David Dinkins (who died yesterday, November 23, 2020) became mayor of New York after our immediate family left the New York area for San Diego. I had no direct experience of his stewardship of the city.
The first New York mayoral candidate for whom I have any lapel buttons that use Hebrew are from the Biaggi campaign of 1973.
Dinkins became the first mayor who used Hebrew lettering on its campaign buttons. The articles about him suggest that he governed a city at a time of great upheaval and racial tensions that he struggled to control. (This was during the period when Donald Trump made his first foray into the political realm with his call to apply the death penalty against those accused in the Jogger Case of 1989.) As Bill Clinton in 1996 hoped to be the president to lead us to a bridge to the 21st century, Dinkins also became a bridge figure.
That moment in New York City, thirty years ago, seems oddly similar to our American moment now.
Bridges are powerful. Our mother often spoke in awe of engineers’ ability to create bridges. I spoke of the significance of each of us being bridges to my congregation in Ramona for Rosh haShannah in 5760.
To add to this metaphor, consider becoming a bridge over troubled waters.
Date:
1990
Size:
4.43
Pin Form:
straight clasp
Print Method:
celluloid
Text
DINKINS MAYOR דינקינס
Date:
1993
Size:
4.4
Pin Form:
straight clasp
Print Method:
celluloid
Text
DINKINS ’93 דינקינס
your lapel buttons
Many people have lapel buttons. They may be attached to a favorite hat or jacket you no longer wear or poked into a cork-board on your wall. If you have any lying around that you do not feel emotionally attached to, please let me know. I preserve these for the Jewish people. At some point, they will all go to an appropriate museum. You can see all the buttons shared to date.
In early March 2020, before the Coronavirus pandemic lockdown began here in New York City, I was approached by T’ruah:
the invitation
I’m reaching out with what I hope might be a fun volunteer project with T’ruah. We’re putting together a group of… people who can craft what we’re calling non-rapid response statements and other materials– basically, to look at some of the most likely scenarios that might happen (we’ve done some of this work already, but there’s more to do) and pre-craft some Jewish and human rights language to respond. That is, when something dramatic happens (God forbid a violent incident, or new legislation, or something else either in the US or in Israel), we want to be able to be a moral voice, including having some thoughtful and deep Jewish language ready to go. Sometimes, this might mean a statement of our position and other times, it might mean a text study. For example, when the impeachment happened, we quickly threw together some texts for study; ditto on the acquittal. Other times, we have a more clear statement of what our position is. The goal of these is both to model a moral rabbinic voice (and to be heard in news stories, etc.) and to give rabbis in the field material that they (you) need to talk with/teach their communities. So here’s the ask– like I said, we’re putting together a small (8−10) group of people who can identify some of these key opportunities and start to craft some language/identify some sources that we would use if the opportunity arose…. We’ve tentatively scheduled a first meeting (via Zoom) for Thu, March 12 at 2PM (we hope you can make this time, but if you can’t, it’s not a deal breaker. At this meeting, we will identify a few of the top opportunities for response and divvy several of them out to pairs of people to work together (so it’s a chance to work with an old/new friend–or even if there’s someone you want to bring in, that’s great too) and to take a few weeks to draft some language and/or text suggestions. We’d come back together after Pesach to look these through, give feedback & identify new opportunities. I would imagine the commitment being about a quarterly meeting, plus some writing with a partner in between (but it can be somewhat flexible).
I accepted the invitation. On the designated date, we gathered and discussed the possible situations facing us.
our agenda
Goals:
Identify the top areas for which we need to prepare responses
Determine what kind of response(s) might be needed (statement, prayer, text sheet, something else)
Assign pairs to start working on prioritized responses
Check-in/introductions
Review of goals/why we respond:
Moral voice–model for Jewish community
Give rabbis/cantors/other Jewish professionals language they can use
Give rabbis/educators materials they can use in their own communities
Support rabbis/cantors through difficult moments
Review of potential situations
Likely scenarios:
White nationalist terrorist attack on:
Synagogue /other Jewish institution
Immigrant community/business
Black church
Mosque
Attack on synagogue/Jewish community by anti-Israel terrorist
Election:
Trump re-elected
Democrat elected, peaceful transition
Democrat elected, Trump refuses to leave, or election goes to Supreme Court or other chaos
Annexation of all or part of West Bank
New violence with Gaza
New war with Iran
Third intifada
Coronavirus outbreak becomes more serious/mass closures in US
Mass shooting in a school/movie theater/other communal space
Trump drops dead of heart attack or other natural causes
Trump assassinated
What else?
