In our previous post, we
discussed Rabbi Slifkin’s letter to Ami magazine and explained why his issues
with Rabbi Shafran’s article were irrelevant. As it happens Rabbi Shafran also addresses Rabbi Slifkin’s letter to which Rabbi Slifkin then counters with a seven point response. It is these points that we would like to discuss here but before doing
so we would like to quote the following statement from our previous post.
The purpose of Rabbi
Shafran’s article was to criticize blogs that are dedicated to the
disparagement of gedoley yisrael and the undermining of their authority, hence
the comparison to Korach. The article was a one-pager in total, containing less
than 700 words, and was written with a specific goal in mind; presumably to
warn people of the dangers of such blogs.
If the preceding statement
is kept in mind, Rabbi Slifkin’s seven point response is entirely irrelevant,
at best. Before we proceed with our analysis, the following quote from Rabbi Slifkin’s
post I Was Wrong is highly edifying.
I would also like to stress that I most certainly agree that there is plenty to criticize about the blogosphere. There are blogs that are way too quick on the draw to judge unfavorably. There are blogs that level accusations without basis. There is also a tendency towards negativity which, even if it serves a useful purpose, is unhealthy… there is an inbuilt problem with the very nature of blogging, in terms of the rapid pace, and the loss of responsibility and respectability that accompanies anonymity. My dispute with Rabbi Shafran should certain not be read to mean that I think that there is nothing to criticize about the blogosphere.
Beautiful! So Rabbi Slifkin
agrees with Rabbi Shafran that there are things to criticize about the
blogsphere. That’s precisely what Rabbi Shafran was doing in his article; providing
criticism. The quote from Rabbi Slifkin above is similar to the statement we
provided about the nature of Rabbi Shafran’s article. Seemingly there
should be no issue here. But for some reason Rabbi Slifkin is still unhappy.
Here are his points, with our comments interspersed after each one.
1. "Whether or not the Jewish world would have been any slower to understand the scope and tragedy of abuse had the subject been raised, and the need to confront it promoted, in a responsible, honorable way is a question whose answer neither the letter writer nor I can possibly know." Surely he can't be serious. But even if he is, and even if he were to be correct, it's irrelevant. The point is that it's due to blogs that the issue was taken seriously, and appreciation should therefore be shown.
Rabbi Shafran is making a side
point. He's making the very reasonable assertion that the blogs that revealed the abuse
issue did not have to do so in a fashion that was denigrating to the gedoley
yisrael. He understands that any revelation of abuse, even
one done in a malicious fashion, has its benefits. In fact, this is precisely
what he states in the very next sentence! “One is, however, required to
acknowledge good things and what brought them about, even if those vehicles are
unworthy in other ways.” The word “however” is a qualifier. Ergo, Rabbi Slifkin
is clearly quoting Rabbi Shafran out of context.
2. "One is, however, required to acknowledge good things and what brought them about, even if those vehicles are unworthy in other ways... I think I can say with surety that Rabbi Zwiebel's comments were in that vein..." Exactly. So if Rabbi Zwiebel could do that in a few short paragraphs, why couldn't Rabbi Shafran do that even once in a full-length article on the topic? Even in this response, there is zero hakaras hatov! That was the main point of my letter.
Full length article? The
whole thing was one page, barely enough to develop an idea, any idea, properly.
The message of the article was the dangers associated with reading blogs that
denigrate gedoley yisrael. Why in heaven’s name would Rabbi Shafran choose this
article to express hakaras hatov to blogs that revealed abuse? The very notion
is absurd! Besides, who says they deserve hakaras hatov? They could have
revealed the issue of abuse in a far more responsible and honorable manner. Rabbi
Shafran is very careful with his words. We are required to “acknowledge good
things”, that’s it. The hakaras hatov goes to Hashem, not to people whose
primary purpose with such revelations is the undermining of Torah authority.
3. "As to that place, I clearly wrote that I was not referring to all blogs but to those who, in their crassness, cynicism, negativity, and disdain for talmidei chachamim and gedolim, emulate Korach." Wrong. As Rabbi Kahn pointed out in his letter (which was unfortunately not printed), "While he accepts that there are some responsible bloggers, the examples he enumerates (those "who seek to share community news or ideas... [or] explore concepts in Jewish thought and law... [or] focus on Jewish history and society") demonstrate by omission that those who attempt to expose anything negative in Chareidi society are comparable to the villains in Parashat Korach." Rabbi Shafran, is it possible for a blog to point out genuine problems with Charedi society and its leadership, without you accusing it of emulating Korach?
Wrong? What exactly is
wrong about Rabbi Shafran’s response? Anyone reading the article can see
that he is discussing blogs that evince patent disdain for Torah leaders. That’s
what the article says. Rabbi Kahn’s remark is silly. How can “omission” be
a stronger demonstration than the actual words of the article themselves?
As far as the omission, it
may very well be that Rabbi Shafran has reservations about unregulated blogs writing
critically regarding any branch of Orthodox Judaism, charedi or
otherwise. But that doesn’t mean that he thinks that all blogs that write about
charedi Judaism are “korach blogs”. Like Rabbi Slifkin himself admits, blogs
are way too quick to judge unfavorably and generally tend towards negativity. If
a public figure associated with the Agudah chooses to support the validity of
certain blogs, he obviously must be very careful with his examples.
