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Home » News » National

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Study: U.S. Jews drift from faith

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One-third thoroughly secular

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  • White House Chief of Staff Joshua B. Bolten second from left, Rabbis Abraham Shemtov, left, Levi Shemtov and Nachman Holtzberg, right, light the National Hanukkah Menorah, at the Ellipse, near the White House during a lighting ceremony marking the beginning of the celebration of the Hanukkah, Sunday Dec.. 21, 2008. Associated Press.

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By Julia Duin

For example, only 6 percent of all Americans identify themselves as secular - that is, they disbelieve in God and do not follow any religion. But one-third of all Jews fit into that secular category, she said.

As a result, the number of people adhering to any sort of Judaism as a religion is actually just 3.3 million to 3.4 million, the survey found. Eighteen years ago, it was 23 percent higher, at 4.3 million.

Ms. Keysar also blamed the lack of belief on Jewish intermarriage, which has risen dramatically in recent decades. Before the 1970s, it was at 13 percent, according to the National Jewish Population Study (NJPS) of 2000-01. The rate doubled to 28 percent by 1980 and has continued rising from there.

"These are the children of the intermarried," she said of about 1.8 million nonobservant Jews, "who were raised with no religion and as adults see themselves as having no religion. It's a ripple effect."

Speaking on the phone from Jerusalem, where she and Mr. Kosmin are presenting their findings to the 15th World Congress of Jewish Studies, she added, "The concept that most appeals to people is not going to synagogue or doing religious rituals, but the culture and ethnic attachments to Judaism."

At most, one-quarter of young Jewish adults exclusively date other Jews, according to the NJPS. Only two-thirds of all intermarried couples have children who consider themselves Jewish, and the younger the parent, the less likely it is that the child will be a Jew.

According to ARIS, 3.6 million people in 2001 said they had a Jewish mother, which is the traditional basis for Jewish identity. However, about 500,000 of these adults who had a Jewish mother followed another religion, overwhelmingly some form of Christianity.

Occasionally non-Jews will convert to Judaism through intermarriage, but the numbers are negligible, Ms. Keysar said.

"We tried looking at that in 2001 - we called them 'Jews by choice' - but their numbers were under 10 percent" of the couples surveyed, she said.

Greg Liberman, president and chief operating officer of JDate, a national online Jewish matchmaking service, said about 5 percent of the service's 650,000 members are non-Jews. About 1.2 percent of the members are non-Jews who say they are willing to convert if they meet a Jewish partner; 1.5 percent non-Jews who say they would not; and 1.9 percent who say they "don't know."

"If both parents have a Jewish background, they are more likely to raise their kids as Jews," he said. "Every single family I've talked to who has met on our site is raising their kids Jewish."

The 12-year-old dating service exists to strengthen the Jewish community and ensure that Jewish traditions endure through the forming of Jewish families, according to its mission statement. It matched 21,000 people in 2008, he said.

"Rabbis reach out to us all the time and buy subscriptions on behalf of their single congregants," he added. "They say half the marriages they do are for people who met on JDate."

Some voices in the Jewish community blame the state of American synagogues for the drop in Jewish practice.

"Some of the best energy we get in the Jewish world are non-Jews who encourage their Jewish partners to explore their Jewishness," said Rabbi Michael Lerner, founder of the magazine Tikkun and the spiritual head of Beyt Tikkun, a San Francisco synagogue with 30 percent intermarried couples. "I welcome non-Jews into the Jewish community as a whole. I think they bring a spiritual seriousness their partner does not have.

"What undercuts peoples' commitment to Judaism is the spiritual emptiness that has characterized much of the organized Jewish community," Mr. Lerner said. "The vacuity, the spiritual deadliness people experience growing up in many of America's synagogues leads them to a lack of interest in Judaism and to explore other spiritual traditions.

"People tell me, 'Yeah, I grew up in that system and the only values I learned were safety for the Jewish people, blind loyalty to the state of Israel and making it in America,' " the rabbi added. "The people who get most honored in the Jewish world are the Bernie Madoffs."

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