Mirvis had indicated in recent months that he planned to
reverse Sacks’ policy, but it wasn’t clear whether he would attend this year’s
main Limmud conference, which is scheduled to take place in late December. The
five-day event of more than a thousand lectures, workshops, debates and
performances at the University of Warwick is expected to draw around 2,500
participants.
Mirvis is formally head of the Orthodox United Synagogue
movement, however, over the last decade, the proportion of believers
identifying with religious streams - whether ultra-Orthodox or Reform, Masorti
or Liberal – that refuse to recognize the chief rabbi’s spiritual leadership,
has grown.
The fact that Mirvis announced his Limmud appearance as the
first major decision of his tenure signals that he understands the climate in
which he is operating: one of intense competition between various strands of
Judaism and an environment of growing plurality among British Jews. Limmud has
become the main venue where different groups mingle and study together,
including a growing number of Orthodox rabbis and members of United Synagogues
congregations -- something that further highlighted Sacks’ absence.
Britain’s Haredim still adamantly oppose any cooperation
with non-Orthodox streams, a view emphasized in a statement put out last night
by the London Beth Din (rabbinical court), a body ostensibly under the auspices
of its president -- chief rabbi -- but dominated almost entirely by Haredi
dayanim (judges).
In the statement, the dayanim said they “remain seriously
concerned that the attendance of Orthodox rabbis at Limmud blurs the
distinction between authentic Orthodox Judaism and non-Orthodox beliefs and practices.”
However, even they have been forced to admit that the landscape is changing,
noting in their statement that “the ultimate decision of our rabbis’ attendance
at Limmud lies with the Chief Rabbi in whom the dayanim of the London Beth Din
have every confidence and to whom they offer every support.”
Limmud organizers, non-Orthodox rabbis and lay leaders of
the United Synagogue all enthusiastically welcomed Mirvis’ statement. United
Synagogue president Steve Pack called Limmud, which has spawned dozens of
Limmud international events around the world, “one of Anglo-Jewry’s greatest
achievements and exports.” But besides the significance of the chief rabbi’s
first-time appearance, Limmud will also put him in an unfamiliar position: on a
level playing-field with hundreds of other rabbis, academics, performers and
activists presenting at the conference.
Unlike his predecessor, who built his leadership around his
academic stature, oratorical skills and media star-quality, Mirvis’ strength
has been as a community-builder and educator at the grassroots level. Going to
Limmud, as just another one of a thousand presenters, Mirvis is bravely setting
out his stall for an increasingly embattled institute of British Jewry.
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