What Hollander Does Not Say: Pinsof’s Frame and the Coalitional Silences of a Religious Zionist Sociologist

David Pinsof’s essay “A Big Misunderstanding” attacks intellectuals who diagnose social pathologies as misunderstandings. The classic move: people are biased, ignorant, propagandized; the intellectual brings clarity; the problem dissolves once the diagnosis spreads. R. Aviad Hollander is not the intellectual Pinsof is critiquing. His work already operates in a register close to Pinsof’s own.
Look at what Hollander does across the essays. In “Danger, Slippery Slope!” he tracks how morale becomes a halakhic category inside military rabbinics. The argument is not that the IDF rabbinate has misunderstood the law. The argument is that institutional pressure expands legal categories in directions favorable to the institution. Pikuach nefesh covers combat necessity; combat necessity ramifies into morale; morale ramifies into general emotional stabilization; stabilization ramifies into administrative convenience. The category drifts under organizational pressure. This is the analysis Pinsof produces about cognitive science. The drift is not a cognitive failure. It is a structural feature of how categories operate when coalitions need them to do work.
In the eglah arufah essay, Hollander studies how a covenantal polity bounds its responsibility. The state cannot be omnipotent. The state cannot be evasive. Authority must be delegated, responsibility limited, jurisdiction defined. Constitutional theology at the level of how sovereignty functions, not a misunderstanding diagnosis.
In the household essay, Hollander locates civilizational reproduction in the bourgeois religious-Zionist family rather than in elite institutions. The decisive arena is the home of the working professional who tries to hold Torah, labor, marriage, citizenship, and modern culture in one personality. Sociology of religious transmission, not corrective intellectual labor. He asks how covenantal civilizations reproduce themselves under modern conditions, and his answer points to the boring middle stratum that nobody glamorizes.
In the Temple Mount essay with Eliav Taub, Hollander reconstructs how religious-Zionist halakhists negotiate the jurisprudential gap that opens when Jews acquire sovereignty after two millennia of dispossession. The decisors are not idiots and not ideologues. They are agents working with insufficient legal precedent for a situation classical halakha never anticipated.
In the military halakha pieces with Shlomo Goren (1917–1994) as a recurring reference, Hollander treats rabbinic innovation as an institutional response to sovereign vacuum. The vacuum is real. The improvisation is real. The pressures on the improviser are real. What looks like halakhic creativity from one angle looks like coalition service from another, and Hollander registers both without collapsing them into either.
In the Sperber study, Hollander refuses to caricature his subject as either reformer or traditionalist. He reconstructs Sperber as a hybrid intellectual type that emerges from the sociological conditions of contemporary Modern Orthodoxy. Sociological framing, not corrective.
So Hollander is closer to a fellow analyst of how institutions, categories, and coalitions function than to a target of Pinsof’s critique.
What Pinsof does add to a reading of Hollander.
A sharper edge on the gap between stated motives and actual operations. Hollander’s prose is patient and ecumenical. Pinsof’s is mordant. The mordancy can clarify what Hollander documents but does not always name. When Hollander shows military rabbis expanding the morale category to cover Sabbath travel for chaplains visiting troops, Pinsof’s frame asks whether the chaplain corps’ professional position depends on the expansion. Hollander’s prose lets you see the expansion. Pinsof’s prose lets you see the institutional interest driving the expansion.
A reminder that the misunderstanding diagnosis recurs within Hollander’s field even when it is absent from Hollander himself. Other Religious Zionist thinkers, less restrained, diagnose halakhic conservatism as a failure of historical imagination or diagnose halakhic innovation as a failure of textual seriousness. Pinsof’s essay arms the reader to spot these diagnoses and treat them as coalition moves rather than honest analyses.
The men who read Hollander at Bar-Ilan, Ariel, the Hesder yeshivot, and in the mid-tier Religious Zionist rabbinate constitute a coalition with interests in their leader’s interpretive sophistication. Hollander’s prose ratifies their position: serious, sociologically aware, neither Haredi nor Liberal Orthodox, capable of describing the tradition without flattening it. This position has its own incentives, its own audience, its own status logic. Hollander does not write outside a coalition any more than anyone else does, and his usual silence about his own coalitional position is one of the few places where Pinsof’s challenge bites.
What Pinsof misses when applied to Hollander.
Hollander treats the halakhic tradition as having internal moral content, not only coalitional content. His anxiety about morale category drift is anxiety about a real pathology, not a coalition complaining about another coalition. The eglah arufah essay worries about the moral cost of bureaucratized sovereignty.
The Pinsof frame works best on intellectuals whose stated mission diverges sharply from their operation. Hollander’s stated mission is sociological: describe how Religious Zionist halakhic reasoning operates under sovereignty, military modernity, institutional bureaucracy, and bourgeois home life. His operation matches the description. The gap between mission statement and operation is narrow. Pinsof’s frame does its best work where the gap is wide.
Hollander is not in the misunderstanding-correction business. He is mapping a problem and watching it. Pinsof’s challenge to misunderstanding-diagnosing intellectuals does not apply to intellectuals whose mode is descriptive sociology rather than prescriptive correction.
Hollander tracks category drift in military halakha but does not name the donor base, professional networks, and career paths that the IDF rabbinate’s institutional position depends on. He describes the householder as the locus of religious-Zionist transmission but does not press hard on the coalitional politics of who counts as a successful householder and who does not. He praises Sperber’s hybridity without examining the alliance between academic Jewish studies and the Open Orthodox movement that Sperber’s career has helped sustain. Pinsof’s frame highlights these absences. The absences are not failures. They mark the line Hollander has chosen not to cross. Crossing it would put him in a different coalition, and his current coalition has reasons for valuing the prose he produces from the line he has chosen.
Pinsof’s frame identifies Hollander’s own coalitional position, and gives vocabulary for what Hollander omits. Hollander understands that institutions shape categories, that elites pursue interests, and that sovereignty drives halakhic improvisation. He describes these things in a register more decorous than Pinsof’s. The two frames are compatible, working at adjacent registers on overlapping problems.

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Halakhic Liberal Democracy 3.0: Expert Capture in Sperber’s Project and Hollander’s Analysis