What kind of responses might each of these need?
Statement
Prayer/other liturgy
Text sheet
Webinar
What else?
Note, that while “Trump drops dead of heart attack or other natural causes” was mentioned as a possibility, at that early date, none of us imagined the extent of death and destruction COVID-19 would cause. The day of our Zoom meeting Governor Cuomo announced restrictions on mass gatherings and closed all Broadway theaters. Eight days later, on March 20, he mandated a state-wide lockdown and all our T’ruah planning paused.
At the end of June, our group was reconvened in order to develop materials specifically related to the upcoming presidential election.
I have been politically active my entire life, but I had not studied Jewish texts related to electoral politics. I used the search tools available to me and reached out to friends and colleagues for leads, but came back empty-handed. Ed proceeded similarly, though he still has his rabbinic library within arm’s reach. Ed discovered R. David Markus’ ALEPH senior teshuva on “The Jewish Duty to Vote”. A brief, popular version was later published at the blog of Rabbis Without Borders and his own blog. We invited R. Markus to join us in updating his work and he graciously engaged with us.
the result of our effort
While the conversation has shifted somewhat from protecting the voting process, our efforts remain helpful in clarifying a number of the issues involved. On October 14, T’ruah announced:
Election Day is three weeks away, but we already know we are unlikely to have clear election results on the night of November 3. Between expected delays in counting mail-in ballots, attempts to dispute election results, and politicians who prefer to serve their own egos rather than the democratic process, we are looking at an entire election season.
While T’ruah: The Rabbinic Call for Human Rights is a 501(c)(3) and does not conduct partisan political activities in support or in opposition to any political candidate, you can find a variety of helpful materials at the Election Center site. These include:
What clergy and congregations can do
Text studies
Prayers
Webinars
Divrei Torah
Protest placards
The document Ed and I prepared is under the Text studies section. You can download and print a PDF of it here. Or, you can review the document and all its related text here.
Jewish Texts On Fair Voting And Just Elections
In the form we know them today, popular elections – where all adult citizens vote for their leaders – are the product of western democracies. In western democracies, as time has passed, modern technology has allowed for widespread campaigns and for hundreds of millions of votes to be cast and counted.
Although Jewish tradition long predates western democracy, over an extended time, Jewish tradition takes an increasingly democratic approach to choosing leaders. That tradition evolves along a clear path from Moses’ appointment by God to a Jewish duty to vote for governmental leaders and even assess taxes. It follows, therefore, that for this duty to vote to be meaningful, the election must be just and votes must be fairly counted.
The Jewish trend towards democratic elections is rooted in the notion that we view government as a human partnership with God. Where Torah predicts that Israelites would want civil rulers instead of priests and prophets, Moses told the people: “[B]e sure to place over yourselves the king that God elects for you” (Deut. 17:14–15). Tanach records that God chose the first king, Saul (1 Sam. 9:16–17). The second king, David, however, was chosen by God but confirmed by “all of Israel’s elders” (2 Sam. 5:3). The third king, his son Solomon, ruled in David’s bloodline but “all the people” together ratified his accession (1 Kings 1:39). This democratic shift becomes clear in the Talmud, which opined that not even God would select rulers without consulting the people (B.T. Berachot 55a).
With the destruction of Jewish sovereignty in the Land of Israel, the role of the people in selecting their leaders and supporting secular government slowly expanded and extended. It began with the proposition that civil government is important. Thus, as in ancient days, we still “pray for government’s welfare, for without fear of it [we] would swallow each other alive” (M. Avot 3:2). The duty to create and support government was so important that it became one of the few duties that Jewish law recognizes for all, Jew and non-Jew alike (B.T. Sanhedrin 56b). To R. Moses Maimonides (the “Rambam,” 1135–1204), the purpose is to ensure public order (Mishneh Torah, Melachim 9:14); the Talmud extends the purpose to include all social welfare (B.T. Avodah Zara 4a). This is even more evident today where public safety, health, social equity, the rule of law – the very fabric of life in an interdependent world – require wise, effective and democratically accountable government.
