At the Columbia demonstrations, a group of Jewish participants held a seder last week. This was just one of many instances of Jewish opponents of Israel loudly displaying both their Jewish and anti-Israel bona fides. Most of the available data suggest that such radical positions are held only by a small minority of U.S. Jews. Nonetheless, some Jewish communities have since October 7 become sharply divided over attitudes toward Israel.
The American-Israeli author Yossi Klein Halevi and the Jewish Renewal rabbi David A. Ingber discuss these divides with Dan Senor, and ask the uncomfortable but inevitable question: at what point should the Jewish community reject entirely those who make common cause with Israel’s enemies? They also ask how the situation got so bad: Halevi notes an unhealthy Jewish obsession with victimhood, Ingber a climate at liberal synagogues and seminaries where “rejecting social justice is a bigger heresy . . . than saying you don’t believe in God.” (Audio, 66 minutes.)
More about: American Jews, Anti-Zionism, Israel and the Diaspora