R. Daniel Sperber’s Modern Orthodoxy project wants to give more power to experts with elite secular educations such as himself.
Stephen Turner’s work on expertise and democracy is a good tool for examining the expert capture of a communal practice. Turner’s central argument runs as follows. Modern liberal democracies have moved through three phases. Classical liberalism rested on small government and broad citizen capacity to evaluate public questions. Welfare-state liberalism expanded the role of expert authority over policy domains the public could not evaluate. Liberal democracy 3.0 is what we have now. Expert claims have proliferated to such a degree that democratic deliberation about most policy questions is foreclosed, because the questions have been pre-classified as technical and removed from popular adjudication. Turner documents this drift across many domains: bioethics, public health, climate, regulatory policy, professional ethics, social science research. His critique does not say experts are wrong. It says expert authority hollows out democratic legitimacy even when the experts are sincere, because the public cannot ratify claims it cannot evaluate.
Apply this to halakha.
The traditional posek operated within a structure of communal ratification. He was recognized by his community. His authority depended on continuous practice within a known tradition. The texts he worked with were in principle accessible to literate Jews. His reasoning could be traced. The community could evaluate whether his pesak fell within the inherited tradition. The Vilna Gaon, the Hatam Sofer, and the Aruch ha-Shulchan all operated under conditions that allowed their work to be checked by other learned Jews and ratified by communities that lived under their pesak. Authority and ratification were structurally linked.
Sperber breaks this link. The Sperber-style posek requires philological training, manuscript-critical training, sociological training, anthropological training, historical-contextual training, and access to academic networks that produce and validate this training. None of this can be acquired in the yeshiva. None of it can be evaluated by Jews who lack academic credentials. Sperber argues that the older posek was already doing this implicitly. Turner’s frame would identify this argument as the standard expert legitimation move. Take a domain governed by communally embedded judgment. Claim that the judgment was always relying on something that only credentialed experts can now make explicit. Use the explicitness claim to license expansion of expert authority into the domain.
The move appears in many other domains Turner has analyzed. The bioethicist claims that ordinary moral judgment was always implicitly relying on principles that bioethical analysis can now articulate. The public health expert claims that ordinary risk judgment was always implicitly relying on epidemiological models that the expert can now produce. The economic policy advisor claims that ordinary economic intuition was always implicitly relying on welfare functions that the economist can now compute. In each case the move is the same. The claim of explicit recovery licenses the substitution of expert judgment for communal judgment.
Michael Polanyi (1891–1976) gave Turner the conceptual tool that demolishes this move. Tacit knowledge cannot be made explicit. The attempt to explicate it always distorts it. The traditional posek’s authority rests on a knowledge that cannot be captured in philological footnotes. He knows his community by living among them. He knows the tradition by inhabiting it. He knows what his pesak will do because he has watched generations of similar pesak unfold. This knowledge is not articulable in academic prose. Sperber’s project treats tacit communal knowledge as a primitive form of explicit academic knowledge waiting for its proper expression. Polanyi and Turner would insist on the opposite. Explicit academic knowledge is at best a partial reconstruction of tacit communal knowledge, and the academic version is in many cases worse than the embedded version because it strips out what could not be articulated.
The substitution Sperber proposes is a replacement of one authority structure with another. Turner’s frame names what is replacing what. Communal-embedded authority gives way to credentialed-academic authority. The traditional posek’s tacit knowledge gives way to the academic posek’s explicit knowledge. The community’s capacity to evaluate the posek gives way to the community’s dependence on credentials it cannot examine. This is liberal democracy 3.0 in the beit midrash. The form of governance that has hollowed out Western democratic legitimacy is now hollowing out halakhic legitimacy by the same structural pathway.
The democratization claim is the most acute irony. Turner has documented many cases in which expert expansion is presented as democratization. The expert claims to be giving voice to ordinary people, to be validating popular intuitions, to be removing pre-existing elite constraints. In practice the expert is replacing the older elite with a newer one and reframing the substitution as empowerment. Sperber’s framework fits this pattern. He claims to be giving the community more voice in halakha. The community now counts because its emotional suffering and its religious spirit register as halakhic data. The effect is that the community’s standing is mediated by the academic posek who decides what the community’s spirit is. The community does not directly produce halakhic authority. The credentialed posek who interprets the community produces it. The intermediary is not eliminated. The intermediary is replaced.
The new intermediary is also less accountable than the old one. The yeshiva-trained posek lived among his community. He depended on its acceptance for his standing. His authority could be withdrawn if the community judged him to be operating outside the tradition. The academic posek’s standing comes from a different network: peer review, conference invitations, university appointments, journal placements. He does not depend on local communal acceptance. He depends on the validation of other academic poskim and on the credentialing institutions that train them. His accountability runs upward into the academic network, not downward into the community. The community, in his system, becomes data for him to interpret rather than a constituency that ratifies his authority.
This points to Turner’s typology of expertise. The traditional posek was something close to what Turner classifies as a Type I expert. His claims could in principle be evaluated by his clientele, because his clientele had the same texts and tradition he used. The academic posek is a Type IV expert in Turner’s classification. He creates his own market by persuasion. He must convince his clientele that they need him because their tradition is more complicated than they thought, that classical sources require philological clarification they cannot provide, that proper pesak requires academic methods that only he can apply. Once the clientele accepts this framing, they cannot retract it without losing access to expert services they have come to depend on. The market becomes self-perpetuating.
The institutional infrastructure follows the expert pattern. Bar-Ilan’s department of Talmud, the journal Akademot, the JOFA publication network, the academic journals that publish Sperber-style work, the conferences that gather his readers, and the graduate programs that train his students all constitute an institutional ecosystem that depends on the academic-religious model continuing to expand. New academic poskim must be produced. New journal articles must be published. New conferences must be held. The infrastructure has its own institutional needs that align with the framework’s expansion. Turner has documented this pattern in many other domains: bioethics centers, public health institutes, regulatory science programs. The pattern is the same.
Now turn to Hollander.
R. Aviad Hollander is a Type IV expert in Turner’s classification. He produces academic-religious sociology that creates demand for more academic-religious sociology. His readership is the credentialed sliver of the Orthodox world that has the training to evaluate his work. The broader Orthodox community cannot evaluate Hollander any more than it can evaluate Sperber. To engage Hollander’s argument you need familiarity with Weber, Polanyi, Bourdieu, the sociology of professions, the methodology of religious studies, and the inside conversation among academic students of contemporary Orthodoxy. The audience for this is small. The community Hollander writes about is much larger and is locked out of the conversation about its own life.
This is the recursive expert capture pattern Turner has identified. The community is the subject of expert analysis. The expert analysis takes place in a vocabulary the community cannot use. The community therefore cannot evaluate the analysis. The expert analysts evaluate each other. The community is told what is happening to it by experts whose work it cannot read. Decisions get made within this expert network that affect the community’s life. The community’s lack of standing in the conversation is presented as a feature of the analysis rather than a problem with it. Hollander does not write for haredi grandmothers in Bnei Brak. He writes for tenured colleagues at Bar-Ilan and Hebrew University and for the journal editors who decide which articles get placed. The grandmothers have no path into the conversation about whether the halakha they live by is being restructured.
Hollander’s Weberian apparatus is a particular case of the pattern. Weber’s typology of authority is a powerful academic tool. It is also a credential gatekeeper. To deploy it you need graduate training. To evaluate it you need graduate training. When Hollander uses Weber to classify Sperber as a charismatic figure within a traditional structure, the classification flatters Sperber and forecloses popular evaluation. The community cannot judge whether Sperber qualifies as a charismatic authority in Weber’s sense. They have not read Weber. The classification is therefore not subject to communal contestation. It is settled within the expert network and presented to the community as established.
The structural-tension framing is the same move at a higher level of abstraction. Calling the controversy an expression of structural tensions internal to modern religious life is academic vocabulary that the community cannot contest because they cannot enter the vocabulary. The framing settles the question of how to describe the conflict before the community has had a chance to describe the conflict in its own terms. The community might prefer to describe the conflict as the academic-credentialed wing of Modern Orthodoxy attempting to capture halakhic authority. They are not given the floor. The expert framing wins because the expert framing controls the description.
Turner’s positive vision is for forms of authority that the demos can ratify. He thinks knowledge that empowers ordinary people is healthier for democratic life than knowledge that produces dependence on credentialed gatekeepers. The traditional yeshiva had aspects of this. It produced poskim from within communities, using texts the community could in principle access, operating in vocabularies the community could engage. The university produces the opposite. It produces experts whose authority depends on credentials the community cannot replicate, operating in vocabularies the community cannot enter, accountable to peer networks the community cannot influence.
Sperber’s project moves halakha from the community-empowering structure to the expert-dependence-producing structure. He frames the move as democratization. Turner would identify this as the central legitimation device of Liberal democracy 3.0. Every expansion of expert authority is sold as democratization. The reality is the opposite. Expert capture reduces communal standing. The community must trust experts it cannot check. The community must accept descriptions it cannot contest. The community must live under rulings it cannot evaluate.
A serious response to Sperber from within Turner’s frame would not deny that some halakhic questions benefit from philological clarification. It would deny that philological capacity should be treated as authoritative. The Talmud belongs to the community of those who study and live by it. Outside expertise can be a resource. It cannot be a sovereign. Sperber’s project tries to make outside expertise sovereign by claiming that without it pesak cannot be done correctly. This claim is structurally identical to the claim of bioethicists, public health authorities, and regulatory scientists in the wider Western polity. Turner spent his career demonstrating why this claim is anti-democratic.
The honest argument Sperber could make would be the substitution argument. He could say: I am replacing communal-embedded authority with academic-credentialed authority because I think the new structure produces better outcomes. This argument would be contestable. The community could say no. The community could say it prefers its embedded poskim to be communally accountable rather than academically credentialed. The community could weigh the loss of philological accuracy against the loss of communal standing. The argument would be democratic.
Sperber does not make this argument because making it would forfeit the legitimating cover. The recovery framing presents the substitution as no substitution at all. The community is told that nothing has been taken from it. The framing presents the operation as mere clarification of halakha. Clarification happens to require credentials the community lacks, but this is incidental. Turner’s whole career has been a sustained demonstration that this incidental-looking move is the move by which expert authority hollows out democratic life. Halakha is now subject to the same operation.
Hollander’s failure is to provide cover for the operation by describing it in the vocabulary of structural sociological development. The cover is essential. Without academic legitimation the operation would be visible as a power play. Hollander’s essay does the work of converting a visible power play into an invisible structural transformation. Without his work and the work of others like him, the operation would face open communal resistance. With his work, the operation proceeds under the cover of academic neutrality. Turner would identify this as the expert legitimation function par excellence. The expert tells the public that what is happening is what must happen, that resistance is futile because the change is structural rather than chosen, that the proper response is sociological understanding rather than political opposition.
The community can refuse this framing. The community can insist that the change is chosen, that it can be opposed, that the experts who tell them otherwise are doing politics under cover of analysis. The community can insist that halakhic authority belongs to those who live within and are accountable to the community, not to those who interpret the community from outside through academic methods. The community can insist that the academic posek’s credentials are no substitute for communal ratification. Turner’s whole body of work licenses these refusals. The community has the standing to refuse expert capture even when the experts call the refusal anti-intellectual or rigid or ossified. Those characterizations are part of the expert toolkit for delegitimating communal pushback. They have been used in many other domains. They are now applied to halakha.
The hollowing out of democratic legitimacy by expert authority produces backlash. The expert class loses its standing because it has overreached. We are seeing this now in public health, in climate policy, in various regulatory domains. The same outcome is possible within Modern Orthodoxy. The communities Sperber’s framework treats as data may eventually refuse the framework. The credentialed academic posek may find his market shrinking. The broader Orthodox world may declare that academic methods are not pesak. If this happens, Turner’s frame will have predicted it. The expansion of expert authority over communal practice is not stable. The community can take its life back, and sometimes does.

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R. Daniel Sperber and the Historicization of Halakha

R. Daniel Sperber (b. 1940) occupies an unusual position in postwar Orthodox Jewish scholarship. He combines the sensibility of a classical philologist with the responsibilities of a working halakhist, and the result is a body of work that has reshaped how Modern Orthodoxy thinks about custom, law, and historical change. His career spans more than half a century at Bar-Ilan University, eight volumes of Minhagei Yisrael, hundreds of articles on Greco-Roman Jewish life and rabbinic philology, and a series of halakhic interventions on women’s ritual participation that placed him at the center of contestation within contemporary Orthodox Judaism.

Sperber was born in Britain on 4 November 1940 and spent his earliest years at Gwrych Castle in north Wales, where his parents helped operate a refugee home for German Jewish children during the war. The family later moved to Manchester and then to London. The combination of postwar British Jewish life and the lingering presence of European refugee culture shaped his sense that Jewish civilization was a fragile inheritance requiring active reconstruction rather than passive transmission. He completed secondary school in 1958 and made aliyah that year.

In Israel he entered Yeshivat Kol Torah, where Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (1910–1995) ranked among the leading authorities, and later studied at Yeshivat Hevron. He received rabbinic ordination from Kol Torah, a credential that grounded his subsequent academic work in traditional rabbinic training rather than positioning him as an outside observer of Orthodox practice. He returned to England in the early 1960s and pursued a different track. He read art history at the Courtauld Institute of Art, then moved to University College London for doctoral work in ancient history and Hebrew studies under Arnaldo Momigliano (1908–1987) and Siegfried Stein. The pairing matters. Momigliano was among the great historians of antiquity in the twentieth century, a Jewish refugee from Italian fascism who treated ancient history as a continuous human conversation. Stein worked on rabbinic literature with philological rigor. Sperber emerged from these years trained in both Greco-Roman history and the textual sciences of rabbinic Judaism.

His doctoral research focused on the economic and material conditions of Roman Palestine. The early publications grew out of this work. Roman Palestine 200–400: Money and Prices (1974) examines coinage, inflation, and currency reform across the period when the Mishnah and parts of the Talmud took shape. Roman Palestine 200–400: The Land (1978) treats agricultural conditions, taxation, and the pressures on rural Jewish life. The City in Roman Palestine (1998) looks at urban institutions, civic structures, and the texture of municipal life. These books read as classical economic history, drawn from coins, papyri, archaeological remains, and rabbinic sources treated as historical witnesses. Sperber here works in the lineage of Saul Lieberman (1898–1983) and Gedalyahu Alon (1901–1950), scholars who used rabbinic texts to reconstruct the social world of late antique Jewry while subjecting those texts to the same evidentiary discipline applied to Greek and Latin sources.