4. "As to my neologism, the suffix "stan" has been used creatively by many to recall the lawlessness, malice, and violence in certain countries whose names end in that syllable. As such, it is most properly adapted for reference to the world of pernicious blogs." I think that Rabbi Shafran is correct in that the suffix does not necessarily mean what I thought it meant, and he is entitled to use it with this connotation. However, let us examine whether, with this connotation, it is indeed appropriate for him, of all people, to use it in reference to the blogosphere. "Lawlessness, malice, and violence"? With regard to lawlessness, the critique of the blogosphere towards the charedi system of authority and society is exactly that! Abuse is handled illegally and inappropriately (if at all) rather than through the legal system. Rabbinic pronouncements are arranged via all sorts of shady (sometimes criminal) askanim and with complete lack of protocol rather than via any halachic and professional procedures. And he is accusing the blogosphere of lawlessness?! With regard to violence, I assume that he means verbal violence (as far as I know, the only physical violence relating to charedi rabbinic authority is on the part of charedim, in Ramat Bet Shemesh, New Square, Ponovezh, and last week in the offices of Yated Ne'eman in Bnei Brak). Now, there's certainly plenty of unfortunate verbal violence in the blogosphere. However, I think that it is evenly matched by the verbal violence issued by the Gedolim and those who act in their name, whether in letters, speeches, or books calling for the execution of rationalists. I would further add that such verbal violence is much worse when issued by people in positions of authority rather than when issued by some random blogger. And with regard to malice - the malice in Rabbi Shafran's own article certainly matches anything coming from the blogosphere.
This response requires no
comment. Rabbi Slifkin admits that his original criticism of the term “stan”
was unwarranted. The rest of Rabbi Slifkin’s remarks are entirely irrelevant to
the topic at hand and amount to nothing more than a cheap shot at Rabbi Shafran.
5. "It is telling that now, with the issue of abuse squarely in the focus of the Jewish world (indeed, of the larger world as well, on front pages and in lead newscast stories), the inhabitants of Blogistan continue..." Surely Rabbi Shafran is joking. Does he really expect people to accept that now, all of a sudden, the Gedolim are adequately taking care of matters? Agudah still insists that people with suspicions of abuse must not go to the authorities without asking a rabbi! The Gedolim still have not apologized for decades of covering things up! There are still "Gedolim" who are publicly known to have enabled abusers for decades that continue to receive honor!
Now Rabbi Slifkin is
taking cheap shots at gedoley Torah! This is precisely what Rabbi Shafran was
talking about. But all this is irrelevant. Now that the abuse issue is out in
the open, people have no choice but to deal with it! Whether the gedolim are “adequately
taking care of matters” is irrelevant. If they don’t address the issues, the
police will! (as has been done in Williamsburg
recently). There is simply no reason to continue going on with tirades against
our gedoley Torah. As far as Rabbi Slifkin’s remark that the gedolim need to
apologize for decades of covering up, this comment is so pernicious it would be improper to dignify it with a response.
6. "That really says all one needs to know about the true motivations of those militants." It's amazing that Rabbi Shafran considers it impossible to know whether the blogosphere effected the strongest change regarding abuse, but he is 100% sure regarding people's personal motivations. Rabbi Shafran should take a lesson from Rabbi Zwiebel, who said that he's not going to judge, and who pointed out that "I do believe that among them there are people who are deeply pained about certain issues and feel that this is the way they can express their pain."
Nothing amazing about it.
Rabbi Shafran lives on planet earth. He doesn’t bury his head in the sand like
Rabbi Slifkin is trying to do here. He understands that people’s actions are an
indication of their inner motivations and are therefore deserving of criticism.
The truth of the matter is, Rabbi Slifkin understand this too. As he writes; “I
most certainly agree that there is plenty to criticize about the blogosphere.
There are blogs that are way too quick…to judge unfavorably. There
are blogs that level accusations without basis.” So, Rabbi Slifkin, what
kind of blog levels accusations without basis? Blogs with pristine intentions?
Blogs with pure motivations?
7. "It is not the welfare of the Jewish people that they seek, but rather, for whatever personal reasons they may feel they have, to attack and undermine true Jewish authority. That was the point of my essay, and its veracity is self-evident." The personal reasons of bloggers are unknowable and irrelevant. Rabbi Shafran's essay compared all those who critique Charedi society to Korach's entirely villainous act that was punished by death. Whereas the truth is that, despite shortcomings, the blogs are addressing real problems with charedi rabbinic authority and effecting real improvement, as admitted by none other than the Executive Vice-President of Agudah. Rabbi Shafran should be expressing some of the hakaras hatov that he quotes the baalei mussar on, and should be engaging in some introspection regarding the flaws of the system that he defends as "true Jewish authority," rather than issuing malevolent condemnations.
In summary, Rabbi Shafran’s
article is entirely justified and in fact needs to be taken under serious advisement
by those who make it a habit of perusing the korach type blogs. Rabbi Slifkin’s
claim that “Rabbi Shafran's essay compared all those who critique Charedi
society to Korach's entirely villainous act” is false and is obviously a
calculated distraction designed to avert the reader’s gaze from the truth of Rabbi
Shafran’s message.
One final question needs
to be addressed. If everything we are saying is so simple, so obvious, why does
Rabbi Slifkin have such issues with Rabbi Shafran’s article? What’s wrong with
criticizing blogs that are clearly out to criticize gedolim for the sake of
criticism alone? And the answer is simple. Rabbi Slifkin (who, to his enormous
credit, is brutally honest about himself) answers it himself. Here it is.
“I most certainly agree that there is plenty to criticize about the blogosphere…There is also a tendency towards negativity which, even if it serves a useful purpose, is unhealthy. Indeed, my own blog certainly suffers from the latter (although, at least in my case, a large portion of the blame can certainly be attributed towards the Gedolim that Rabbi Shafran defends)‘nuff said…