Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Three years later...

It's been three years since Natan Slifkin's books were banned by a distinguished group of Jewish Elders. With the passage of time, the controversy has died down, for the most part. Everyone who has an opinion on the matter has made up his or her mind and many of them have spoken it as well.

Perhaps it's not time to reexamine this issue, but in searching for something on Wikipedia, I was directed to a page which mentioned the controversy and spent a few hours reading through Rabbi Slifkin's website www.zootorah.org. Much had been added since I last looked at it a few years back, and I noticed as I read that I had personal relationships with several of the people mentioned and that perhaps I could bring a new perspective to this...controversy.

I keep using the word controversy. It's in the title of this blog. But "controversy" implies that there are two sides arguing - perhaps not of equal strength but each with it's own merits. And to pit one man against practically every Gadol - including some who initially supported him, as we shall see - is perhaps not best described as a "controversy."

The reason I chose to do this in blog form, therefore, is threefold. One, to allow words and terms to develop and change (dare I say, evolve!) as I progress. True, this can also be accomplished with the creation of a simple Word document, but the blog format simply feels more malleable. Two, the feedback from readers that a blog provides will allow me to edit this more sharply, both in terms of content and style. Bear in mind that I will be merciless in cutting off and out people who get too, er, emotional. And three, a blog, by being more open and alive, will give me - someone with a full-time job, and many, many other distractions - the focus to return to it and develop it.

Let me say this at the outset: My heart goes out to Rabbi Slifkin. Whatever happened, I cannot imagine his intentions were anything but pure; I cannot imagine that he lacks faith in God or the Divinity of His Torah; I cannot imagine the emotional and psychological toll that this has taken on him and his family.

Let me also say this: I fully and completely accept the authority of the Orthodox Rabbinate to be binding. If there were two sets of Gedolim pitted against each other on this issue, that would be one thing. But ladies and gentlemen, it's a rout. So you must understand that I am approaching this more in terms of discovering what happened and how, than in debating the results. The results are clear.

Let's begin.

3 comments:

Keeping Count said...

You're right, it's not two equal sets of Gedolim pitted against each other.

It's Rav Sherira Gaon, Rambam, Rabbeinu Avraham, Rav Eliezer of Metz, Maharam Schick, Pri Chadash, Rav Hirsch, Rav Herzog, and many dozens of others against Rav Elyashiv and about 20 others.

My money is on the first group.

E-Man said...

BAAAA ZIIIIIIIIING

Joseph said...

Keeping Count:

You completely misrepresented the position of the Gedolim you mentioned. They said no such thing.