Two methodological commitments organize this early work. First, philology comes first. Many rabbinic terms are loanwords from Greek or Latin, and recovering the source word often clarifies what the rabbis meant. Sperber’s A Dictionary of Greek and Latin Legal Terms in Rabbinic Literature (1984) and Greek in Talmudic Palestine (2012) document this lexical layer in detail. Second, the rabbinic corpus reflects historical conditions. Prices, building practices, market structures, and legal arrangements in the Mishnah and Talmud track the broader Roman world rather than floating free of it. To read rabbinic law historically is to understand that many rulings address a particular economic or administrative reality.

Sperber joined the Bar-Ilan University faculty in 1968 and remained there for the rest of his academic career. He held the Milan Roven Chair of Talmudic Research, served as Dean of the Faculty of Jewish Studies from 1985 to 1989, chaired the Talmud Department, and founded the Bar-Ilan University Press. In 1992 he received the Israel Prize for Jewish studies, the highest civilian honor the state confers. He has held visiting appointments at Yeshiva University’s Bernard Revel Graduate School in New York since 1982 and lectured widely in North America, Europe, and Australia. His scholarly output includes more than twenty books and hundreds of articles.

The work for which he is best known to a wider readership is the eight-volume Minhagei Yisrael: Origins and History (1989–2007). The series reconstructs the development of Jewish customs across two millennia. Each volume follows particular practices through their textual and material history, from talmudic origins through medieval Ashkenaz and Sepharad to modern Eastern European ritual life. The customs treated range from synagogue practice and liturgy to mourning, marriage, food preparation, and domestic ritual. The method draws on rabbinic responsa, manuscript evidence, art historical sources, archaeological finds, comparative folklore, and economic history.

The cumulative argument of Minhagei Yisrael is that custom has a history. Practices that appear immemorial often have datable origins. They emerge from concrete conditions, spread through identifiable channels, and change in response to migration, persecution, neighboring cultures, technological shifts, and economic constraints. A custom one community treats as Sinaitic may have arisen in twelfth-century Mainz under particular pressures. Another may reflect Iberian conditions transported through the Sephardic diaspora. Sperber rarely makes the polemical case explicitly. He documents. The polemical implications follow from the documentation.

This historical orientation forms the bridge between Sperber the philologist and Sperber the halakhist. If practice has a history, then halakhic reasoning that treats practice as static stands on weak ground. Custom does not lack authority in this view. The authority of custom rests on particular historical reasons, and when the reasons change, the authority sometimes changes with them. The argument sits within the rabbinic tradition rather than outside it. Medieval and early modern halakhists routinely distinguished customs grounded in error, customs grounded in stringency, customs grounded in regional circumstance, and customs grounded in core legal obligation. Sperber recovers this taxonomic sensibility for a contemporary readership trained to flatten the categories.

His halakhic writings extend the historical method into active jurisprudence. On Changes in Jewish Liturgy: Options and Limitations (2010) addresses the problem of liturgical reform within Orthodox practice. Darka shel Halakha (2007), translated as On the Relationship of Mitzvot Between Man and His Neighbor and Between Man and God, considers the priority of interpersonal ethics within the halakhic system. The Path of Halacha: Women Reading the Torah (2007) and his various essays on partnership minyanim build a halakhic case for expanded female ritual participation drawing on the principle of kevod habriyot, human dignity.

Kevod habriyot has a recognized place in classical rabbinic jurisprudence. The Talmud establishes that human dignity can override certain rabbinic prohibitions in narrowly defined circumstances. Sperber’s argument expands the operative scope of the principle. He maintains that the contemporary moral consciousness of educated Orthodox Jewish women, who experience exclusion from honors such as Torah reading as a degradation rather than a courtesy, generates a halakhic claim that traditional poskim must engage. The argument does not stop at whether women may read Torah. It asks whether the honor of the congregation is the only or the primary value at stake.

The reasoning takes a conservative form. Sperber works through classical sources, surveys minority opinions, recovers neglected positions, and arrives at conclusions that operate within the architecture of halakhic argument. He does not claim revelation, intuition, or progressive consensus as legal grounds. He claims that the tradition contains more interpretive room than recent stringency has allowed, and that closing the available room imposes costs on Jewish life the tradition recognizes as legally relevant. The argument operates as consequentialist reasoning within the limits the rabbinic system permits, a defensible position within the literature.

The institutional consequences became visible through Sperber’s role at Yeshivat Maharat in New York, founded by Rabba Sara Hurwitz and Rabbi Avi Weiss in 2009. Sperber served as Posek HaYeshiva for sixteen years and conferred ordination on the first cohort of Orthodox women trained for clerical service. The titles given to graduates have varied, including Maharat, Rabba, and Rabbi, and the politics around the titles reflect a broader contestation about what the ordination of women means for Orthodox communal structure. Sperber’s involvement provided halakhic legitimation that an outside academic could not have offered. He was a senior posek with traditional ordination, an Israel Prize laureate in Jewish studies, and the author of canonical works on Jewish custom. His endorsement reframed the debate from a question about whether the proposal had any halakhic standing to a question about which halakhic positions among several available ones the broader Orthodox community would accept.

The reaction within Orthodoxy followed predictable lines. The Rabbinical Council of America passed resolutions opposing the ordination of women. Haredi authorities issued sharper condensations. Within Modern Orthodoxy, the response divided. Open Orthodoxy, the wing associated with Yeshivat Chovevei Torah and Yeshivat Maharat, embraced Sperber’s positions. The Centrist Orthodox institutional core remained skeptical or hostile. The result was a deepening of the fault line within American Modern Orthodoxy that had been building since the 1990s. Sperber did not create the fault line. He gave one side a halakhic apparatus capable of sustained argument.

His other contested positions follow a similar pattern. He has criticized the expansion of kitniyot prohibitions on Pesach, arguing that the inclusion of foods such as quinoa under categories developed for medieval Ashkenazi conditions reflects category drift rather than considered ruling. He has spoken against gay conversion therapy, signing rabbinic statements describing the practice as harmful and inconsistent with the value of pikuach nefesh, the preservation of life. He has supported greater transparency in conversion procedures and criticized the consolidation of conversion authority in centralized bureaucratic structures perceived to operate without due process. None of these positions is novel within the broader spectrum of Jewish thought. The distinctive feature lies in the venue. Sperber argues them within Orthodoxy, from inside the system of rabbinic legitimacy, using the technical apparatus of halakhic reasoning rather than appeals to outside values.

The reception of his scholarship has tracked the same pattern. Within academic Jewish studies, Sperber’s work commands wide respect. Minhagei Yisrael has the standing of a standard reference. His philological contributions enter the secondary literature on Roman Palestine and rabbinic Hebrew without controversy. His historical reconstructions of medieval ritual practice serve as starting points for further work. Within the Haredi world, by contrast, his books have sometimes circulated under suspicion. The objection rarely targets particular claims. It targets the historicizing approach. Treating customs as products of identifiable historical conditions weakens the rhetorical claim that contemporary practice descends from Sinai through an unbroken chain. The objection has substance. Sperber’s method does change the phenomenology of custom. He treats this as honesty rather than subversion, but the implication for traditional self-understanding is real, and his critics are not wrong to register it.

Several broader features of his work warrant attention.

He treats material culture as primary evidence for Jewish history. Many traditional historians of Judaism have privileged textual sources and treated archaeology, art, and economic data as supplementary. Sperber reverses the priority where the evidence permits. He has written on synagogue mosaics, ancient Jewish art, ritual objects, household material remains, and the visual culture of the medieval Jewish world. The art historical training at the Courtauld informs this orientation. Buildings, coins, lamps, and textiles tell stories that texts alone do not, and the historian who reads only texts misses much of the social world.

He engages comparatively with the surrounding cultures of late antiquity and the medieval period. Rabbinic Judaism developed in conversation with Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Sasanian, Christian, and Islamic civilizations. Sperber treats these conversations as constitutive rather than incidental. The Greek loanwords in the Mishnah, the Latin legal vocabulary in tannaitic literature, the architectural conventions of late antique synagogues, and the customs that traveled between Jewish and surrounding populations form part of the historical fabric of Judaism rather than contamination of an otherwise pure tradition. The comparative orientation reflects the Momigliano lineage in his training and connects his work to broader currents in late antique studies.

He maintains a strong sense that halakha addresses real human lives. The economic history of Roman Palestine occupies him in part because it discloses the texture of life under whose conditions the rabbis legislated. The history of customs holds his attention because customs shape the daily experience of ordinary Jews, especially women, the poor, the bereaved, and the marginalized. Halakhic interventions on women’s participation, conversion, and liturgical reform follow the same orientation. The rulings of poskim affect persons. The historical record shows that poskim throughout the centuries have weighed personal consequences in their reasoning, and Sperber recovers this dimension against a juridical style that treats halakha as a closed formal system.

He understands his role as a posek to include preservation through adaptation. The institutional context of his halakhic work is the educated Modern Orthodox community in Israel, North America, and Britain, populated by Jews who hold professional degrees, work in mixed-gender settings, raise daughters with full secular educations, and possess extensive exposure to contemporary moral and intellectual life. Sperber does not believe Orthodoxy can address this community by ignoring its formation. He has argued that excessive stringency drives exits, that the appearance of misogyny alienates the next generation, and that an Orthodoxy unwilling to engage with the moral consciousness of its own committed members will lose them. The argument has obvious empirical components and obvious contestable assumptions. It also has a long pedigree within Jewish history. Reformers from the medieval German tosafists onward have argued that halakhic flexibility under particular conditions serves rather than betrays the tradition.

His personal life reflects the world his scholarship describes. He married Phyllis (Chana) Magnus, a couples therapist from Highland Park, Illinois, and the couple raised ten children in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City. He has served as the rabbi of the Menachem Zion Synagogue in the Old City for many years. One daughter, Abigail Sperber, has become a filmmaker and activist who founded Bat Kol, a group for Orthodox lesbian women in Israel. The biographical detail informs the work. Sperber’s halakhic engagement with questions of gender, family, and community has drawn on lived family experience as well as textual scholarship. The combination is characteristic. He treats the boundary between scholarship and life as porous, as he treats most boundaries, and the willingness to bring biographical witness into halakhic argument distinguishes his approach from poskim who present rulings as if produced by purely textual operations.

