Donations may be made at http://tinyurl.com/CMTLgive or by mail to CMTL, 63 South Pleasant Street, Sharon MA 02067. We can also accept donations of securities via Stockdonator.
Dear Friend and Supporter,
I began typing these words on December 17 while waiting to board my flight to Israel. That’s late for an end-of-year appeal. But I didn’t feel able to write before I was en route, and I’m revising now that I’ve returned.
You’re being inundated with appeals for nonprofits that will help our soldiers directly and physically; that claim to be protecting our soldiers metaphysically; or that ask for money now to prepare for inevitable rising demand when the war ends. This will be different.
Since October 7, my teaching has focused on military halakhah and Jewish military ethics. That has involved shiurim at Princeton , Rutgers, and Yale; many CMTL weekly essays; a much longer essay published Dec. 22 on TheLehrhaus.com; an internationally attended zoom shiur; Jewish Link articles with Barry Kornblau; podcasts on Taking Responsibility for Torah and the Yeshiva of Newark; and more. Here you can find a chronological compilation of my articles on war.
This material seemed useless for my trip. Rabbi Dr. Norman Lamm told my semikhah class that all Jews should make aliyah – except rabbis; Israel had more than enough mediocre Torah scholars. So why would anyone want American Torah about war in Israel?
I was wrong. Yeshivot and communities in Israel wanted to hear my shiurim about the ethics and halakhot of war, and how those relate to concern for civilian casualties. Yeshivat Migdal haTorah spent a three-hour morning seder learning these topics with me, as did Rav Elisha Anselovics shiur at Machon Pardes; and I gave hour-long shiurim at Yeshivat Eretz Hatzvi, Midreshet Amudim, and Machon Gruss. Each of these shiurim sought to be rigorous, generous, and critical, and to leave students with the resources and responsibility to keep thinking. I’m grateful to the students for listening intently and asking great questions. Many thanks to SBM alum and Rosh Yeshiva Rabbi Jonathan Ziring of Migda HaTorah (who has introduced a teshuvah-writing course at the yeshiva modeled on SBM), Rabbi Simon Levy of Eretz HaTzvi, Dr. Julie Goldstein of Amudim, and SBM alums/Gruss students Daniel Peled-Schwartz and Zach Beer for arranging those shiurim.
All the above shiurim were aimed at American gap-year students. But I also greatly appreciated invitations to learn with Israeli audiences in Tekoa, at Yeshivat Drisha, and at Kehillat B’Orkha in Yerushalayim.
The event at Tekoa emphasized to me the importance of CMTL’s campaign against the use of Amalek as a descriptor for current enemies. No matter how many qualifiers are used, invoking Amalek inevitably carries a whiff of genocide. This is simply a gift handed to Israel-bashers. But more importantly, it risks tempting us to relax the high moral standards that we are justifiably so proud of under such difficult circumstances. I’m grateful to Dr. Naftali Moses for arranging the event and to Rabbi Dr. Avi Walfish for participating.
At Drisha, I introduced the dispute between Rav Moshe Kahn z”l, rebbe of my wife and of my younger daughter, and yibadel lechayim Rav Herschel Schachter about whether newlyweds need the sanction of a posek to delay starting a family. The shiur was optional, during break time, and in the middle of review week, and I was warned that only SBM alums might show up. But in the end over twenty Israeli talmidot and Rosh Yeshiva Rabbanit Chani Dreyfuss joined alums Elke Bentley, Sofia Freudenstein, and Tzophia Stefansky.
My Shabbat derashah at B’Orkha, delivered in Hebrew, discussed whether the fulfillment of Yosef’s dreams was inevitable, and what lessons we can learn if they were not. It was an unalloyed joy to receive a letter from Rav Dovid Ansbacher on behalf of his community recognizing the importance of connecting the communities of Yerushalayim and North America and expressing appreciation for a “deep and original shiur . . able to ground our beliefs and thoughts about out dreams and the ways to realize them”.
I also delivered shiurim for American students at Yeshivat Orayta, Midreshet Migdal Oz, and Yeshivat Har Etzion. on “Halakhah from First Principles”. The content of those shiurim, which I hope will develop into my next book, was adapted each time in response to excellent student critiques, as well as those of my friend Rabbi Dov Weinstein. I’m grateful to Rabbi Yitzchak Blau of Orayta, Rabbanit Shayna Goldberg and Ms. Racheli Schmelli of Migdal Oz, and Rabbi Eli Weber of Har Etzion for arranging these shiurim, and to Barak Eisenman ’23 and current Har Etzion student Judah Lopatin for successfully encouraging so many of their friends to attend.
I also gave a brief presentation at Midreshet Lindenbaum based on last year’s SBM topic. I’m grateful to Rabbanit Sally Mayer and Rabbanit Nomi Berman for arranging that.
It was wonderful to see the enthusiasm of this past summer’s amazing SBM reflected in attendance at these shiurim, as well as the continued support and appreciation of so many wonderful Torah educators, Over 80 students added their names to the CMTL mailing list, with several stating their intention to apply to SBM.
