It was said of Lev
Bronstein, a revolutionary
in post-Czarist Russia, who -- to dissociate himself from his Jewish roots
-- changed his name to Leon Trotsky: “It’s the
Trotskys
who make the revolutions, and the
Bronsteins
who pay the bill.”
We are 5 million Jews in America, and ten percent of us are Orthodox. So:
500,000 Orthodox Jews . . . 5 million American Jews. There are one or two of
these crook situations each and every year. One or two out of 500,000 . . .
one or two out of 5,000,000. The large-yarmulka’d
rabbi of the 1970s nursing home scandal. The Brooklyn yeshiva condemned by
United States Senator Sam
Nunn
for drawing federal Pell
Grant funds for students who do not exist in a yeshiva that does not exist
to eat meals that do not exist. The junk bond dealer. The Washington
lobbyist. The fellow who fled America for Switzerland, then got pardoned by
a departing President who said the pardon was requested by Israel’s Prime
Minister. The New Square
Chassidic community that bullet-voted for
Hillary for U.S. Senate after Bill did not pardon but commuted sentences of
three of their chassidim.
The East Coast Chassidim,
West Coast Orthodox Union lay leader, and Israeli bankers involved in a
federally indicted money-laundering scheme. And of course
Postville.
Some are “Orthodox.” Some are otherwise denominated.
We Jews are such a profoundly ethical and honest community. How many
prisoners in the federal prisons really ask for kosher meals? Five? Eight?
Nine?
Yet, there comes a point where it no longer seems or feels like only three
out of 500,000 -- because this is the area of stereotype. It plays and feeds
into stereotype. And therein lies the profound sensitivity.
Stereotypes are foolish, built on apocryphal presumptions. Do Jews really
know more about money than do others? Clearly, anti-Semites throughout
history have thought so, always keeping a Jew around to head the Treasury or
the Exchequer. Even Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand, when they expelled
all Jews from Spain, asked one individual Jew, Don Isaac
Abravanel,
to stay behind to do the books. Insane! If Jews know so much about managing
money and turning a profit, why is Israel unable to manage without American
largesse?
How did Alan Greenspan and Ben
Bernanke
help preside over the American fiscal fiasco? And was it Mayor Abe
Beame
who took New York City into bankruptcy? And Robert Citron in Orange County?
Who got the idea that Jews know so much more than anyone else about how to
manage money? Yet several Presidents seem to have brought in some Jewish
monetary advisors.
FDR had Treasury Secretary
Morgenthau.
Nixon had Herbert Stein as chairman of his Council of Economic
Advisors.
Carter had W. Michael
Blumenthal. (Shhhhh!
He was not really Jewish despite being named
Blumenthal.)
Clinton had Robert Rubin. Certainly, to employ a double negative, there is
no reason that a Jew should not be welcomed as an
economic
advisor if she is best for the job. And certainly Jewish deep thinkers
populate the entire spectrum of economic thought from a range of liberals
including Paul Samuelson to conservatives like Milton Friedman and even
objectivist-libertarians
like Ayn Rand (Shhhhh!
She was Jewish
despite changing her name to Rand . . . from Alice
Rosenbaum.)
It is impossible to avoid noting that this latest crook, Bernard
Madoff,
was prominently positioned in the Yeshiva University lay hierarchy. (He
personally is not Orthodox, nor is he nominally so or thus
quasi-denominated.) He also invested hundreds of millions of charitable
dollars in his Ponzi schemes. We need to do something as a community akin to
what Jews in America did 100 years ago to separate ourselves in the popular
imagination from the likes of Arnold
Rothstein
and Bugsy
Siegel
and Legs Diamond and Meyer
Lansky.
And we did.
Whether it means refusing to count these characters in
minyans,
to give them aliyas,
to permit them to attend banquet dinners, taking their names off synagogue
walls and out of siddur/chumash
inside-covers, or the like, it seems necessary to do something to separate
our community from them.
There should always be a chance for
teshuvah
-- sincere, heartfelt repentance. Absolutely -- that is a core Jewish value
and belief. And someday in the future, maybe after therapy, after
restitution, after complete repentance (teshuvah
g’murah),
new books can be dedicated, and new
minyanim
can be formed with their inclusion. They can be given new honors. But there
needs to be a separation, a
havdalah
g’murah,
pending teshuvah.