When Jews elected tax collectors to remit Jewish taxes to secular authorities, Moses Isserles (the “Rema,” 1520–1572) held that all taxpayers were to assemble and vote “for the sake of heaven” (Shulchan Aruch, Choshen Mishpat 163:1). Declining to vote means ignoring Torah’s notion of human partnership in the “heavenly” work of government. Some 200 years later, R. Moses Schreiber Sofer of Pressburg (the “Chatam Sofer,” 1762–1839) held that taxpayers who didn’t vote forfeited their rights to shape election outcomes and were bound by those outcomes. Both based on the important call to vote and the binding nature of election outcomes, the Chatam Sofer necessarily assumed that votes would be counted in a fair and just election process.
While these authorities did not themselves establish a duty to vote, the Jewish focus on collective action – in political language, “the social contract” — so highly values the public interest as to compel individual behavior that serves the common good. As Shlomo ben Meiri (“Rashbam,” 1080–1174) held, this social compact obliges Jews to honor the realm’s civil laws in exchange for the realm’s benefits and protection (comm. B.T. Bava Batra 54b). By choosing to live somewhere as citizens, we bind ourselves to a contract with that society.
Jewish choice of residency also triggers a duty to help provide the benefits of society, lest anyone’s non-participation cause what economists call free riding. (If anyone could take a public good without giving, then all would have the same incentive – and the public good itself could disappear.) For this reason, Jews must not only pay for public benefits they receive (B.T. Bava Batra 8a), but also directly help as needed to serve the public (B.T. Bava Metzia 108a).
While in talmudic times the main concerns for collective action were flood control, public transportation, civil defense and public health, in our day these concerns devolve mainly on government. It is via government that Jews fulfill their civic duty to communities where they maintain residence and citizenship – not only by paying taxes, but also through public service and especially by voting. The implications are profound. The real “Jewish issue” is government’s effectiveness to perform its public duties. Understood properly, government’s whole agenda – public health and safety, social policy, criminal justice, environmental protection and more – is a “Jewish issue.” All are necessary concerns of Jewish voters as Jewish voters. That is the Jewish commitment to our nation, tradition and values – whatever our personal politics and partisanship may be.
This Jewish requirement to honor the social contract strongly implies a duty to vote, which in turn, implies a right to a fair and just process that allows for and counts those votes accurately. Indeed, in the Rama’s view, an election’s legitimacy depends on universal notice of the election and the corresponding full and fair opportunity for all eligible voters to cast ballots. Indeed, even before the advent of modern election mechanics, halachically it was well-settled that an election’s legitimacy would be undermined – and its outcome thus unenforceable – if the election was inadequately publicized or some voters inhibited eligible others from voting. So also held R. Yechezkel Landau (the “Noda b’Yehuda,” 1713–1793) and the Chatam Sofer.
It follows that in this modern era of complex election mechanics – any of which can and often do suppress voting or raise reasonable public question about the fairness of election administration – the spiritual duty to vote necessarily requires that election procedures be fair.
This result accords with modern Israel’s status as a democratic state, reflecting its continuation of Jewish commitment to the public good and fair elections. Indeed, after the founding of modern Israel, the Lubavitcher Rebbe (Igrot HaKodesh, at 32) and the Chazon Ish both urged all eligible voters to vote (albeit for specified candidates). So important was the electoral franchise that at least one prominent Israeli rabbi wouldn’t receive congregants on election day until they voted. To them, it was obvious that Jews must vote.
This result also accords with the views of contemporary progressive Jewish movements that deemed voting key to democracy and urged reforms against voter suppression to fulfill the verse (Lev. 19:15): לֹא־תַעֲשׂוּ עָוֶל בַּמִּשְׁפָּט לֹא־תִשָּׂא פְנֵי־דָל וְלֹא תֶהְדַּר פְּנֵי גָדוֹל בְּצֶדֶק תִּשְׁפֹּט עֲמִיתֶךָ — “Do not render an unfair decision, do not respect the poor or favor the mighty.” This verse inspired the Conservative Movement’s Rabbinical Assembly’s call for fair election mechanics to enforce the practical right to vote and have each vote counted, and its later resolution demanding elections in which “all eligible voters… have free and equal access to cast their ballots and all votes should be counted equally.”
Similarly, the Reform Movement’s Central Conference of American Rabbis (“CCAR”) adopted a 2001 resolution calling for election reform after the disputed U.S. presidential election of 2000. The CCARnarrated a societal “ethic of political participation [that] has guided Jews” and that renders anathema to Jewish thought what the CCAR called undue barriers to voting. The CCAR held a 2010 symposium on this subject, in which leading Reform rabbis offered case studies of Jewish religious community participating in the civic sphere.
