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Revel in the Community, Part 2

From Rashi鈥檚 Shir ha-Shirim to Jewish-Christian Tensions to the Contemporary Academy: Revel Yom Iyun Addresses the Value and Relevance of Academic Jewish Studies Over 100 people congregated at The Jewish Center on the Upper West Side of Manhattan on Sunday morning, March 18 for a unique Yom Iyun (鈥渄ay of study鈥) entitled 鈥淣ew Perspectives on Jewish-Christian Relations鈥 jointly sponsored by 51爆料鈥檚 Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies and The Jewish Center. Some of those in attendance have a professional interest in Jewish studies鈥攕tudents, professors and rabbis鈥攂ut most did not, and came primarily to learn from the featured speakers. Indeed, this Yom Iyun was designed to bring academic Jewish scholarship to the awareness of the broader Jewish community as part of Revel鈥檚 celebration of its 75th anniversary. The Yom Iyun included four lectures dealing with a range of topics spanning from biblical times to the modern age, each showcasing how academic Jewish studies complement talmud Torah (religious study). In addition to marking Revel鈥檚 75th anniversary, the event celebrated the publication of New Perspectives on Jewish-Christian Relations: In Honor of David Berger, a collection of studies edited by Elisheva Carlebach and Jacob J. Schacter.
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David Berger assumed his current role as Dean of Revel in September 2008, at which point he turned to Revel Professor of Bible Mordechai Cohen to serve as his Associate Dean. Sunday鈥檚 Yom Iyun reflects the efforts of the Berger-Cohen Revel administration to make YU鈥檚 graduate school of Jewish Studies a resource to the broader Jewish community. Yosie Levine, Rabbi of the Jewish Center and Cohen鈥檚 former student at Revel, explained why he regarded this event as an important milestone for his congregation: 鈥淭he Jewish Center is delighted to partner with the Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies. Part of our goal is to build a bridge between the academy and the broader Jewish community by engaging the talents of leading scholars and inviting them to teach us about their respective fields. It is our hope that this will be the beginning of a wonderful partnership that will give us entr茅e into an academic universe brimming with possibility.鈥 YU President Richard Joel attended the Yom Iyun and addressed the audience prior to Berger鈥檚 keynote speech. As Cohen noted in his introductory remarks, it was President Joel who recognized the need to bring Berger to YU on a full-time basis in 2007. Although Berger has long been teaching at YU part-time, his full-time academic post for over thirty yeas was at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, where he achieved renown as a leading Jewish historian and thinker. Joel described Berger鈥檚 appointment as 鈥渙ne of [YU鈥檚] great achievements of the last decade鈥 since he has assumed a leading role in the direction of academic Jewish studies at 51爆料. Both Carlebach and Schacter were Berger鈥檚 students as undergraduates at Brooklyn College. Schacter, a former Rabbi of The Jewish Center, expressed his appreciation to Berger as he addressed his former congregation. 鈥淗e has influenced my life in extremely deep and profound ways,鈥 Schacter said about the Dean. 鈥淚 was mesmerized by his brilliance, his humanity; I wanted to be like him.鈥 For Schacter, working on New Perspectives was 鈥渁 labor of love and expression of hakarat hatov,鈥 he continued. 鈥...I really can鈥檛 thank Dr. Berger enough for his influence in my life.鈥 Joel spoke proudly about Revel鈥檚 achievements over the past few years since Berger took the helm鈥攅specially the dramatic growth of Revel鈥檚 PhD program, from 9 students in 2008 to its current 26. Additionally, the school鈥檚 MA program remains vibrant, and increasing numbers of non-degree students and auditors attend Revel courses purely out of interest in the range of subjects taught there. Joel also mentioned the expansion of the Revel faculty, with 7 new appointments (some directly to Revel and some undergraduate faculty who have become a part of the Revel faculty as well) in the last 9 years, which greatly enhance the scope of the program. 