I’m also moved by the continued attachment of SBM alums. Alums from as far back as 2008 came to an informal gathering in Yerushalayim on Thursday night, and in addition to the alums studying at Drisha and Gruss, and Rabbi Ziring (who has introduced a teshuvah-writing course directly modeled on SBM), alums showed up spontaneously at B’Orkha and Pardes, or made arrangements to meet privately. I crossed paths with sixteen of the approximately 45 alumni presently living or studying in israel, and I hope to do better next time.
The long and short of it is that CMTL remains an important resource and inspiration for alumni in both Israel and the US, and for their friends and institutions; the Summer Beit Midrash is strong and likely strengthening; and CMTL’s content plays an important, recognized, and appreciated role in our community. I’ve focused in this letter on my trip, but please be aware that our work for agunot continues, as does our work on issues of sexuality, and more. I’m also working hard to finish an edited collection of teshuvot from the 2023 Summer Beit Midrash Fellows, exploring the tension between halakhah and spiritual utilitarianism.
Our community needs CMTL’s responsible, ethical, rigorous, courageous, and compassionate voice on all these issues. CMTL needs your support to continue and expand its role, and ensure that more such voices emerge. We recognize that the war has properly redirected much American Jewish philanthropy to Israel. We ask for your support on the assumption that this is not a zero-sum game. Donate via http://tinyurl.com/CMTLgive or by mail to CMTL, 63 South Pleasant Street, Sharon MA 02067. We can also accept donations of securities via Stockdonator. Please email [email protected] with any questions.
With great appreciation and all best wishes,
Aryeh Klapper, Dean
(Last year’s appeal is appended so you can evaluate us for consistency etc.)
Dear Friend,
Please support the Center for Modern Torah Leadership generously. You share our ideals; you love our alums; and you know that any disagreements we have are rooted in seriousness and integrity on both sides. Giving generously to CMTL is an investment in your understanding of Torah and your vision of a Torah community. You can donate online at www.torahleadership.org/donate.html or by mailing a check to CMTL, 63 South Pleasant Street, Sharon MA 02067.
Two wonderful things happened this past summer. First, an amazing group of Summer Beit Midrash Fellows built a model community of intellectual rigor, religious depth, and simple humanity. Second, CMTL published my book Divine Will and Human Experience: Explorations of Halakhah and Its Values, which promptly became a #1 best-seller in its category on Amazon.
The book generated lively, engaged, and challenging conversations with and among the SBM Fellows. You can hear the Fellow-created podcast based on Chapter 1 on our podcast Taking Responsibility for Torah, and a second episode based on Chapter 8 should be posted soon. A variety of popular and scholarly publications have assigned reviewers, and I look forward with eager trepidation to reading the reviews as they come out. I also expect to discuss the book on various non-CMTL podcasts.
Chapter 26 shows how the standard American beit din practice for writing converts’ names in divorces can lead to their Jewishness being challenged years later. For most batei din, this is unintentional, and the practice has already changed in at least one major beit din in response to this essay. At the same time, a Youtube video shows the director of a different beit din advocating for the problematic practice on the ground that it will enable challenging a conversion years later, and acknowledging openly that this involves “tricking the convert”. There’s a long way to go.
One underlying issue is that many batei din have not internalized transparency as a value. A second is that while Orthodoxy wants non-Orthodox Jews to come to our institutions for personal status issues – for example, we want every heterosexual intramarriage that ends in divorce to include a get – we have not accepted that this makes non-Orthodox Jews part of the constituency of halakhah.
Here’s another example. A woman was referred to a significant posek with a question as to whether she needed a get from a years-ago relationship. The answer was yes – but no one told her how to go about arranging it, even though she had long since been out of contact with the relevant man, and had no connection with anyone who could guide her through the get process. This was just one of four cases that came to me recently through the GETYOURGET project of the Boston Agunah Task Force. Each case revealed a hole or flaw in the system. CMTL stands in those breaches for now, and works toward a tomorrow where there are no breaches, for example by advocating for both the halakhic prenup and for the pre-civil-divorce agreement and strategies that the BATF has devised with my halakhic advice and the approval of major batei din.
Right now, not knowing whether we have any discretionary budget for the next year, I won’t pledge to produce programs other than SBM for 5783. I understand that you face the same inflationary pressures that we do. But, if the money does come in, here are some things I hope and expect will happen with your generous help:
- Continuing and expanding the advanced program for women in Even HaEzer that we piloted last year,
- A weekly podcast based on chapters of the book,
- Publication of 2022 SBM teshuvot,
- Restarting the CMTL Campus Fellowship,
- An Israel trip giving shiurim at many gap year and advanced programs, for both American and Israelis. This both seeds recruitment for SBM and helps us stay connected to our many alums who have made aliyah,
- Shiurim on many university campuses in America,
- Scholar in Residence weekends to spread CMTL’s message,
- At least one more book
- Weekly Torah essays,
- Many other podcasts, essays, and shiurim.
Any and all of this will be possible only because you and people like you resonate with our vision and find us worthy of support. Please give generously.
Please help spread the word about CMTL and our Torah by sharing our essays and podcasts, liking our posts on social media, and inviting me to your community for a scholar in residence program or shiur.
Please contact me at [email protected] with any questions about our programming or Torah content, or if you have a halakhic or other question where you think my input might be valuable.
With gratitude, appreciation, and blessings
Rabbi Aryeh Klapper, Dean