Judaism’s wisdom tradition teaches that “You do not need to finish the work, but you are not free to desist from it” (M. Avot 2:16). Maybe no single election will fix the nation’s fate, but every election is important – and Judaism’s value of collective action mandates Jews to pitch in. That demand, in turn, implies a right to an election that is just and where the votes are fairly counted.
Prepared by R. Mark Hurvitz and R. Ed Stafman, with special thanks to R. David Markus, whose 2014 rabbinic teshuvah on these matters provided much of the research and thought supporting this paper.
Resources in order of their appearance in the document above (apologies for the odd formatting… the text appears correctly formatted in the PDF):
“When you come into the land that YHVH your God is giving you, and you possess and settle it, and say, ‘I will set over me a king like all other nations around me,’ be sure to place over yourself the king YHVH will elect for you….
‘To-morrow about this time I will send thee a man out of the land of Benjamin, and thou shalt anoint him to be prince over My people Israel, and he shall save My people out of the hand of the Philistines; for I have looked upon My people, because their cry is come unto Me.’ And when Samuel saw Saul, the LORD spoke unto him: ‘Behold the man of whom I said unto thee: This same shall have authority over My people.’
And Zadok the priest took the horn of oil out of the Tent, and anointed Solomon. And they blew the ram’s horn; and all the people said: ‘Long live king Solomon.’
“R. Yochanan said: the Holy Blessed One proclaims three things: famine, plenty and a good leader.… A good leader, as in (Ex. 31:2): God spoke to Moses saying, ‘See I called by name Betzalel son of Uri.’ R. Yitzchak said: We mustn’t appoint a leader for a community without consulting it, as in (Ex. 35:30): ‘See, God called by name Betzalel.’ The Holy Blessed One said to Moses: Moses, do you think Betzalel suitable? [Moses] replied: Ribono shel Olam, if You think him suitable, all the more do I! [God] said to [Moses]: All the same, go consult them. [Moses] went and asked [Israel]: Do you think Betzalel suitable? They replied: If the Holy Blessed One and you think him suitable, all the more do we!”
אמר רבי יוחנן שלשה דברים מכריז עליהם הקב“ה בעצמוואלו הן רעב ושובע ופרנס טוב. … פרנס טוב דכתיב (שמותלא:ב) (ויאמר) ה‘ אל משה לאמר ראה קראתי בשם בצלאלוגו‘ אמר רבי יצחק אין מעמידין פרנס על הצבור אלא אם כןנמלכים בצבור שנא‘ (שמות לה:ל) ראו קרא ה‘ בשם בצלאלאמר לו הקדוש ברוך הוא למשה משה הגון עליך בצלאל אמרלו רבונו של עולם אם לפניך הגון לפני לא כל שכן. אמר לו אףעל פי כן לך אמור להם הלך ואמר להם לישראל הגון עליכםבצלאל אמרו לו אם לפני הקדוש ברוך הוא ולפניך הוא הגוןלפנינו לא כל שכן.
R. Chanina, assistant to the priests, said: Pray for the welfare of the government, since but for the fear of it men would swallow each other alive.
רבי חנינא סגן הכהנים אומר הוי מתפלל בשלומה של מלכות שאלמלא מוראה איש את רעהו חיים בלעו.
It was taught in a Baraita: Just as Israelites were commanded to establish courts in each and every province and each and every town, so to were Noahites commanded to establish courts in each and every province and each and every town.
כשם שנצטוו ישראל להושיב בתי דינין בכל פלך ופלך ובכל עיר ועיר כך נצטוו בני נח להושיב בתי דינין בכל פלך ופלך ובכל עיר ועיר
How must the gentiles fulfill the commandment to establish laws and courts? They are obligated to set up judges and magistrates in every major city to render judgement concerning these six mitzvot and to admonish the people regarding their observance.A gentile who transgresses these seven commands shall be executed by decapitation. For this reason, all the inhabitants of Shechem were obligated to die. Shechem kidnapped. They observed and were aware of his deeds, but did not judge him.A gentile is executed on the basis of the testimony of one witness and the verdict of a single judge. No warning is required. Relatives may serve as witnesses. However, a woman may not serve as a witness or a judge for them.