鈥淸Revel] is a resource for the community on multiple levels, permeating modern Orthodox life and literacy,鈥 emphasized Joel. The first lecture, Exile, Redemption, Human Love and National Saga: Peshat and Ideology in Rashi鈥檚 Song of Songs Commentary鈥 was delivered by Associate Dean Cohen and explored the literal versus allegorical interpretations of the biblical Song of Songs (Shir ha-Shirim). Cohen noted the substantial innovation of  the great eleventh-century exegete Rabbi Solomon ben Isaac (commonly known as Rashi) in Song of Songs interpretation: in a move unprecedented in Jewish tradition, Rashi formulated a comprehensive interpretive approach to the literal sense of the Song of Songs as love poetry, and not just as allegory.  The lecture was based partially on a fourteen-member collaborative research project on Jewish, Christian and Muslim interpretation that Cohen directed at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem鈥檚 Institute for Advanced Studies last year. Cohen noted that the Song of Songs is 鈥渃hallenging from an ideological perspective.鈥 Both Jewish and Christian interpreters grappled with the question of why this work, seemingly a collection of love poems, was included in the Bible. What, indeed, is its theological message? The answer given in midrashic tradition was that the text has a deeper allegorical meaning: it reflects the love between God and the people of Israel. According to this approach, the beloved鈥檚 beautiful eyes described in the poem (Song 1:15) are interpreted as the righteous ones of Israel, and her two breasts (Song 7:4) as the two tablets of the Law containing the Ten Commandments. As Cohen noted, an analogous sort of allegorical reading was adopted by the Church Fathers, who interpreted the Song as the love relationship between Jesus and the Church. Even the Karaites, who generally reject rabbinic tradition, interpreted this biblical text allegorically鈥攁bout the history of the Karaite sect. Following the midrashic approach, the Orthodox Jewish publishing company Artscroll translated the Song of Songs into English according to its allegorical sense, emptying the text of its literal meaning. The authority they cited for doing so was Rashi, who does indeed cite the midrashic interpretations faithfully. But, Cohen observed, Rashi actually argued for the importance of the peshat (literal) level of the Song of Songs鈥攖hat is to say, the love story. 鈥淩ashi accepts the allegorical interpretation,鈥 stated Cohen, who quoted from Rashi鈥檚 introduction to the work. 鈥淏ut that was not Rashi鈥檚 innovation, because it was well entrenched in midrashic tradition and targum [Aramaic interpretive translation]. When you ask what Rashi鈥檚 contribution was, it was the emphasis on peshat...Rashi in reality stated you need the peshat as a foundation for the allegory.鈥 As an example, Cohen drew the audience鈥檚 attention to Rashi鈥檚 comments on Song of Songs 2:10-13. This passage describes the lover鈥檚 call to his beloved that invokes the beautiful colors and scents of the blossoming springtime. Rashi comments that 鈥渢his entire passage, according to its peshat, is said in the language of a young man enticing his betrothed to join him.鈥 Thus, argued Cohen, Rashi perceived the Song鈥檚 literary qualities as manifested in the literal plot of the story, and didn鈥檛 view it purely as an allegory. Rabbi Samuel ben Meir (Rashbam), Rashi鈥檚 grandson, furthered developed the peshat approach of literary appreciation, comparing the literal sense of the Song of Songs to the love stories recited by the jongleurs in his own twelfth-century France. This, argued Cohen, 鈥渄eepen[ed] the relevance of this biblical text for his generation.鈥 Rabbi Jacob J. Schacter, University Professor of Jewish History and Jewish Thought and Senior Scholar at the  at , presented 鈥淎 Surprising View of Christianity in the Eighteenth Century: The Perspective of Rabbi Jacob Emden.鈥  Rabbi Emden was the focus of Schacter鈥檚 1987 PhD dissertation which, incidentally, he worked on while serving as rabbi of The Jewish Center. Schacter framed his lecture around a particular letter written by Emden regarding a group of Sabbatians (followers of the false messiah Shabbetai Zvi) in Poland. In June 1756 all Sabbatians in Poland were excommunicated, further deepening the existing persecution of the Sabbatians in Poland and beyond. Those persecuted turned to Christian authorities, arguing that they, the Sabbatians, were being persecuted because they shared the Christian belief in Jesus and other matters of faith. The Church responded favorably to the Sabbatians, interpreting their persecution as an attack on Christianity itself. 