The historical significance of his career, viewed from the present, lies in several places at once.

He helped reshape the relationship between academic Jewish studies and Orthodox halakhic practice. Earlier generations of Modern Orthodox intellectuals, including figures such as Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik (1903–1993), held the two domains in productive tension while keeping them somewhat separate. Sperber integrated them. His halakhic arguments draw on his philological and historical research, and his historical research illuminates halakhic problems. The result challenged the older compartmentalization in both directions. Academics had to take rabbinic practice as a live subject rather than a museum piece. Halakhists had to engage with historical evidence as relevant rather than disruptive.

He gave women’s ordination within Orthodoxy a halakhic foundation it had previously lacked. Earlier advocates, including Blu Greenberg (b. 1936), had made the moral and communal case. Sperber added technical halakhic argument from inside the tradition. The arguments remain contested. Their existence changed the terms of debate. After Sperber, the question of whether women may serve in clerical roles within Orthodoxy is no longer easily framed as a question about whether any halakhic basis exists. It became a question about which halakhic positions among several available ones the community accepts.

He documented the historical contingency of custom on a scale no previous scholar had attempted. Minhagei Yisrael is not the first work to argue that customs change. It is the first to demonstrate the argument across the full breadth of Jewish ritual life with full philological apparatus. The cumulative weight of the evidence reframes how custom can be discussed.

He contributed to the broader transformation of Modern Orthodoxy from a movement of synthesis to a movement of contestation. Earlier Modern Orthodox thought, in figures such as Soloveitchik and Rabbi Norman Lamm (1927–2020), emphasized the integration of Torah and secular knowledge under conditions of mutual respect. Sperber’s career belongs to a later moment, in which the integration project has produced internal disagreements about what halakhic consequences follow from the engagement with modernity. His positions mark one end of a spectrum within Modern Orthodox thought, with the Yeshiva University centrist consensus near the middle and various Haredi-influenced positions at the other end. The spectrum has hardened into institutional division in the United States. In Israel, where Religious Zionism encompasses a wider range of positions and the institutional structure differs, his influence has been more diffuse and harder to map onto stable factions.

At eighty-five he continues to write, lecture, and rule on halakhic questions. He remains rabbi of his synagogue in the Old City. Communities and individuals across the Jewish world bring questions to him that are not new in their substance. They concern women’s roles, conversion, liturgy, custom, the boundaries of acceptable practice, the place of moral intuition in legal reasoning. The same questions occupied medieval poskim, early modern poskim, and twentieth-century poskim before him. The texture of the questions changes with the conditions of the communities asking them. The work of giving answers from inside the tradition continues.

A Big Misunderstanding

David Pinsof argues in “A Big Misunderstanding” that intellectuals share a foundational story about the world. The story holds that humanity’s troubles arise from cognitive failure. People are biased, ignorant, gullible, misinformed, infected with stereotypes, blinded by tribalism. The intellectual class, whose work is the production of understanding, therefore occupies the position of healer. Fix the misunderstanding, fix the problem. Pinsof rejects the diagnosis. He proposes instead that humans understand their coalitional interests pretty well, that “biases” are mostly savvy strategies, and that the social pathologies intellectuals condemn arise from rational competition over status, resources, and the coercive apparatus of the state. The misunderstanding diagnosis itself, on Pinsof’s reading, is a status product. It elevates the diagnostician.

Apply this lens to Daniel Sperber’s career and a striking pattern emerges.

Sperber’s project depends on a misunderstanding diagnosis. The Orthodox Jewish public, on his reading, has come to treat customs as if they descended unchanged from Sinai. The customs in fact emerged from datable historical conditions, regional pressures, economic constraints, and accidents of migration. Minhagei Yisrael documents the contingency. Halakhic interventions on women’s ritual participation rest on a parallel claim. Poskim and their communities have forgotten or suppressed minority opinions, narrowed the operative scope of kevod habriyot, and treated as immutable what the historical record shows to have been variable. The remedy is recovery. Recover the suppressed plurality, recover the technical machinery of human dignity, and the law’s options expand. The Haredi rabbinate has misunderstood its own tradition. The Centrist Orthodox poskim have deferred to a misunderstanding. The educated Modern Orthodox public has been told a story about Sinai-to-now continuity that the manuscripts do not support.

This is the misunderstanding diagnosis in its classic form, applied to a particular religious community. Replace “biased voters” with “rigid poskim” and the structure is the same. The intellectual, here a philologist-rabbi credentialed at University College London and Bar-Ilan, occupies the position of healer. He brings light. The community will move forward once the light arrives.

The Pinsof challenge cuts directly. Maybe the rigid poskim are not in the dark.

Haredi rabbis read Hebrew. They have access to manuscripts. They know that customs vary across regions and centuries. The world of medieval responsa contains explicit acknowledgment of regional variation, of mistaken customs, of customs adopted in error and then sustained. The Haredi rabbinate has not lost this knowledge. It has chosen not to make the knowledge operative within communal life. The choice serves a coalition. Treating customs as Sinaitic protects rabbinic authority over the daily texture of Jewish practice. Permitting historical relativization weakens that authority. The choice is rational from the standpoint of the coalition that benefits from it.

Centrist Modern Orthodox poskim know about minority opinions. They have read the same Tosafot and Beit Yosef and Mishnah Berurah Sperber has read. They know about the kevod habriyot literature. They have chosen not to deploy it the way Sperber deploys it. The choice serves a different coalition: Yeshiva University, the Orthodox Union, the Rabbinical Council of America, their donor base, their alumni, the right flank of their constituency they do not want to lose. Their reluctance to adopt Sperber’s positions is not a cognitive failure waiting for clarification. It is a coalitional position protected by a vocabulary of caution.

The women who chafe at exclusion are also not in the dark. They are not waiting for a philologist to explain that customs have a history. They have professional degrees. They run organizations. They earn the same income as the men they sit behind in synagogue. Their grievance is not historical but social. They want greater status, greater participation, greater authority within the religious community whose life they share. Sperber’s scholarship gives them ammunition for the fight they were already in. The ammunition is well-machined and the credentialing is impressive. The fight existed before the ammunition arrived.

Now read the institutional pattern of the conflict and the Pinsof frame predicts it cleanly.

When Sperber’s books appear, Haredi authorities do not respond with counter-monographs on the historiography of custom. They circulate warnings. They discourage the books. They train their followers to treat Sperber as suspect. The response is coalitional management, not interpretive engagement. The interpretive engagement would require admitting that the historiographical question is open, which is precisely what the Haredi position cannot afford. So the response operates at the level of social control over what gets read.

When Yeshivat Maharat ordains its first cohort, the Rabbinical Council of America does not publish rebuttals on the technical merits of Sperber’s kevod habriyot argument. It passes resolutions. It tells member synagogues not to hire women clergy. The contest is institutional. The textual arguments serve as flags, not as the field of battle. The field of battle is the question of who gets to occupy the pulpit, draw the salary, perform the lifecycle ritual, and represent Orthodoxy to the broader world.

When Sperber criticizes the expansion of kitniyot prohibitions, the response from Haredi authorities is not “let us examine the historical claim about quinoa.” The response is silence or contempt. The point of the prohibition was never the botany. The point was the social position of the rabbinic authorities who enforce it. Their authority does not rest on the categorical reasoning. It rests on the obedience the categorical reasoning generates. Sperber’s argument threatens the obedience. The obedience cannot be defended at the level of the argument, so the argument is treated as unworthy of engagement.

Sperber’s stated mission tracks the misunderstanding diagnosis. He says he wants to preserve Orthodoxy through faithful adaptation. He says rigidity costs the next generation. He says historical honesty is owed to the tradition. These statements are not lies. They are mission-statement language. The Starbucks mission statement says inspiring the human spirit one cup at a time. The actual operation maximizes profit. The Sperber mission statement says preserving the tradition through scholarly recovery. The actual operation establishes a class of women clergy with salaries, credentials, networks, and institutional standing, against an entrenched older class that does not want to share the field. Whatever the mission statement says, that is the operation underway.

The mission statement is not nothing. It does descriptive work. Sperber probably does want to preserve Orthodoxy. He probably does believe his daughters and granddaughters deserve fuller religious lives. He probably does love the historical material he has spent sixty years documenting. The Pinsof point is that the stated motives and the actual operation are not the same thing, and that the stated motives systematically present the operation in language flattering to the actor and the actor’s coalition. Sperber describes himself as a recoverer of suppressed plurality. His opponents describe him as a destabilizer of communal authority. Both descriptions track something real about what he does. The first description is the one his coalition speaks. The second is the one his opponents speak. Neither is the disinterested truth.

The biographical detail fits the pattern. Sperber’s ten children are educated, professional, integrated into Modern Orthodox life with all its accommodations to liberal Western expectations. His daughter Abigail founded Bat Kol, the Israeli religious lesbian women’s organization. The man who issues rulings on women’s participation, gay conversion therapy, conversion procedures, and liturgical reform has lived inside the coalition that wants those rulings to come out a certain way. This is not corruption. It is the normal condition of moral and legal reasoning across every tradition. Pinsof’s point is that the normal condition is closer to coalition service than the misunderstanding diagnosis admits.

Now turn the frame on Sperber’s enemies, since Pinsof’s logic applies symmetrically.

The Haredi resistance is not free of coalition. The men who run Haredi institutions have salaries, status, and authority on the line. They write about the spiritual cost of innovation. The actual operation maintains a labor market protecting their position. Their critique of Sperber as an academic infiltrator is not wrong about the social facts. He is academically credentialed, he does import historical method into halakha, and the import does threaten the boundary protecting their guild. They have read his work accurately. They have responded to it accurately, from the standpoint of their coalition.

The Centrist Orthodox institutional core operates the same way. Yeshiva University depends on a donor base, an alumni network, and a constituency that runs from left-modern to nearly Haredi. The leadership cannot adopt Sperber’s positions without losing the right side of the coalition. Their hedging is rational. Their public language calls it prudence and humility before tradition. The operation is donor management and constituency maintenance.

Sperber’s coalition has Maharat, Open Orthodoxy, Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, the academic Jewish studies establishment, and the educated liberal Modern Orthodox public. His enemies’ coalitions have YU, the OU, the RCA, and the Haredi rabbinic establishment. Each side fights with the tools its position permits. Sperber’s tools include philological scholarship, kevod habriyot expansion, recovery of minority opinions, and the prestige of academic credentialing. His opponents’ tools include institutional control over titles, employment, communal funding, and access to the pulpit. The two toolkits clash at predictable points. The clash does not resolve through argument because argument is not where the conflict lives.