Similarly, we must give real thought to changing the way we do business as
an organized theological and spiritual community. Are we too
material-focused? Do we respect money more than good deeds? To paraphrase
Rav Michael Broyde's quote of Rav Emanuel Rackman's observation: Do we teach
that it is more important to do good in this world -- or that it is more
important to do well? Do we honor people who are monied more than people who
exude righteousness? (Yes, a monied person simultaneously can exude
righteousness. I have known some such people, like Jack Nagel of Los
Angeles, and they have touched my life by their example without really
donating my way.)
What a moment of opportunity we have before us to teach our community and
our young people real Jewish values! Or to capture some of these thoughts in
a public statement promoting reconsidered public policy. We have before us
-- right now -- an opportunity to propose or suggest standards that limit or
regulate the vulgar excesses of Bar Mitzvah and Bat Mitzvah parties. (How
many meals can a Jew eat in three hours? Does every thirteen-year-old merit
a life-sized ice sculpture of his luminescence and deserve to have 300
adults compelled to watch a fifteen minute retrospective of his
life-and-times as though compiled by Ken Burns?)
What a moment of opportunity to reinforce condemnations that rabbinic
organizations repeatedly have published against those who conduct
synagogue-centered poker games and casino-like gambling. To teach people
that the great names that have lived in Jewish history are those of rabbis
who taught Torah, scholars and teachers, pioneers who built Israel, other
pioneers who built and defended Jewish communities throughout the world --
and monied people who distributed their wealth generously. The greatness of
Baron Rothschild, Moses Montefiore, Baron de Hirsch, Haym Salomon, Jacob
Schiff, and others was not their riches but their philanthropy. They did not
sit on their money and hoard it. They worked hard for it, took real risks in
the world of industry, and then shared generously with those less fortunate.
What an opportunity we have! To require that every public event/banquet
include at least one major award to be conferred on a humble less-prominent
person purely for his or her profound leadership in Torah and ethics,
regardless of money. To teach about honesty. To invite to schools the person
who returns a lost bag of cash that he finds left behind in a taxi. This is
the moment to turn this shame into a moment of pride.
And, even as we truly have a remarkably proud record throughout the world as
a law-abiding community – can you think of a safer place to walk alone in
the middle of the night than in a
frum
neighborhood that is not plagued by midnight interlopers from outside? -- we
need to teach our yeshiva kids again and again,
nukh
a-mol
un
takeh
nukh
a-mol,
that financial crimes are cardinal sins because they implicate the name and
honor of HaKadosh
Barukh
Hu.
And now a final exposition: “Why is the religion of these isolated
perpetrators relevant?”
In Torah terms, the problem is Chilul Hashem. Their actions desecrate the
Holy Name of the G-d of Israel Who took us out of Egypt and brought us to
Mount Sinai to receive His Word and to transmit its glory to the Nations
around us.
And in secular terms, the problem is
in the stereotype. If David
Berkowitz, the non-Jewish “Son of Sam,” went around murdering blonde women
in their cars with his .44-caliber gun, it still did not feed a stereotype.
Jews are not stereotyped as killers/murderers.
But this Madoff thing fits a stereotype. For some prejudiced non-observant
Jews, it fits one intra-Jewish stereotype: “Oh, those Orthodox! They are so
strict about their supposedly high standards. They think they are so much
better than we are. Why, one of their rabbis would not even drink wine that
I poured for him! They won’t eat my food – even though they will eat the
food of people who hire illegal aliens and employ child labor. So they are
oh-so-holy, but when it comes to being honest, they take a back seat, those
Orthodox. I’m a better Jew than they are, any day of the week. We may eat
pork on Yom Kippur, but we are better Jews than they are. Because we have
Jewish hearts.”
Cardiac Jews.
That is why Madoff -- who is not Orthodox in the first place -- is a problem
of Chilul Hashem of one sort, when dealing with one sub-group of
non-observant Jews. And it is not an answer to respond that the Reform
Community Day school in Los Angeles is named for a junk-bond dealer who
perpetrated crimes of financial shame. How can that be an answer? What kind
of response is that? Rather, that is the road of falling into the same silly
trap when, in fact, we all should be working together as Jews of all stripes
and spots, denominations, genders, and politics, to eradicate financial
malfeasance and defalcations.
