I hear where you're coming from. I suppose as a non-Jew working in the Zionist activist space my inclination is to generally let Jews debate where along the secular to fundamentalist scale is best to fall, whether Reform is better than Orthodox, which forms of Hasidism may be benign while others that could be harmful, which Jews are so sā¦
I hear where you're coming from. I suppose as a non-Jew working in the Zionist activist space my inclination is to generally let Jews debate where along the secular to fundamentalist scale is best to fall, whether Reform is better than Orthodox, which forms of Hasidism may be benign while others that could be harmful, which Jews are so secular that they shouldn't even count as Jews, etc.
My main concern right now is the rising antisemitism which targets all Jews. And it seems like to counter that, Jews and non-Jews from secular to fundamentalist should try to come together and bring their unique perspectives to figuring out how we can defeat the antisemites and authoritarians.
I hear where you're coming from. I suppose as a non-Jew working in the Zionist activist space my inclination is to generally let Jews debate where along the secular to fundamentalist scale is best to fall, whether Reform is better than Orthodox, which forms of Hasidism may be benign while others that could be harmful, which Jews are so secular that they shouldn't even count as Jews, etc.
My main concern right now is the rising antisemitism which targets all Jews. And it seems like to counter that, Jews and non-Jews from secular to fundamentalist should try to come together and bring their unique perspectives to figuring out how we can defeat the antisemites and authoritarians.