鈥淭he Jewish Council of the Four Lands was prepared to argue that Sabbatianism had nothing to do with Christianity,鈥 explained Schacter, 鈥渁nd that in fact Sabbatianism must be seen as an entirely new religion. However, there was a danger in this argument, because according to Christian practice at that time, no new religions were allowed; anyone guilty would be killed. So the leaders of the Va鈥檃d Arba Aratzot [Council of the Four Lands] understood that a lot was at stake. They turned to Emden and asked whether they should do this. Emden pens this very sharply worded essay, and writes that it鈥檚 not only [permissible] for them to do this, but they are [obligated to]...And if the Sabbatians are to be killed then so be it.鈥 What comes next in Emden鈥檚 essay is novel. In the course of this essay, said Schacter, Emden presented his most explicitly favorable鈥攁nd unprecedented鈥攁ssessment of Jesus and Christianity  including Christianity and Islam under the rubric of 鈥kenesiyyah le-shem shamayim鈥 [a gathering for the sake of heaven]  Emden credited the two later Abrahamic faiths  with a number of accomplishments, for which he gives them great respect. Chief among them: spreading a monotheistic tradition to the nations of the world. Secondly, Emden credited these faiths with protecting the Jews from their would-be destroyers. Ultimately, argued Schacter, Emden鈥檚 attitude toward Christianity must be viewed in light of his attitude towards Sabbatianism. By establishing a contrast between the two that favored Christianity, Emden delegitimated Sabbatianism and distinguished it as incompatible with both Judaism and Christianity. However, 鈥渁ll this is theoretical in the world of Jacob Emden,鈥 emphasized Schacter, pointing out that in Megillat Sefer Emden expressed frustration and feelings of persecution related to Christians he encountered personally. 鈥淚f Jacob Emden had a tolerant attitude to Christians in theory, when looking out the window it was a different thing entirely.鈥 Dr. Elisheva Carlebach, Salo Baron Professor of Jewish History, Culture and Society at Columbia University, who also serves as Senior Adjunct Professor at Revel, lectured on 鈥淛ews, Christians and the Conflict Over the Calendar.鈥 鈥淲e all look at a calendar in different ways,鈥 noted Carlebach. 鈥淲hen you look at a calendar, you see that this is a place where Jews and Christians diverge.鈥 Carlebach noted that in antiquity, Christians designed their new calendar specifically to compete against and supersede the existing Jewish one.  By the third century, the Church Fathers had replaced Shabbat with Sunday, 鈥淭he Lord鈥檚 Day.鈥 They also fixed Christian holidays specifically so as not to coincide with Jewish ones鈥攏otably, Easter was not allowed to fall out on Passover.  鈥淭here was tremendous discomfort on both sides,鈥 said Carlebach. At end of the sixteenth century, the Church replaced the Julian calendar with its newly created Gregorian calendar and also reconfigured the calculation of Easter. These developments once again placed the calendar in the forefront of the consciousness of all Europeans. Living daily life organized according to the Christian calendar proved uncomfortable for many Jews. Throughout the medieval period, said Carlebach, Jews were highly aware of the fact that as society Christianized, everything that they referred to in the framework of the general calendar could be seen as the adoption of a semi-idolatrous, forbidden culture. Yet even though acknowledging the Christian calendar was inescapable, Jews sometimes incorporated anti-Christian sentiment and even polemics in their dual Christian-Jewish yearly calendars.  Carlebach described the duality as a 鈥渟ubtle system of reference.鈥 For example, one such calendar marked all Christian holidays to do with the Virgin Mary before the Annunciation with the word 鈥betulah鈥 (鈥渧irgin鈥). However, it marked the Annunciation Day itself as 鈥isha鈥 (literally 鈥渨oman鈥 or 鈥渨ife,鈥 implying loss of virginity). 鈥淲hen it comes to the day that she is conceiving her child, she鈥檚 isha,鈥 said Carlebach. 鈥淚 believe that these three letters constitute the shortest anti-Christian polemical text in the entire history of Jewish anti-Christian polemics.鈥 The final presentation of the day was Jewish Studies and Judaism: Personal Reflections on a Career in Academic Jewish Scholarship,鈥 the keynote of the Yom Iyun, delivered by Berger. While some religious individuals purposely avoid academic inquiry, fearing that their studies might shake their faith, Berger asserted that academic Jewish scholarship 鈥渕ust play a role in the consciousness of the educated layman as well [as the academic].鈥 鈥淪etting aside issues of methodology, there is the enterprise of simply studying materials that clearly fall under the rubric of Torah but are not part of the curriculum of the yeshivas,鈥 Berger continued. He went on to recount a conversation that he had with a Jew who teaches a Talmud class in Boro Park.  