Alternatively, just as in the case of fish of the sea, any fish that is bigger than another swallows the other, so too in the case of people, were it not for the fear of the ruling government, anyone who is bigger than another would swallow the other. And this is as we learned in a mishna (Avot 3:2) that Rabbi Ḥanina, the deputy High Priest, says: One should pray for the continued welfare of the government, as were it not for the fear of the government, every man would swallow his neighbor alive.
דבר אחר מה דגים שבים כל הגדול מחבירו בולע את חבירו אף בני אדם אלמלא מוראה של מלכות כל הגדול מחבירו בולע את חבירו והיינו דתנן רבי חנינא סגן הכהנים אומר הוי מתפלל בשלומה של מלכות שאלמלא מוראה של מלכות איש את רעהו חיים בלעו
It is necessary to assemble by writ of election all taxpayers and prompt them to speak according to their judgment for the sake of heaven, and then we follow the majority. But if a minority refuses [to follow] the majority, it is permissible to force them, even by order of star worshippers (i.e. non-Jews), to pay their share to the tax collector selected. If one boycotts and refuses to offer one’s opinion (i.e. vote), then it is disregarded and the opinions of the majority remaining decide the matter.
יש להושיב כל בע“ב הנותנים מס ויקבלו עליהם שכל אחד יאמר דעתו לשם שמים וילכו אחר הרוב ואם המיעוט ימאנו הרוב יכולין לכוף אותן אפילו בדיני עכו“ם ולהוציא ממון על זה והם צריכין לתת חלקם והמסרב מלומר דעתו ע“פ החרם בטילה דעתו ואזלי‘ בתר רוב הנשארים האומרים דעתן.
All the taxes and fees and customs that kings are accustomed to enact in their kingdoms are the law! For every person of the kingdom accepts upon themselves, of their own free will, the laws of the king. Therefore, it is completely settled law.
והאמר שמואל דינא דמלכותא דינא — כל מסים וארנוניות ומנהגות של משפטי מלכים שרגילים להנהיג במלכותם דינא הוא שכל בני המלכות מקבלים עליהם מרצונם חוקי המלך ומשפטיו והלכך דין גמור הוא ואין למחזיק בממון חבירו ע“פ חוק המלך הנהוג בעיר משום גזל.
Rav Yehuda says: All of the city’s residents must contribute to the building and upkeep of the city gates [le’aglei gappa], and for this purpose money is collected even from orphans. But the Sages do not require protection and are therefore exempt from this payment. All of the city’s residents must contribute to the digging of cisterns [lekarya patya], and for this purpose money is collected even from the Sages, since they too need water. The Gemara comments: And we said this only when the people are not required to go out en masse [be’akhluza] and do the actual digging, but are obligated merely to contribute money for that purpose. But if the people are required to go out en masse and actually dig, the Sages are not expected to go out with them en masse, but rather they are exempt from such labor.
אמר רב יהודה הכל לאגלי גפא אפילו מיתמי אבל רבנן לא צריכי נטירותא הכל לכריא פתיא אפילו מרבנן ולא אמרן אלא דלא נפקי באכלוזא אבל נפקי באכלוזא רבנן לאו בני מיפק באכלוזא נינהו:
“Rav Yehudah said: When the river requires dredging, those dwelling on the lower reaches must aid the upper inhabitants, but not vice versa. But it is the reverse in respect to rain water [in a drainage ditch].”
אמר רב יהודה לכריא דנהרא תתאי מסייעי עילאי עילאי לא מסייעי תתאי וחילופא במיא דמיטרא.
Lubavitcher Rebbe
In response to a letter asking about the halacha of voting for an Israeli civil government. the Lubavitcher Rebbe replied on 5 Kislev 5709 (December 7, 1948) that voting is halachically mandatory to ensure the election of the most religious candidates running for office. Schneerson, Igrot HaKodesh, at 32.
“[Someone] asks about the issue of participating in elections for the government in the Land of Israel. Certainly it is obligatory for all eligible to vote not to give up this [voting] right. All who participate must try to [elect] the most religious party, but not for one whose interest is to create controversy and sow disunity through advocacy in the [mere] name of Torah. May awe in God stoke the pride of our brothers in Israel living in the Holy Land, may it be built and completed, and in all the lands of exile. May they merit the coming of the Redeemer… who will gather us to the Holy Land, may it be built and completed, from all nations in which we were scattered.”