Again the question, then: Why is the
religion of the perpetrator relevant?
I would say, because the real concern is the way that we -- all Jews --
appear in the eyes of those bigots among the non-Jewish world who may bear
prejudices and stereotypes that feed off these aberrations.
There are plenty of non-Jewish crooks, frauds, and defalcators. The present
Illinois Governor (still in office as of this second) was elected to shake
up Springfield but instead shook down Illinois. How Jewish is a guy whose
name is pronounced Bla-goy-avich? And Martha Stewart is not Jewish. And,
during my high-stakes litigation career, I represented and defended powerful
clients, including a solid cross-section of non-Jews who were accused of
financial malfeasance.
Yet it is not a sufficient answer to say that Enron were non-Jews and that
Global Crossing were non-Jews and that Charles Keating was a non-Jew who
used his fraudulent gains to support Mother Theresa – indeed, she even wrote
a letter to the judge in his support during the legal proceedings against
him. Because, at day’s end, there are stereotypes. Stereotypes are so hard
to squelch and so easy to reinforce. People truly believe that Polish people
are stupid, even though they have produced a Pope of the Catholic Church, a
brilliant (if disastrous) foreign policy advisor to a past American
president, my favorite / sharpest / most brilliant morning talk show
hostess, and at least two Prime Ministers of Israel. If an Irish person gets
involved in something arising from inebriation, well, it is as though the
only alcoholic beverages ever concocted were Jameson's, Powell's, and
Bailey's. When an Italian person is associated even obliquely with something
arising from organized crime, it feeds stereotypes, even though Italians
like Rudy Giulliani led vigorous struggles against organized crime.
People of color particularly are subjects of stereotypes.
The stuff of Madoff feeds our
stereotype. The vulgar use of the
word “Jew” as a verb is shamefully tied with financial vulgarism. We may
fight the Oxford Dictionary, but this is what it is. The stereotype is
Shylock the Moneylender. It is hook-nosed Fagin who corrupts and sends
urchins to steal for him. Both were fictional creations of literary minds
and pens that could have designated them Anglicans, but didn't. During the
Civil War, the stereotype prompted Gen. Ulysses S. Grant to issue General
Order No. 11. When William Jennings Bryant railed at the 1896 Chicago
Democrat National Convention against Wall Street financiers, saying “You
shall not press down upon the brow of labor a crown of thorns; [y]ou shall
not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold,” everyone understood what he was
saying. He was not stereotyping the Romans on Wall Street.
This is the viciously unfair stereotype of us. In the streets of the rustic
Midwest, even where no Jews live, arson-for-insurance (as contrasted from
pyromaniacally setting wildfires in California) is called “Jewish
lightning.” The term is so defined on Wikipedia's Wiktionary website:
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Jewish_lightning
I heard it for the first time while traveling in the Bible Belt. The person
was a non-Jewish colleague of mine, a friend, who did not even realize that
the term was offensive. (It is like absent-mindedly criticizing a Native
American as an “Indian giver.”) It is Marc Rich getting pardoned by an
American President who pens dishonestly in the
New York Times that he
did so at the urgent behest of the Prime Minister of Israel. And every
single time that an outlier, isolated Jew emerges in one of these things, it
builds, and it builds on itself. It builds on stereotypes. It poses the
single greatest calumny against Jewish people.
That’s why the religion of the perpetrator matters to me. I wish we could
figure out a way to separate ourselves in the public mind from these guys,
but it is easier said than done. As long as we allow such defalcators and
crooks to be honorees at our events, to have their names on our
institutions' buildings and in the inside covers of our holy books, to hold
positions of lay leadership in temple and synagogue boards of directors or
trustees, we inadvertently become ignorant accessories, teaching children
for the next generation that we accord our highest honors based not only on
how deeply within his denomination he bears his bond and trust in G-d . . .
but on how consummately he is deeply pocketed in bearer bonds denominated
“In Gd We Trust.”
We have to aim higher. We absolutely must.