This learned Jew was unaware that Maimonides鈥 thirteen principles printed in the prayer book do not represented the full, original text.  When he was showed that text in the back of the standard edition of the tractate Sanhedrin, he expressed surprise and asked how Berger knew about this. Berger also addressed the issue of objectivity in the academic study of Judaism. Some academics, for example, assert that their observant colleagues allow 鈥渢heir religious sympathies to affect their scholarly conclusions.鈥 Yet Berger argues that just as secular scholars have an obligation to examine arguments on their merits, religious scholars have an obligation to draw conclusions that they believe will pass muster by objective criteria鈥攁nd the best of them do precisely that. Berger spoke about his earliest exposure to academic Jewish studies鈥攂eginning with his father, and continuing through his education at the Yeshiva of Flatbush, Yeshiva College and Columbia University. He also described some of the projects of importance to the modern Jewish community he has undertaken鈥攁nd was especially qualified for as a result of his academic studies.  For example, in 1978, Berger, an expert on the Jewish-Christian debate in the Middle Ages, teamed up with Dr. Michael Wyschogrod to write a booklet entitled Jews and 鈥楯ewish Christianity鈥 on behalf of the Task Force on Missionaries and Cults of the Jewish Community Relations Council of New York. In the winter of 1989, Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz received permission from the Soviet government to open a yeshiva in Moscow鈥 the first legal yeshiva in the history of the Soviet Union.  It was necessary that at least one of the four projected faculty would have academic credentials in addition to the ability to teach in a yeshiva, and Berger was recruited for this position. For 7 weeks, he taught his Russian students and in some instances the community at large Bible, Talmud, Jewish history, Pirkei Avot, Torah reading, and Jewish thought, including Maimonides鈥 twelfth-century Iggeret Teiman, a letter of consolation addressed to the persecuted Yemenite Jewish community.  鈥淣o one can say that this is not a Torah text in the broad sense, but it is not even on  anyone鈥檚 radar screen in the yeshiva world,鈥 said Berger, who was moved by the experience of teaching the letter, over 700 years after its composition, to another beleaguered Jewish community just beginning to reclaim its heritage. 鈥淭eaching it was a challenge primarily because it was next to impossible to suppress tears.鈥 Finally, Berger touched on the tricky question of whether and how to apply knowledge garnered through academic study to halakhah (Jewish law).  鈥淪ay you are convinced that the Ethiopian Jews are not descended from the [biblical] Tribe of Dan,鈥 said Berger as an example. 鈥淭hat has serious halakhic implications. Rav Ovadia Yosef鈥檚 basis for saying they do not need conversion is based on a position that an academician would not accept. So the question is whether the halakhic process is independent of such knowledge.鈥 Several students鈥攆rom Revel and elsewhere鈥攁ttended the Yom Iyun and expressed appreciation for the opportunity to hear Revel faculty members鈥 views on how academic Jewish knowledge is vital to the Jewish community.  鈥淚 enjoyed the unique opportunity to hear Revel professors not only lecture on areas of their expertise in a non-classroom setting,鈥 said Emily Belfer, who earned her Revel MA in 2011, 鈥渂ut also to hear them speak about why they value the academic study of Jewish texts and history among educated laypeople.鈥 Ira Tick (University of Wisconsin 鈥11), who is now seriously considering applying to Revel鈥檚 MA program, was similarly impressed. 鈥淟istening to Professor Cohen and Dean Berger reflect on the impact of their research on their understanding of Torah and Jewish life and the importance of a 鈥檅road curriculum鈥 in the education of the faithful, I felt a profound sense of homecoming,鈥 said Tick.  鈥...The representatives of the Bernard Revel School explained the meaning of their life鈥檚 work, bridging the gap between the cloisters of the academy and the reality outside of them. They echoed my own hopes to contribute not only to my own knowledge and to the world of Jewish scholarship, but also to the understanding and appreciation of my fellow Jews and the rest of humanity.鈥 Article by Yaelle Frohlich; photos by Judah Harris  

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