[פב‘‘פ] שואל על אודות ההשתתפות בענין הבחירות לממשלה בארץ ישראל. בודאי חובה על כל אחד ואחד שראוי לבחור לא יותר על זכותו זה. ועם מי להשתתף צריכים להשתדל להשתתף עם חבורת היראים יותר אבל לא עם אלו אשר כל ענינם הוא לעשות מחלוקת ופירוד לבבות ודוגלים בשם התורה. והיראת השי‘‘ת ירים קרן אחינו בני ישראל ד‘ עליהם יחיו באה‘‘ק ת‘‘ו ובכל מדינות הגולה ונזכה לביאת הגואל צדק משיח צדקנו אשר יקבצנו מכל ארצות פזורנו לאה‘‘ק ת‘‘ו.
R.Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz (1878−1953, the Chazon Ish):
Many years ago, Rabbi Shimon Soroka, a leader of Zeirei Agudath Israel in Israel and a vice mayor of Bnei Brak, came to Baltimore to solicit funds for the upcoming Israeli elections. As a yeshiva bochur who was the head of Pirchei Agudas Yisroel of Baltimore, I was zocheh to accompany him on his visits in Baltimore. He related to me the story of a Bnei Brak resident, who took it as a given that he shouldn’t vote. He did, however, pose the question to the Chazon Ish. The Chazon Ish answered him very firmly that, in fact, he must vote.
On Election Day, the Chazon Ish met this same Jew in the street. “Did you vote yet?” inquired the Chazon Ish.
“No,” was the response.
“Why not?” persisted the Chazon Ish.
“I don’t have the three Israeli pounds to pay the poll tax,” was the answer.
The Chazon Ish would not give up. “Do you own a pair of tefillin?” he continued.
“Of course!” answered the Jew.
“Well, go and sell your pair of tefillin and use the funds to pay the poll tax so that you can go and vote,” said the Chazon Ish.
The Chazon Ish later explained to Rabbi Soroka that wearing tefillin is a mitzvah, but voting in the election is also a mitzvah.
“I’m not worried that this Jew will not put be putting on tefillin,”explained the Chazon Ish. “If need be, he’ll borrow a pair. I am afraid that he won’t perform this other mitzvah – voting in the election.”
He adds that he heard from Harav Yitzchak Flakser, zt”l, R”M in Sfas Emes, who was a neighbor of the Tchebiner Rav, that on the morning of Election Day, he heard people arguing outside the Rav’s house. They argued that if the Tchebiner Rav didn’t have to go to vote, then why did they? Reb Yitzchak shared what he had heard with the Rav, who told him to go outside and tell the people there that he had already voted. Reb Yitzchak was stunned. “Rebbi, ad kedei kach [to such an extent?]” and the Rav replied, “Ya, ya, ad kedei kach.”
…
The meshamshim recall how the Rav was adamant that everyone go vote, including his gabba’im, and even the Rebbetzin — and they traveled to Tel Aviv, where they were registered as residents. That day, he didn’t take kvitlach [which were conveyed through the gabba’im]. When people came to him with kvitlach, he said, “Go vote.”
Harav Weber, who was then a bachur, relates that only he remained in the Rav’s house while the other gabba’im went to their places of residence to vote.
“The Rebbe said to me, ‘The truth is it was very hard for me to send all the gabba’im away,’” Harav Weber recalls. “‘But I had no choice, because the elections are such a great mitzvah I could not hold them back!’ He waved his two holy arms in the air and said ‘Aza groiseh mitzvah!’ with reverence.”
If the Belzer Rav, who knew what a mitzvah means, said of elections “Aza groiseh mitzvah!”— dare we doubt it?
Chatam Sofer, Choshen Mishpat 116
An election’s legitimacy can be undermined – and its outcome thus unenforceable against non-voters – only if the election is inadequately publicized or some voters inhibit eligible others from voting… once a public announcement issues for an election, all who choose not to vote give up their rights to cast ballots and are treated as if they appointed those who do vote as their proxies to decide the election.