Pinsof’s frame closes with a question about whether intellectuals can fix anything. Apply that question to Sperber and the answer is unflattering to the misunderstanding diagnosis but not to Sperber.

He has not fixed the disagreement. Forty years of philological work, eight volumes of Minhagei Yisrael, sixteen years as Posek HaYeshiva at Maharat, an Israel Prize, and a stack of halakhic monographs have not produced reconciliation. The Haredi rabbinate has not adopted his positions. The Centrist core has not adopted them. Open Orthodoxy has built institutions around them. The fault line in American Modern Orthodoxy is deeper now than it was when he started. The disagreement persists because it never was a disagreement of understanding. It was a disagreement of interest, status, and institutional position, fought through textual argument because textual argument is the legitimate currency of the community.

Sperber may have understood this from the beginning. His success at Maharat is not the success of having fixed a misunderstanding. It is the success of having built an alternative coalition with its own credentialing, its own job market, and its own legitimacy. The alternative coalition does not need its opponents to agree with it. It needs to exist, to grow, to retain its members, and to set the terms of its own internal life. Sperber has helped accomplish that. His opponents have built and maintained their coalition successfully too. Both sides have done what their positions required. The misunderstanding diagnosis is not what either side has been pursuing, even when the diagnosis appears in the rhetoric.

The last item in Pinsof’s piece is the line about the hole. You can study the hole all you want. The hole does not go away through study. Sperber’s career suggests a refinement. Some holes have inhabitants who have made peace with the hole and built lives in it. Other inhabitants want to leave or to remodel. The remodelers cannot persuade the settled by explaining the hole’s geology. They can only build a new room and invite people in. Sperber built a room. The settled inhabitants of the older rooms have not moved. The ones who wanted the new room moved into it. The walls between the rooms remain.

Alliance Theory

Sperber holds an Israel Prize in Jewish Thought, chairs a department at Bar-Ilan University, has authored multi-volume works on halakha and minhag, and ranks as a senior Talmudist of his generation. He also endorses partnership minyanim, supports women’s ordination, and signs on to halakhic responsa that the Haredi establishment treats as outside the bounds of Orthodoxy. The standard reading treats his positions as flowing from his values: tolerance, equality, intellectual honesty. Pinsof’s framework predicts that his positions track his alliance structure.
Map his coalition. Sperber’s allies include Avi Weiss (b. 1944), Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, Yeshivat Maharat, JOFA, Beit Hillel, the religious feminist movement in Israel, and the academic Talmud establishment at Bar-Ilan, Hebrew U, and JTS. His rivals include the Haredi rabbinate, the right wing of the Rabbinical Council of America, the conservative voices at Tradition magazine, and the rabbis who signed against women’s ordination. The Israeli Chief Rabbinate sits adjacent to his rivals though it avoids open confrontation with him.
Pinsof’s three criteria for ally selection apply here. Similarity: Sperber’s allies share his methodological commitments to historicized halakha, source-critical Talmud study, and openness to academic methods. Transitivity: his allies oppose his rivals (the Haredi establishment, the right-wing RCA), and his rivals oppose his allies (Open Orthodoxy, women’s ordination, partnership minyanim). Interdependence: his coalition gives him platforms (JOFA conferences, YCT and Maharat semicha ceremonies, Open Orthodox publishing venues), and he gives them halakhic cover, scholarly authority, and Israeli credibility.
Now the propaganda biases.
Perpetrator biases. When women violate traditional gender norms in synagogue—leading Kabbalat Shabbat, reading from the Torah, receiving aliyot—Sperber emphasizes mitigating circumstances. The historical record reveals more variation than Haredi narratives admit. The relevant prohibitions are minhag rather than din. The spiritual harm is minimal. The women act from sincere motives. When his rivals enforce traditional restrictions, he attributes their motives to fear, sociological insecurity, or misreading of sources. Same act, different framing.
Victim biases. Sperber emphasizes the suffering of Orthodox women excluded from leadership, the pain of women unable to say Kaddish for a parent, the indignity of mechitza arrangements that hide women from view. He gives less weight to grievances of Haredi families whose communities experience the spread of partnership minyanim and women rabbis as a threat to halakhic continuity. Both sides claim victimhood. He amplifies one side.
Attributional biases. When Modern Orthodox women succeed as scholars and leaders, Sperber attributes their success to inherent capacities and the moral progress of the community. When Haredi women remain in restricted roles, he attributes this to external factors: sociological pressure, communal coercion, lack of education. His rivals reverse the attributions. They credit Haredi women’s modesty and learning to virtue. They credit Modern Orthodox feminism to outside influence from secular culture. Pinsof predicts this exact pattern, and we observe it.
Now the strange bedfellows. Sperber finds himself allied with secular feminists on questions of women’s ritual roles. He finds himself allied with Conservative Jewish scholars on questions of historicized halakha. He finds himself allied with Reform-trained academics on questions of Talmudic source criticism. He finds himself opposed to Haredi rabbis with whom he shares deep commitments to halakha, daily prayer, kashrut, and Shabbat observance. The patchwork makes no sense as a philosophy. It makes sense as a coalition.
Watch what happens when an issue cuts across the coalition. When secular feminists push for civil marriage to bypass the Chief Rabbinate, Sperber’s secular feminist allies favor the move; he might oppose it. When Conservative Jews argue for accepting patrilineal descent, his Conservative allies favor it; he opposes it. The coalition holds on women’s roles in Orthodox synagogues. It breaks elsewhere. Alliance Theory predicts this. A philosophy of equality or autonomy might not.
Apply the framework to his methodological work. Sperber’s emphasis on minhag as flexible and historically variable serves a coalition function. His multi-volume Minhagei Yisrael documents customs that shifted, faded, and revived across centuries. The empirical work is real. The methodological emphasis is also a tactic. If minhag is flexible, then current restrictions on women’s roles might also be flexible. If minhag responds to context, then context might justify change. His rivals emphasize the binding force of accepted custom. They are not wrong about the sources. They emphasize a different aspect of the same tradition because they belong to a different coalition.
Apply the four diagnostic questions. Who supplies Sperber’s status, income, and protection? Bar-Ilan, the Israel Prize committee, the Modern Orthodox academic network, the Open Orthodox publishing circuit. Whom does he risk angering by speaking plainly? The Haredi rabbinate, the right wing of Religious Zionism, the conservative wing of the RCA, the Israeli Chief Rabbinate. Who benefits if his framing wins? Women seeking Orthodox ordination, partnership minyanim, JOFA, YCT, Maharat, the religious feminist movement. What truths might cost him his position? Conceding that his halakhic moves serve coalition interests rather than emerging from neutral textual analysis. Granting that the Haredi reading of the sources has more textual support than he admits. Acknowledging that the social costs of his innovations fall on traditional communities more than on his own.
Note what conventional accounts miss. The standard liberal account treats Sperber as a brave reformer pushing Orthodoxy toward justice. The standard Haredi account treats him as an academic infiltrator using scholarship to undermine tradition. Both accounts assume he acts from values. Pinsof’s framework suggests he acts from coalition logic, and so do his opponents, and the coalition logic on each side selects for the values that justify the coalition’s positions. The values come second. The coalitions come first.
Note also what Alliance Theory predicts about Sperber’s halakhic consistency. Pinsof predicts double standards. We find them. Sperber emphasizes the binding force of contemporary halakhic consensus when consensus favors his positions, such as the Modern Orthodox consensus on mixed-gender religious Zionist youth movements. He downplays consensus when it goes against him, such as the broad consensus against women’s ordination. He emphasizes textual sources when they help, such as medieval evidence for women receiving aliyot in some communities. He emphasizes minhag when texts are unfavorable, such as the dominant Ashkenazic practice of male-only public prayer. The selection pattern is what Pinsof predicts.

Convenient Beliefs

Sperber’s coalition is layered. He sits inside the Modern Orthodox and liberal Orthodox world. He writes for Bar-Ilan, the religious Zionist flagship academy. He published often in Edah, the now-defunct Modern Orthodox journal. He supports Yeshivat Maharat and the institutions training women clergy. He serves as honorary chancellor of the Canadian Yeshiva & Rabbinical School in Toronto, a non-denominational seminary. He also speaks to Conservative and Reform Jews who want a credentialed Orthodox figure to lend respectability to liberalizing moves they make on their own. The Israeli secular public, which gave him the Israel Prize, sits in the outer ring of his audience.
His convenient beliefs serve those audiences. He argues that halakha has always evolved and continues to evolve. He grounds his progressive ritual proposals in his rule of leniency: if you can find a permissive position, you should encourage it. He produces enormous philological and historical scholarship, the eight volumes of Minhagei Yisrael, his lexicons of Greek and Latin loanwords in rabbinic literature, his work on Roman Palestine, that gives his halakhic interventions a heavy academic weight. He says he is just describing what halakha has always done rather than innovating. The frame casts innovation as recovery, and recovery is harder to attack than innovation.
Now the inconvenient beliefs.
First, his support for women’s ordination as Orthodox clergy. He has argued that women may serve as halakhic decisors and lead certain ritual functions. He has trained and supported women in roles the Orthodox establishment treats as male-only. The mainstream Orthodox rabbinate, the RCA in America and the Israeli Chief Rabbinate, has rejected the position. Haredi rabbis treat Sperber as outside the camp on this issue. He has been condemned in print for failing to explain the source of his personal authority to override the Shulchan Aruch of Joseph Karo (1488-1575) and the rulings of Maimonides (1138-1204), which the Orthodox world treats as binding.
Second, his support for women reading Torah publicly in Orthodox synagogues. His Edah essay “Congregational Dignity and Human Dignity: Women and Public Torah Reading” gave halakhic cover to a practice the Orthodox mainstream forbids. Synagogues that run partnership minyanim cite him. The Israeli Chief Rabbinate does not.
Third, his daughter Abigail founded Bat Kol, an Orthodox Jewish lesbian organization. Sperber has not disowned her. He has not publicly distanced himself from her work. In Haredi society and in much of the right-wing Modern Orthodox world, the social cost of an out lesbian child is severe, and the cost of refusing to denounce her organization is severer still. Sperber has paid the cost while staying Orthodox. The position is inconvenient in a way no scholarship can soften, because it is a position of the heart visible to his community.
Fourth, his attack on contemporary stringency culture. He has called the expansion of the Ashkenazi kitniyot prohibition, now reaching cottonseed oil, sunflower oil, peanut oil, and even hemp, an absurdity. The Ashkenazi rabbinic establishment in Israel and America has driven the trend toward stringency for fifty years. Calling it absurd costs him with the rabbis driving it.
Fifth, his essay “Paralysis in Contemporary Halakhah?” indicts the rabbinic establishment for refusing to address modern questions. The title is a public charge. Rabbis in the establishment do not enjoy hearing the charge from a colleague who wins prizes and lectures at Princeton.
Sixth, his honorary chancellorship of the Canadian Yeshiva & Rabbinical School. Lending an Orthodox name to a post-denominational seminary is the kind of move that costs an Orthodox figure standing with the organized Orthodox rabbinate.
Why have these inconvenient positions not destroyed him? Several reasons.
He sits at Bar-Ilan, an academic chair rather than a pulpit. His income does not depend on a congregation that might fire him or a yeshiva that might expel him. The Israel Prize gives him a layer of public protection no rabbinic body can strip away. His scholarship on minhagim is so massive and so well-regarded that opponents cannot dismiss him as a lightweight. And his rhetorical move, framing innovation as recovery, lets him say he is restoring practice rather than inventing it.
The most inconvenient of his beliefs, by Turner’s measure, is the bundle around women in halakha: ordination, public Torah reading, ritual leadership. The bundle costs him the entire right wing of Orthodoxy. It costs him standing with the Israeli Chief Rabbinate. It probably cost him a higher rabbinic role than the one he holds. He has chosen the cost. The choice is the marker of a man whose convictions outweigh the local incentives. Turner’s frame predicts such men are rare and tend to have outside protection that lets them eat the cost. Sperber has the protection. He has used it.

