Humanistic Judaism ( Yahadut Humanistit) is a Jewish movement that offers a nontheistic alternative in contemporary Jewish culture.
It defines Judaism as the cultural and historical experience of the Jewish people rather than a religion, and encourages Jews who are humanistic and secular to celebrate their identity by participating in relevant holidays and rites of passage (such as weddings and bar/bat mitzvahs) with inspirational ceremonies that go beyond traditional literature while still drawing upon it.
Origins
In its current form, Humanistic Judaism was founded in either 1963 or 1965 (sources differ) by American rabbi Sherwin Wine.
As a rabbi trained in Reform Judaism with a small secular, non-theistic congregation, he developed a Jewish liturgy that reflected his and his congregation's philosophical viewpoints by combining Jewish culture, history, and identity with humanistic outlooks while excluding all prayers and references to a god of any kind.
This congregation developed into the Birmingham Temple in Farmington Hills, Michigan.
It was soon joined by a previously Reform congregation in Illinois and a group in Westport, Connecticut.
In 1969, all three congregations were organizationally united with other groups under the umbrella name of the Society for Humanistic Judaism (SHJ).
The SHJ had 10,000 members across 30 congregations in the United States and Canada in 1994; however, there are many congregations that identify with Humanistic Judaism's teachings but are not members of the SHJ.
The International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism (IISHJ) founded in 1986, is the academic and intellectual center of Humanistic Judaism.
It was established in Jerusalem in 1985 and currently has two centers of activity: the aforementioned one in Jerusalem and another in Lincolnshire, Illinois.
Rabbi Adam Chalom is the dean of the IISHJ's American site.
The IISHJ offers professional training programs for spokespersons, educators, leaders (also referred to in Hebrew as madrikhim/ot or Yiddish as vegvayzer), and rabbis, in addition to its publications, public seminars, and colloquia for lay audiences.
Principles of belief and practice
According to the SHJ,"What is Humanistic Judaism?" by the Society for Humanistic Judaism the philosophical foundation of Humanistic Judaism includes the following ideas:
A Jew is someone who identifies with the history, culture, and future of the Jewish people.
Judaism is the historic culture of the Jewish people, and religion is only one part of that culture.
Jewish identity is best preserved in a free, pluralistic environment.
People possess the power and responsibility to shape their own lives independent of supernatural authority.
Ethics and morality should serve human needs, and choices should be based upon consideration of the consequences of actions rather than pre-ordained rules or commandments.
Jewish history, like all history, is a human saga, a testament to the significance of human power and human responsibility.
Biblical and other traditional texts are the products of human activity and are best understood through archaeology and other scientific analysis.
The freedom and dignity of the Jewish people must go hand in hand with the freedom and dignity of every human being.
Humanistic Judaism presents a far more radical departure from traditional Jewish religion than Mordecai Kaplan, the co-founder of Reconstructionist Judaism, ever envisioned.
Kaplan redefined God and other traditional religious terms so as to make them consistent with the naturalist outlook, but continued to use traditional prayer language.
Wine rejected this approach as confusing, since participants could ascribe to these words whatever definitions they favored.
Wine strove to achieve philosophical consistency and stability by creating rituals and ceremonies that were purely non-theistic.
Services were created for Shabbat, Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and other Jewish holidays and festivals, often with reinterpretation of the meaning of the holiday to bring it into conformity with secular humanistic philosophy.
Humanistic Judaism was developed as a possible solution to the problem of retaining Jewish identity and continuity among non-religious Jews.
Recognizing that congregational religious life was thriving, Wine believed that secular Jews who had rejected theism would be attracted to an organization that provided all the same forms and activities as the religious branches of Judaism, but which expressed a purely secular humanistic viewpoint.
See also
Reconstructionist Judaism
Hillelism
History of the Jews in Metro Detroit
Jews and Buddhism
Jewish Buddhists
Jewish secularism
Secular humanism
List of Jewish atheists and agnostics
References
External links
Society for Humanistic Judaism
International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism
Association of Humanistic Rabbis
BBC - Religions - Judaism: Humanistic Judaism
International Federation for Secular & Humanistic Judaism
Leadership Conference of Secular and Humanistic Jews
Israel program of International Institute for Secular Humanistic Judaism
Portal of Jewish Secular Rites in Israel
The City Congregation for Humanistic Judaism - New York City
Scholasticism and Humanism in Classical Islam and the Christian West