The RA urged reforms against voter suppression to fulfill the verse לֹא־תַעֲשׂוּ עָוֶל בַּמִּשְׁפָּט לֹא־תִשָּׂא פְנֵי־דָל וְלֹא תֶהְדַּר פְּנֵי גָדוֹל בְּצֶדֶק תִּשְׁפֹּט עֲמִיתֶךָ — “Do not render an unfair decision, do not respect the poor or favor the mighty. This result impelled what the RA called fair election mechanics to enforce the practical right to vote and have each vote counted. Rabbinicalassembly.org/resolution-election-reform?tp=270, quoting Lev. 19:15; see also “Resolution on Voting Rights in the United States” (2014), available at http://www.rabbinicalassembly.org/story/resolution-voting-rights-united-states?tp=1355. Similarly, the RA advocated public financing of campaigns to equalize political influence, based on the Deuteronomy ban on partiality in judgment. See Rabbinical Assembly, “Resolution on Campaign Finance Reform in the United States,” available at http://www.-rabbinicalassembly.org/story/resolution-campaign-finance-reform-united-states?tp=378.
The presidential election of 2000 exposed numerous flaws in the United States’ election procedures. Across the nation, polling mechanisms, the design of election ballots, voting rules, hours, and allocation of financial resources vary significantly between states and localities. In many jurisdictions utilizing older types of voting equipment (such as punch card machines) ballots are disqualified at significantly higher rates than in jurisdictions employing more accurate and reliable equipment (such as optical scan machines). In some states, it has been found that older machines are concentrated in poorer areas and result in statistically higher rates of disqualified votes for citizens of color, who tend to reside in these precincts. Moreover, due to the lack of legislative prioritization for funding of election administration, officials in many states and localities do not have the resources to hire adequate numbers of election workers and conduct meaningful voter education programs. Finally, in some instances, efforts to purge ineligible voters from registration rolls (including those who have died, moved, or been sentenced as felons) have resulted in the mistaken elimination of fully eligible voters from registration rolls. Election laws that place high burdens of proof on the voter, combined with inadequate checks and balances in these systems in place on Election Day, have made it difficult for such aggrieved voters to obtain redress.
Many citizens are particularly embittered over the alleged disenfranchisement of citizens of color during the 2000 presidential election. While the events in the state of Florida have received the most attention, the phenomenon is not limited to that state in particular. Along with the disqualifying of thousands of disputed ballots, there are unanswered questions about both access to the polls and the fairness of procedures for counting of votes. Many citizens of color harbor lingering resentment over this process, and echo the sentiment of Representative John Lewis (D‑GA), who remarked, “I thought this was behind us.” Allegations of voter disenfranchisement remind us of the vital importance of our government’s obligations to vigorously enforce voting rights laws and ensure that all Americans have free, unfettered access to fulfill their right to a secret ballot.
Our tradition teaches us that the process of choosing leaders is not a privilege, but a collective responsibility. The Sage Hillel taught “Al tifros min hatzibur, Do not separate yourself from the community” (Pirke Avot 2:5). Rabbi Yitzhak taught that “A ruler is not to be appointed unless the community is first consulted” (Babylonian Talmud Berachot 55a). This ethic of political participation has guided Jews to enthusiastically participate in the American electoral process and is epitomized by our traditionally strong voter turnout. Jews also have placed a priority on voter education and registration efforts. In the past election cycle, the Reform Movement, through the Religious Action Center, took a lead role in this effort by publishing a “Get Out the Vote Program Plan and Action Manual,” jointly with the Reconstructionist, Conservative, and Orthodox Movements. Moreover, given our historical role in the civil rights struggle, allegations of voter disenfranchisement compel us to speak out. It is our duty to ensure that all citizens are afforded the opportunity to vote and have their votes counted.
In order to restore confidence in the integrity and fairness of our nation’s election process, government agencies at the federal, state and local levels must work together to evaluate the various components of our electoral system. They should take any necessary and appropriate steps to strengthen and/or change policy at the federal, state and local levels to ensure that all persons wishing to vote are given a meaningful opportunity to do so, and all votes determined to be valid in accordance with established fair standards are counted accordingly. Congress and other government agencies should assess approaches that aim to ensure fairness with regard to casting and counting of votes, including, but not limited to, the implementation of a uniform nationwide poll closing time and uniform standards for counting disputed ballots within individual states. Government agencies at the federal, state and local levels should also evaluate and undertake measures aimed at expanding voter registration, increasing voter participation and ensuring equal access to the polls for all Americans. Such measures could include, but are not limited to, weekend voting; mail-in ballots; establishment of Election Day as a holiday; and same-day voter registration.
For the Jewish community, the events surrounding the 2000 presidential election must be seen as a clarion call to civic duty. The impetus now exists for us to redouble efforts, individually and collectively, to increase voter registration and participation, and engage in legislative advocacy to ensure that vital election reform proposals are afforded serious consideration by our nation’s elected officials.
