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Joshua Hammerman
E-Mail:
rabbi@tbe.org
Temple Beth El
350 Roxbury Rd.
Stamford, CT 06902
Website:
www.tbe.org
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The Rabbi's Library
by Rabbi Joshua
Hammerman |
"Ranking Your
Rabbi"
(The Jewish Week
04/20/2007)
Believe it or not, I've got
something positive to say about Newsweek.com's widely panned
recent ranking of the 50 most influential rabbis in America - this
despite that fact that I belong to the legions of the rankled
unranked.
The list, a product of three
Hollywood bigwigs with entirely too much time on their hands, came
up at my seder. I for one hadn't given it a second look - OK, I
did give it a thorough first look - and the whole episode might
have passed uneventfully had not my mother asked, "Are you on it?"
Ouch.
But rather than dialing up a
therapist, I chose to take her query as a signal that this list
needs to be taken seriously. Whether or not it is a good thing, it
is the way people think. Rankings are everywhere. Call it the
"American Idol" factor, or the Lettermanization of America.
Everyone needs to be rating something. There are even top 10 lists
of top 10 lists.
Come to think of it, Jews have
been creating such lists for centuries. In Chapter Five of
tractate Avot alone, there are nine top 10 lists. And, in an
interesting twist, here the rabbis rank their congregants. (So
what type of learner are you? A sieve, a funnel, a sponge or a
strainer?)
Magazines routinely try to
quantify quality in reviewing doctors, lawyers, hospitals,
colleges and politicians. That quantification is often deceptive.
We can rank billionaires on net wealth, but even Forbes can't rank
how much they've bettered humanity. I know and admire several
doctors who have turned up on New York Magazine's "best of" lists
and, while I'm happy for them and their kvelling mothers, I have
no idea what makes them better than others whom I also know and
admire.
How does one measure the
influence of a rabbi? Is it as simple as the Hollywood formula has
it: 20 points each for fame and "impact on Judaism," and 10 apiece
for "media presence," community leadership, movement leaders, the
"size of their constituency" and a bonus 10 for "greater impact?"
The Newsweek list puts a premium
on popularity. For Israel Salanter, a 19th-century rabbi, humility
and integrity were the true measures of rabbinic greatness. He
once claimed famously that a rabbi who is liked by everyone is not
a rabbi (though he added, "one who is liked by no one is not a
mensch"). These sentiments were echoed by subsequent leaders like
Rabbi Arthur Hertzberg, who feared no person and eschewed
popularity when it flew in the face of conviction. How many points
does the list give for integrity, humility and conviction? How
many for wisdom?
I've had several opportunities to
do scholar-in-residence weekends outside my congregation. It's a
wonderful experience, but there was nothing like returning home
afterwards. Being a rabbi is about connecting with others on the
deepest, most human level, something that rarely can be
accomplished over a single Shabbat, no matter how spectacular, and
something that can best be done in smaller communities, not mega-shuls.
And once that personal connection is made, its depth cannot
possibly be measured.
I've also had the horrific
responsibility to officiate at four recent funerals of people in
their 30s. On each occasion, the only thing I had to offer were
words that came directly from my heart. Who can measure the impact
of such words on a grieving parent? Each one of those eulogies had
a more profound influence than anything I've ever had published.
The Jewish future is being forged
by hero-rabbis in the trenches, one Jew at a time.
Miraculously, despite the lousy
rating system, the moguls chose well. Their list contains many
role models (and close friends) who have influenced me greatly.
They all deserve to be recognized for the quality of their
teaching and the depth of their humanity rather than the extent of
their popularity. There is no question that among them are several
who should be considered "gedolay ha-dor,' our generation's
greatest.
One more positive thing: The
list's very appearance signals that, in some small way, the place
of the rabbi in American Jewish life is veering its way back to
the center, where it has always belonged. There's something
comforting in the fact that rabbis maintain a level of mystery and
fascination in the public eye. This should be no surprise to
anyone who has ever gone to a swim club, kids' soccer game or
anywhere else Jews tend to gather, where inevitably the discussion
turns to rabbis. But now, as our communal center of gravity is
slowly shifting back toward the synagogue, the rabbi's role is
shifting too, away from the ceremonial and symbolic and toward the
substantive, from mere fascination to outright respect. A rabbi is
now just as likely to be giving the keynote address as the
invocation.
Several years ago, I proposed
that American Jewry needs a chief rabbinate. While the suggestion
was only half serious, the Newsweek list signals that perhaps the
time has come to look for new ways to recognize rabbinic
excellence - and to understand the true criteria for achieving it.
Most of the last century's great
Jewish leaders were rabbis. For every Brandeis, Buber or Ben
Gurion, there was a Heschel, Kaplan, Soloveichik, Silver and a
Wise. Their greatness was not measured on a point system, but by
the power of their message, the passion of their commitment and
the depth of their love for Judaism and humanity. For decades,
however, the rabbinate has been marginalized and, as result,
Jewish leadership has been infested with mediocrity. The
appearance of the Newsweek 50 signals that a new era of rabbinic
greatness might just be at hand. n
Joshua Hammerman, a CLAL
associate, is rabbi of Temple Beth El in Stamford, Conn.
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