Hybrid Vigor

Daniel Sperber entered the world in Gwrych Castle, Wales, where his parents ran a refugee camp for German Jewish children during the war. The location matters. His scholarly career emerged from a sequence of crossings the framework predicts will produce hybrid vigor: a Romanian-Hungarian rabbinic lineage on his father’s side (David Sperber, 1875-1962, the Brașover Rav, born in Zablotov to Vizhnitz Hasidim, who served the Brașov rabbinate from 1928 and resettled in Jerusalem after the war), a British boyhood in Manchester and London, yeshiva education at Kol Torah and Hevron in Jerusalem, art history training at the Courtauld Institute, classical philology at University College London under Arnaldo Momigliano (1908-1987), and a return to Israel as a Bar-Ilan Talmudist in 1968. Each transition crossed his inherited material with new genetic stock. The result is a scholar whose method does what the Babylonian sages did: takes the inherited tradition into contact with foreign legal reasoning, foreign theology, foreign material culture, and produces something more elaborate than the source could alone.
His scholarship makes the crossing visible. A Dictionary of Greek and Latin Legal Terms in Rabbinic Literature treats the Talmud as a document shaped by Roman legal vocabulary that the rabbis absorbed and repurposed. Roman Palestine 200-400 reads rabbinic sources for evidence about agrarian crisis under the late empire. The City in Roman Palestine maps rabbinic descriptions onto archaeological and classical sources. Nautica Talmudica handles seafaring vocabulary the rabbis acquired from Greek maritime culture. Magic and Folklore in Rabbinic Literature reads the Talmud against the magical papyri and Mesopotamian incantation bowls. The eight-volume Minhagei Yisrael documents how Jewish custom shifted as it traveled across Sephardic, Ashkenazi, Yemenite, and Italian environments, accumulating local variation that the closed-system halakhists treated as deviation but that he treats as evidence of how the tradition stayed alive by crossing.
This is methodological heterosis at the level of scholarly practice. The closed-system Talmudist who reads the Talmud only against the Talmud misses what the text does: absorb foreign material it pretends to reject. Sperber’s training under Momigliano gave him the tools to see the absorption. Momigliano was himself a hybrid, an Italian Jewish historian shaped by classical philology and German Wissenschaft, exiled to England by fascism, and what passed from teacher to student was not a body of doctrine but a stance toward ancient material that read every text as a record of cultural encounter. The scholar who reads the Talmud only against the Talmud sees a closed system doing internal work. The scholar trained to read the Talmud against Greek legal papyri and Persian Sasanian law sees an open system whose vigor came from what it absorbed.
Sperber’s career is more elaborated, more comprehensive, more generative than that of the typical Talmudist whose education stayed inside the system. He produced over thirty books and four hundred articles. He held the Milan Roven Chair of Talmudic Research, served as dean of Bar-Ilan’s Faculty of Jewish Studies, founded the Jesselson Institute for Advanced Torah Studies, and won the Israel Prize for Jewish Studies in 1992. The hybrid produced more than either parent line could produce alone.
Now turn to the harder application: his halakhic positions on women.
Sperber argued for women’s aliyot, wrote in support of women’s ordination, and provided halakhic rationale for women rabbis at Yeshivat Maharat. The conservative Orthodox response treated these positions as importing foreign material that disrupted co-adapted gene complexes (the integrated logic of gendered ritual roles, women’s exemption from time-bound mitzvot, the kavod hatzibbur principle) without understanding what the imports were doing. Sperber’s response was to demonstrate, through minhag scholarship, that the tradition had always been crossing with its environment. Women’s roles in synagogue had shifted across centuries. The closed-system reading that treated the current arrangement as essential confused a temporary equilibrium for the deep structure.
The framework keeps the question empirical rather than ideological. Did Sperber do heterosis, introducing material the tradition needed because the environment had changed, or outbreeding depression, disrupting co-adapted gene complexes faster than the tradition could absorb the import? Both readings have force.
The heterosis reading: the environment changed. Orthodox women now hold doctorates, run institutions, make professional decisions on behalf of complex organizations. A halakhic system that treats them as passive recipients of male religious authority loses fitness in that environment. The closed-system halakhists are defending a niche that no longer exists. Sperber’s crossing introduces traits the tradition needs to remain fit.
The outbreeding depression reading: the gendered structure of Jewish ritual life was co-adapted across centuries with assumptions about kinship, family economy, and ritual purity that hold together as a system. Pulling out one piece (women’s aliyot, women’s ordination) without addressing the rest produces traits the host system cannot integrate. The hybrid loses the deep optimization of the parent line without gaining compensating vigor. The Maharat-trained women rabbis lack the rabbinic standing of their male counterparts in Orthodox communities, and the institutions that ordain them lack the standing of the institutions that produced their teachers. The crossing has not yet produced offspring fit for the environment that received them.
Both readings might be partially right. The framework refuses to deliver an ideological verdict.
Niche construction is visible across his career. The Jesselson Institute, the Bar-Ilan University Press he founded in the late 70s, the Menachem Zion Synagogue in the Old City, his visiting position at Yeshiva University’s Bernard Revel Graduate School, his honorary chancellorship at the Canadian Yeshiva and Rabbinical School: each is environmental engineering that makes his approach more reproducible. His students teach from his methods. His books circulate as required reading. His liberal halakhic positions get cited as precedent in institutions he helped build. The niche he constructed selects for scholars who can do what he does, cross classical philology with Talmudic study, read the Talmud as a document of cultural encounter, and selects against scholars trained inside the closed system that treats the Talmud as a self-contained object.
The crypsis logic holds too. Sperber’s progressive halakhic positions might have been costly for an Orthodox scholar of his generation. The way he holds them suggests careful coloration. He frames his positions in classical halakhic vocabulary, cites traditional sources at every step, presents change as recovery of older practice rather than innovation, and maintains personal observance and Orthodox community ties throughout. The signal he produces is “traditional scholar engaging the tradition’s own logic,” which lets him advance positions that might mark a less skilled chameleon as foreign material to be expelled. He survives in his environment because his coloration matches the background, not because he has stopped doing what predators in that environment select against. That is what good crypsis looks like.
Antagonistic pleiotropy lurks at the edges. The hybrid methodology that gave him advantages in scholarship, reading the Talmud against classical and Persian sources, treating minhag as data rather than deviation, might generate later costs as the closed-system halakhists who resented his approach gain power in the institutions he helped build. His liberal positions on women have not become the Orthodox mainstream. The Yeshivat Maharat graduates remain a minority phenomenon. The Modern Orthodox institutions he influenced face their own crises of definition. The traits selected for in his early career environment (Bar-Ilan in the 70s, the academic-Orthodox interface) might prove maladaptive in the environment his late career inhabits (an Orthodox world that has moved right, an academy that has moved left, a Modern Orthodoxy squeezed between).
The family-level data is suggestive. He has ten children. One daughter, Abigail Sperber, founded Bat Kol, an organization for Orthodox lesbian women. The crossing his career embodies, Orthodox observance with progressive halakhic argument, produced offspring whose own crossings extended further than his. Whether the next-generation crossing produces hybrid vigor or outbreeding depression in the host community is the empirical question the framework keeps open. The Bat Kol example does not settle it. The framework predicts only that the closed-system alternatives, Haredi scholarship that refuses the academic crossing, secular academic Jewish studies that refuses the halakhic commitment, will accumulate the deleterious recessives that closed systems accumulate, and that the hybrid models will outperform them when the environment rewards what the hybrid can do that the parent lines cannot.

The Set

Daniel Sperber (b. 1940) lives in two overlapping worlds, and the people around him come from both.

The first is the world of academic Talmud and the history of rabbinic material culture. Here his company is the school that traced Greek and Latin loanwords through the Mishnah and the Talmud, a line running back to Saul Lieberman (1898–1983), and his peers are scholars like his co-author Yaakov Elman (1943–2018) and the colleagues at Bar-Ilan University who produced his festschrift under the editorship of Adam Ferziger. This set values philological exactness, command of papyri and coins and shipping terms, the ability to read a sugya against the Roman economy that produced it. Sperber won the Israel Prize for Jewish studies in 1992, and in this room the Prize is the coin of the realm. The hero is the scholar who knows the sources cold and can show you what a word meant to a man in third-century Palestine. Status flows to depth and breadth of reading. The essentialist claim here is quiet: halakha grew inside history, not above it, and a man who knows the history understands the law better than a man who only memorized the code.