Therefore, the Central Conference of American Rabbis resolves to:
• Call on federal, state and local governments to vigorously enforce voting rights laws and to ensure that all Americans have free, unfettered access to fulfill their right to a secret ballot.
• Support legislation at the federal, state and local levels to ensure fairness with respect to the casting and counting of votes.
• Support the replacement of unreliable and outmoded voting equipment with more accurate and reliable equipment.
• Urge the federal government to provide financial assistance to state and local governments to implement improvements in their election systems.
• Call on the United States Department of Justice and other appropriate governmental agencies to conduct a proper and thorough investigation into the deeply troubling allegations of voter disenfranchisement during the 2000 presidential election.
• Encourage federal, state and local government agencies to undertake measures aimed at expanding voter registration, increasing voter participation and ensuring equal access to the polls for all Americans.
• Call on our member rabbis to take a leadership role within their congregations and communities in sponsoring nonpartisan voter registration and voter participation drives.
Mishna Avot 2:16
Rabbi Tarfon said: the day is short, and the work is plentiful, and the laborers are indolent, and the reward is great, and the master of the house is insistent.
This year there were no Republican primary campaign buttons. The large field of Democratic presidential primary candidates produced a number of buttons. However, it appears that only the campaigns of Mike Bloomberg, Pete Buttigieg, Bernie Sanders, and Elizabeth Warren produced buttons aimed at the Jewish community.
The Trump campaign has produced a huge amount of swag, but no buttons related to the Jewish community. The primary Jewish Trump surrogate group: “Jews Choose Trump” has produced bumper stickers, tote bags, hats, kippot, and tee shirts. However, the primary item at their Web site is a face mask with their logo.
Third party button makers have produced a wide variety of pr0-Trump Jewish themed buttons. One depicts Trump as Daniel in the lion’s den. A second pairs Trump with Cyrus the Great, hinting at the rebuilding of the Temple in Jerusalem, Another displays the American flag atop the Dome of the Rock… renamed Trump Tower. Perhaps the strangest of them has Trump with raised fist and a crown of thorns that holds up an Israeli flag with the Hebrew text (translated): “Hear o Israel, God won”.
Date:
2020
Size:
7.62
Pin Form:
clasp
Print Method:
celluloid
Text
שמע ישראל, האל ניצח
The Biden campaign, on the other hand seems to be more restrained. The Jewish Democratic Council of American, which seems to have replaced the National Jewish Democratic Council, has a variety of Jewish-themed swag (similar objects as the Jews who choose Trump… minus the kippot), but no buttons. Only the regional Michigan Democratic Jewish Caucus has buttons available. Their buttons are, by far, more subtle than the pro-Trump buttons.
Date:
2020
Size:
5.6
Pin Form:
clasp
Print Method:
celluloid
Text
B“T 2020
your lapel buttons
Many people have lapel buttons. They may be attached to a favorite hat or jacket you no longer wear or poked into a cork-board on your wall. If you have any lying around that you do not feel emotionally attached to, please let me know. I preserve these for the Jewish people. At some point, they will all go to an appropriate museum. You can see all the buttons shared to date.
This site remains under considerable reconstruction.
Most pages should still be available in their original location. However, I will be moving the vast majority of the old site (static html pages) into the Web 2.0 (blog) site. If you experience any "link rot", please let me know.
When I initially created this site I organized the material into what seemed to be meaningful categories (in the days before "tags"). But the time came when, it was hard to figure out which link to click if you wanted to know about Sammy Levinger's ("who"?) death ("what"?) while fighting during the Spanish Civil War ("when"?), though we had visited Belchite the site ("where?") of the battle where he sustained his mortal wounds. The new tools should make this process easier.
`//rite on!
,\\ark Hurvitz
some sayings of ר‘משבצונה“ל
For many years I have worked hard, and struggled with mastering virtuous. Now, in addition, I’m working on becoming more virtual. This is an expression of that effort.
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השיבנו ה‘ אליך ונשובה חדש ימינו כעוד לא היו
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ומביא גאלה…
לצאצאיהם
All photographs are by Mark Hurvitz unless they are obviously not (or credit otherwise is given).
The photos in the banner at the top (only a shallow sliver of a much larger photo) are either from our home or our travels and are offered for their beauty alone (though a brain-teaser for me: "Where was that?").