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Whiskey
Rebellion
Several area synagogues put the kibosh on kiddush clubs
after OU condemns practice.
Steve Lipman - Staff
Writer, Jewish Week
If you want to make a l’chaim at some major Orthodox synagogues around New
York, you’ll have to wait until after services for kiddush.
The shuls have banned kiddush clubs.
This comes following the recent decision of the Orthodox Union’s board of
directors to encourage its member congregations to discontinue the
informal drinking clubs that draw congregants from Saturday morning during
services.
Basing his information on “anecdotal evidence,” Rabbi Adam Mintz,
president of the New York Board of Rabbis, says kiddush clubs “are not
happening anymore” at a half-dozen prominent local Modern Orthodox
congregations that he declined to name.
Their spiritual leaders stopped the practice, he said, after Rabbi Tzvi
Hersh Weinreb, the OU’s executive vice president, urged rabbis in
OU-affiliated synagogues to preach against the abuse of kiddush clubs
during Shabbat sermons two weeks ago.
“This is something they had wanted to do for a long time,” Rabbi Mintz
said.
The OU issued its declaration, Rabbi Weinreb wrote in an essay, “Why
Kiddush Clubs Must Go,” from a concern over “two problematic areas of
contemporary Orthodox Jewish life in the United States. The first … is the
synagogue environment and the oft-bemoaned dearth of spirituality there.”
Congregants who leave services for the invitation-only social events,
usually during the haftarah reading that follows the Torah reading, are
often disruptive to other worshipers.
This criticism was highlighted when Natan Sharansky, former Soviet
dissident and current Israeli cabinet member, was quoted as saying that
his participation in the kiddush club at the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale
in December was the high point of his Shabbat there.
“The second area, perhaps more troublesome,” Rabbi Weinreb wrote, “is the
growth of delinquent and self-destructive behaviors in our community,
primarily with adolescents but persisting into young adulthood, of
substance abuse and related misbehaviors.”
In recent weeks the Israeli press has reported on the death of yeshiva
student from a heroin overdose and the drug arrests of other yeshiva
students from the United States.
“They brought their habits from America,” Haaretz reported.
Some in the American Orthodox community for years have criticized the
amount of alcohol consumed at synagogue kiddushes both as an entry point
into substance abuse for youngsters who see their elders imbibing and as
tacit approval of drinking.
“At a recent convention of the Orthodox mental health organization Nefesh
International, therapist after therapist indicated that almost invariably
the youngsters they see who struggle with alcoholic tendencies trace their
introduction to experiences they had in shul or at [events] such as
weddings and bar mitzvahs,” Rabbi Weinreb wrote.
“I think there’s a correlation,” said Rabbi Abraham Twerski, a physician
and medical director emeritus of the Gateway Rehabilitation Center in
Pittsburgh, who has specialized in treating substance abuse. “A drug is a
drug is a drug.
“Kids learn from what they see,” said Rabbi Twerski, who has taken a “very
strong stand” against kiddush clubs. “Where a single l’chaim is
acceptable, excessive drinking is forbidden.”
Rabbi Daniel Korobkin of Kehillat Yavneh in Los Angeles, in that city’s
Jewish Journal, wrote that “Parents sauntering into shul with Scotch on
their breath are not positive role models.”
In his essay, Rabbi Weinreb wrote: “This increasingly common practice [of
kiddush clubs] consists of a large group of congregants, almost invariably
men, who leave the main sanctuary at a key point in the middle of the
service …and withdraw to a side room where they partake in hard and
expensive liquor, commonly fine single malt scotch whiskey. The kiddush
club … serves as a setting within which adults drink immoderate amounts of
alcohol and often return to synagogue more than mildly intoxicated.
“Many rabbis told us of their struggles to put an end to the disgrace of
the kiddush clubs but felt they alone did not command sufficient authority
to eliminate it.”
The rabbis who decided to end their congregations’ kiddush clubs “relied
on Rabbi Weinreb’s proclamation,” Rabbi Mintz said. “What’s important here
is that it draws attention to the issue. He was far more successful than
most people would have imagined. Had you asked someone six months ago
whether Rabbi Weinreb would be successful, there would have been a real
cynicism.”
The OU directive was the subject of discussion “all over the place” in
Modern Orthodox circles, Rabbi Mintz said, noting that “The abuse of
alcohol has become a very serious problem.”
As one sign of the diminishing support for synagogues’ kiddush clubs, none
of the congregations that have kiddush clubs, nor Web sites devoted to
kiddush clubs, responded to requests by The Jewish Week to comment on the
topic.
For some congregants who enjoy kiddush clubs, “it’s a control issue,”
Rabbi Mintz said. “They don’t want anyone, including a rabbi, dictating
what they can do.
Rabbi Mintz said he heard that a member of “one prominent shul” whose
rabbi had spoken against kiddush clubs distributed a letter in favor of
the practice as a form of protest to other members.
Neither Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun nor Lincoln Square Synagogue,
Manhattan congregations where Rabbi Mintz has served, or Kehilat Rayim
Ahuvim, a new congregation on the Upper West Side where the rabbi is an
“active participant,” has sponsored kiddush clubs, he said.
Kiddush clubs are most common at synagogues where there is only one
Saturday morning service, Rabbi Mintz said. In large congregations with a
variety of Shabbat morning services, a separate kiddush usually follows
each service.
“In shuls where you have multiple minyans,” he said, “you don’t need
kiddush clubs.”
Courtesy of the Jewish Week
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