The second world is the Modern Orthodox reform set, and it gives Sperber his fame and his enemies. The founding document of this movement is Mendel Shapiro’s Edah Journal article on women reading Torah. Sperber wrote the halakhic defense that congregations actually used. Tova Hartman built Shira Hadasha in Jerusalem on these rulings in 2002, the same year Darkhei Noam started in New York. Around them stand Tamar Ross (b. 1938), who wrote the philosophical opening to Sperber’s volume on communal prayer; Shlomo Riskin (b. 1940), who argued the dissenting side inside the same book; Blu Greenberg (b. 1936), founding president of the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance; and the Open Orthodox institutions of Avi Weiss (b. 1944), Yeshivat Chovevei Torah and Yeshivat Maharat, where Sperber took part in ordaining women. His own home sits inside this world too. His wife, Phyllis Hannah Magnus, works as a couples therapist, and his daughter Abigail founded Bat Kol, an Orthodox lesbian group.

What this set values is inclusion bought with halakhic labor. They will not simply copy the Reform and Conservative movements, even while admitting, as Hartman has, that those movements trained the first women who could read Torah at all. The price of admission to this club is that you find the heter inside the tradition. You do the sources. The hero of this world is the learned man who walks into the sea of halakha, swims to the bottom, and comes back up holding a lenient ruling that the establishment cannot dismiss as ignorance. Sperber is that hero to them. His Israel Prize and his Talmudic standing armor the project against the charge that it comes from people who do not know the law.

The status game runs on exactly that point. The opposition does not argue that Sperber is unlearned. They argue that he lacks the standing to overturn the Shulchan Aruch of Joseph Caro (1488–1575) and the rulings of Maimonides (1138–1204), which Orthodox circles treat as the strongest authorities. Aryeh and Dov Frimer wrote the long refutation in Tradition. Gil Student carried the fight on Torah Musings. Eliav Shochetman, a law professor at Hebrew University, attacked Shapiro’s reading from inside the academy. Their sharpest move is not to call Sperber wrong on a source. It is to ask by what right one man dislodges two millennia of practice. So the contest is over authority and the right to rule, and each side measures the other by who counts as a real posek and who is a crypto-Conservative wearing Orthodox clothes.

Sperber’s normative claims are plain and he repeats them. It is forbidden to permit the forbidden, and equally forbidden to forbid the permitted. Halakha changes when conditions change, and the rabbi must meet the change rather than flee it. When a lenient path exists, take it and encourage it. He built the women’s Torah-reading ruling on kevod ha-beriyot, human dignity, which in his reading can set aside kevod ha-tsibbur, the dignity of the congregation. On kitniyot he made the same move from the other direction, calling the modern stringencies absurd, naming cottonseed oil and sunflower oil and hemp as items added to a list that should be shrinking.

Underneath the rulings sits an essentialist claim about the law’s true character. For Sperber, the heart of halakha is responsiveness. Kevod ha-tsibbur was a social judgment tied to the low standing of women in the Mishnaic world, so when that standing rises the bar falls with it. The law, read rightly, bends toward human dignity and toward the permission of the permitted. The establishment holds the opposite essence. For them the law’s nature is continuity and submission to received authority, and a ruling that springs from one professor’s reading of dignity corrupts the thing it claims to serve. Both camps fight over the same question. They disagree about what Judaism, at its root, is for.

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Strange Bedfellows in the Beit Midrash: Coalition Politics in Sperber’s Project and Hollander’s Analysis

David Pinsof, David O. Sears, and Martie G. Haselton’s “Strange Bedfellows: The Alliance Theory of Political Belief Systems” gives the reader the tools to see what Hollander cannot see and what Sperber cannot afford to admit. The framework is simple. Belief systems are not philosophies. They are collections of ad hoc justifications, rationalizations, and moral vocabularies that mobilize support for one’s coalition and opposition to one’s rivals. Moral principles are selectively applied. Egalitarianism extends only as far as the coalition’s interests extend. Authority is respected when it belongs to allies and resisted when it belongs to rivals. The coalition comes first. The principles dress the coalition for public presentation.
Apply this to Sperber.
Sperber’s project presents itself as a recovery of halakha’s authentic humane spirit. Strip away the rhetoric and what remains is a coalition power move executed by bilingual, university-formed Modern Orthodox elites against the rival coalition of yeshiva-only haredi poskim who currently hold dominant interpretive authority. Every move in Sperber’s project advances the interests of his coalition. Every principle he invokes is selectively applied. The vocabulary of humane halakha is coalition technology of the sort Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton describe.
Consider what humane principles means in practice. The phrase has no fixed content. It cannot. Whatever educated Modern Orthodox sensibilities are at any given moment, humane principles will track them. In the 1950s humane principles meant something different than they mean now. In 2050 they will mean something different again. The phrase functions as a placeholder for the moral intuitions of an educated stratum. Those intuitions are shaped by the secular elite institutions that Modern Orthodox Jews attend. Harvard, Yale, Columbia, NYU, the LSE, Cambridge. The graduates of these institutions absorb a moral vocabulary drawn from feminism, liberal jurisprudence, therapeutic psychology, and democratic ethics. Sperber takes this vocabulary, calls it Torah’s authentic spirit, and uses it to argue that halakha must update.
The move is brilliant coalition strategy. It launders the secular elite’s moral vocabulary as Torah. It grants halakhic legitimacy to whatever the educated Modern Orthodox laity already feels. It rebrands cultural pressure as covenantal renewal. The Modern Orthodox Ivy League law graduate who attends an Orthodox shul does not have to choose between his credentialed sensibility and his religious commitment. Sperber tells him the credentialed sensibility is the religious commitment, properly understood. The coalition holds together because membership costs nothing.
Now apply Pinsof’s selective egalitarianism test. Sperber’s framework posits that emotional suffering and communal humiliation become interpretively significant. Whose suffering? Whose humiliation? The framework activates when an educated Modern Orthodox woman feels excluded from Torah reading. It does not activate when a haredi woman feels insulted by Modern Orthodox criticism of her lifestyle. The framework activates when a Modern Orthodox congregant who finds traditional roles painful experiences alienation. It does not activate when a haredi posek feels marginalized by academic credentialing requirements he cannot meet. The framework activates when sincere religious women experience halakhic exclusion as moral injury. It does not activate when traditional decisors experience the academization of pesak as an attack on the integrity of mesorah.
The pattern is the pattern Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton map in liberal politics. Liberals support equality when their allies are disadvantaged and oppose policies that disadvantage their rivals. They detect discrimination against atheists, African Americans, and women. They do not detect discrimination against Christians, men, and White people, even when polling data suggest those groups feel discriminated against. The asymmetry is not principled. It is coalitional. Sperber’s selective deployment of dignity and suffering follows the same logic.
The religious spirit of the community is the same move at the level of authority. Whose spirit? Sperber’s community. Sperber detects spirit where his coalition’s intuitions reside. The haredi spirit does not count. The spirit of communities that prefer rigidity does not count. The spirit of women who freely choose traditional roles does not count, except insofar as their choices can be reframed as false consciousness. Sperber’s community is a bounded coalition presented as the universal voice of Klal Yisrael. The presentation is propaganda. The bounded coalition is the operative reality.
Strange Bedfellows predicts that any move from the community to halakhic authority will track the speaker’s coalition rather than any genuine majoritarianism. The community whose validation Sperber needs is the community whose spirit Sperber finds normative. The authors spell out the route directly. Cognitive systems for choosing allies, namely similarity, transitivity, and interdependence, generate boundaries that look like communities but function as coalitions. The boundary that produces Sperber’s community is the boundary that produces his coalition. They are the same boundary.
Now turn to historical consciousness. Sperber claims that every generation reveals previously latent dimensions of Torah through new historical circumstances. The claim sounds general. In practice it activates only in one direction. New historical circumstances reveal Torah’s commitment to women’s ritual participation. They never reveal Torah’s commitment to gendered roles. New historical circumstances reveal Torah’s openness to academic methods. They never reveal Torah’s preference for the closed beit midrash. New historical circumstances reveal humane flexibility. They never reveal the wisdom of inherited stringency. The selectivity is total.
Historical consciousness in practice is the moral and intellectual consensus of the secular elite as articulated by the universities Modern Orthodox Jews attend. When Harvard discovers that gendered ritual is unjust, halakha must develop. When Harvard discovers that traditional sexual mores were correct after all, halakha will be slower to discover the same thing. The directionality is the directionality of the wider culture, mediated through the stratum that produces Sperber’s readers. Strange Bedfellows points the reader to this directly. When partisans claim moral principles, the principles track allies and rivals.
The democratization claim deserves the harshest treatment because it is the most cynical. Sperber’s framework is presented as transferring authority from elite poskim to the laity. The transfer is from one elite to another. Power moves from the haredi posek who has spent thirty years in yeshiva to the bilingual academic posek who has the yeshiva training plus the PhD plus the conference network plus the philological access plus the institutional appointments at Bar-Ilan and similar institutions. The yeshiva-only posek loses standing. The university-trained posek gains it. The communal Jew without academic credentials loses standing too, because his intuitions count only insofar as they happen to align with the credentialed sensibility. The haredi grandmother in Bnei Brak whose moral intuitions diverge from those of the Hadassah-attending Modern Orthodox lawyer has her intuitions filed under rigidity and discounted.
This is not democratization. It is coalition transfer. Pinsof’s frame describes the move cleanly. Coalitions form to advance the rank of their members. Sperber’s coalition consists of credentialed Modern Orthodox elites whose interests are served by elevating credentials and humane-modern sensibility as halakhic inputs. The framework that licenses this elevation is presented as a recovery of Torah’s authentic spirit. The framework’s function is to redistribute interpretive authority toward the coalition that supplies and consumes the framework.
This brings us to Hollander.
Hollander’s analysis is the analysis of an ally. He shares Sperber’s coalition. He writes for the readership Sperber writes for. He occupies the same hybrid academic-religious space, only one rung over. The convenient thing about Hollander’s position is that it lets him present allegiance as analysis. He calls himself a sociological observer of the controversy when he is a participant in it.
Strange Bedfellows predicts Hollander’s naivetes.
Hollander takes Sperber’s dignity-and-compassion rhetoric at face value. Pinsof’s frame would have flagged this rhetoric as coalition technology and asked where the symmetric concern goes. Hollander does not ask. He treats the rhetoric as descriptive of Sperber’s concern. He swallows whole the framing that humane halakha is about humans rather than about which humans get to govern.
Hollander frames the controversy as expressing structural tensions within modern religious life. Pinsof’s frame would have flagged this framing as a coalition move. Calling a power conflict a structural tension launders it. The launder serves Hollander’s coalition. The structural-tension framing lets Modern Orthodoxy keep its current institutional arrangements while sounding sophisticated about its discontents. It defers verdict. It absolves the participants of needing to win or lose. The participants who do not need to win or lose are the participants currently holding ground. Coalition advantage hides inside the language of structural tension.
Hollander writes that traditional rabbinic authority depended on rhetorical claims of continuity and timelessness. This is the deepest naivete in the essay. Authority did not depend on rhetoric. Authority depended on coalition power. The rhetoric of continuity was a feature of the coalition’s self-presentation, not the source of its power. The Vilna Gaon’s (1720–1797) authority did not come from his rhetorical claims. It came from the network of disciples, communal recognition, institutional patronage, philanthropic support, and disciplinary control over learning that his coalition exercised. The rhetoric of timelessness sat downstream of coalition power, not upstream. Hollander’s mistake is to treat rhetoric as causal when it is decorative. Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton make this point repeatedly. The moral and ideological vocabulary partisans deploy is not the source of their behavior. It is the surface presentation of their coalitional behavior. Hollander treats the surface as the substance.
Hollander accepts the framing that synthesis is what Sperber is doing. Pinsof’s frame asks who benefits from the synthesis framing. The answer is Hollander, Sperber, and the coalition they share. Synthesis sounds intellectually serious. It signals that the speaker has resolved tensions through careful integration rather than through coalition victory. Calling Sperber’s project a synthesis is what allies of Sperber call it. Critics of Sperber call it Reform Judaism in Orthodox costume. The choice between these descriptions is not analytic. It is coalitional. Hollander chooses the ally description and presents the choice as scholarship.
Hollander’s Weberian apparatus does similar work. Categorizing Sperber as a charismatic authority within a traditional system makes Sperber sociologically interesting and politically unjudgeable at the same time. Weber’s (1864–1920) charismatic-traditional distinction is a beautiful tool. The choice to apply this tool to this case at this moment is coalitional. The tool gives Sperber a flattering categorization. It tells the reader that Sperber is the kind of figure who appears at moments of historical transformation. It does not tell the reader whether Sperber’s rulings are right.
The meta-pattern is now visible. Hollander does for Sperber what Sperber does for Modern Orthodoxy. Sperber launders the secular elite’s moral vocabulary as Torah. Hollander launders Sperber’s coalition power move as a structural sociological development. Both moves protect the coalition by presenting it as a transcendence of coalition. Both moves treat the coalition’s interests as humanity’s interests, the coalition’s vocabulary as everyone’s vocabulary, the coalition’s spirit as the universal spirit.
Strange Bedfellows would not let Sperber call his preferences humane principles. They would not let Hollander call the controversy a structural tension. They would ask: whose preferences? whose tension? who benefits from the description? who loses if the description wins? The answers, in this case, are unflattering. They identify Sperber’s project as a coalition move by credentialed Modern Orthodox elites against haredi establishment authority, executed through the strategic deployment of moral vocabulary the elites already share with their wider secular professional coalition. They identify Hollander’s analysis as a coalition-protective gloss on the same move.
This does not say the move is wrong. Coalition moves are not wrong because they are coalition moves. Pinsof’s frame is descriptive, not condemnatory. Sperber’s coalition may be the better coalition. Its vision of halakha may produce a better Jewish future. Its sensibilities may be more morally accurate than haredi sensibilities. The frame does not adjudicate these questions. It only insists that we describe what is happening accurately. What is happening is coalition formation, coalition signaling, coalition propaganda, and coalition victory. The vocabulary of dignity and humanity is the propaganda. The propaganda may be true. It is propaganda regardless.
Hollander’s failure is to take the propaganda for the substance. The substance is the coalition. The propaganda is the rhetoric the coalition uses to mobilize support and to delegitimate rivals. A serious sociology of contemporary Orthodox jurisprudence has to begin where Hollander’s analysis ends. With the coalition. With its interests, its rivals, its weapons, its vulnerabilities, and its prospects. Strange Bedfellows points the way. Hollander does not follow it because following it would require him to describe his own coalition with the clarity he applies to halakhic disputes, and his position does not permit that description.
The most important question is what halakha looks like once one stops mistaking coalition for community, sensibility for spirit, and credential for revelation. Sperber cannot ask this question because his project depends on the conflations. Hollander cannot ask it because his analysis depends on Sperber’s project surviving as something more than coalition strategy. Strange Bedfellows readers can ask it. The asking does not produce a verdict on Sperber. It produces a description of what Sperber is. Sperber is the most articulate spokesman of an educated stratum’s bid for halakhic primacy under cover of universal moral vocabulary. The bid may succeed. The bid is what is happening. Calling it anything else is propaganda.
A final point about symmetry. The frame applies as fully to the haredi establishment as to Sperber. The haredi posek’s claim that mesorah is timeless, that academic methods are foreign intrusions, that the rigorous decisor occupies safer ground, is also coalition technology. Continuity rhetoric protects haredi coalition power exactly as humane-halakha rhetoric advances Modern Orthodox academic coalition power. Both sides deploy moral and theological vocabulary to mobilize support and to delegitimate rivals. Neither side is more honest. Halakhic discourse is coalition discourse, and the participants in it cannot describe their own activity without forfeiting their position within it. The honest analyst is the one outside the coalitions. There are few such analysts in this field, and Hollander is not among them.

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Marc Shapiro: ‘Comments on recent books by R. Benji Levy and R. Eitam Henkin; R. Joseph B. Soloveitchik; and the first color photographs of R. Jehiel Jacob Weinberg’

Marc B. Shapiro’s Levy and Henkin reviews each carry a sharp critical point. The Soloveitchik archive material is good for what it shows about how the Rav functioned in practice and how scholarship on him gets shaped by selective access to material.
On Levy and conversion, Shapiro’s correction matters. Benji Levy reads the Rav as holding that an apostate keeps his collective Jewish holiness even after losing individual holiness. Shapiro reads the Rav as holding that for most purposes the apostate severs his connection to the Jewish people. The Aharon Lichtenstein 1963 article, written in the wake of the Brother Daniel episode, was likely composed under the Rav’s close guidance. Shapiro adduces a document from his Hakirah 32 piece that quotes the Rav aligning directly with Lichtenstein. Levy’s textual argument turns on a distinction the Rav himself does not draw between an irreligious Jew and an apostate.
But Shapiro has a problem he half-acknowledges in a footnote. The 1965 Ha-Aretz interview has the Rav saying that according to formal halakhah Brother Daniel is a Jew, that he wrote to the Chief Rabbi urging a non-halakhic decision, and that he prayed the justices would not follow halakhah. That is not a shiur aside. It is a published interview. Shapiro leaves the tension unresolved. Either the Rav held two views in different periods, or he distinguished between formal halakhic categorization and something like spiritual-sociological standing, or his stance shifted with audience. The cleanest reading is the third. The Rav speaking to Lichtenstein and Hebrew correspondents takes one tone. The Rav speaking to a secular Israeli paper takes another. Both might be sincere, but they are not the same stance.
Henkin on stainless steel is the cleverest argument in the post and the one Shapiro disposes of with the right tool. Eitam Henkin runs an experiment, finds that his family cannot distinguish dairy-stirred tea from clean-stirred tea, and concludes that human taste perception has weakened since the Sages. The argument saves the halakhic concept of beliah by relocating the deficit from the utensil to the human palate. Shapiro’s rebuttal is that this shifts the goalposts. Stainless steel does not absorb. Granting weaker taste perception now, the Sages with their sharper palates still might not have detected anything in stainless steel because there is nothing there to detect. The question stands. R. Yaakov Ariel’s position that beliah operates by its own halakhic logic independent of empirical absorption is the escape route, but it changes what halakhah is doing here. It turns an empirical concept into a formal one. That move can be defended, but it should be made openly rather than through experiments designed to rescue an old framework.
The Bernard Homa story about the UK Chief Rabbinate. The Rav’s name comes up in 1947 as a candidate to succeed Joseph Hertz (1872-1946). The chairman, Sir Robert Waley Cohen, reports that the Rav does not know how to use a knife and fork properly. The committee drops him. Meir Persoff’s documentary work confirms the candidacy but not the cutlery reason. Even if Homa’s recollection embellishes the rejection, the anecdote captures something about Anglo-Jewish establishment culture in that period. Class, as much as theology, governed who got the post. Hertz himself had been an outsider candidate and faced similar resistance.
The Rebbetzin Pesha Soloveitchik material on reheating liquids is the most useful piece Shapiro adds for halakhic history. The Rav’s lenient position on putting cold soup on the blech traces to his mother’s reasoning from a sefek sefeika. Two doubts pile up: whether ein bishul achar bishul applies to liquids at all, and whether bringing food only to a lukewarm temperature triggers a rabbinic prohibition. She concludes the case is permitted. The Rav inherits this. He tells R. Irwin Haut in 1959 that liquids may be returned to the blech if they do not reach yad soledet bo. He tells the Maimonides school caterers a stricter version. The contrast between the two letters shows him distinguishing private competence from institutional supervision. Caterers cannot be trusted to monitor temperature. Individuals at home can. That is a sensible distinction and one many poskim do not make explicit.
The Darkhei Moshe exchange in the comments is a small lesson in public scholarly correction. Shapiro asserts confidently that parenthetical citations in the Rama are editorial additions that postdate the Rama and therefore cannot show what the Rama himself drew on. A commenter named Sass points out that the Rama in Darkhei Moshe sources the practice of standing during chazarat hashatz to Hagahot Minhagim, not to Maimonides. Shapiro acknowledges the point. Another commenter, Fotheringay-Phipps, adds that the standard printed Darkhei Moshe is an abridgement and that the Darkhei Moshe ha-Aruch is the authoritative source. The Hanukkah candles example Shapiro cites does turn out to source the Rambam in the longer version. Shapiro asks whether all parenthetical citations in the Rama trace to the Darkhei Moshe ha-Aruch. Nobody has done the study.
The lo tirtzah footnote raises a philosophical question Shapiro cannot fully resolve. The Rav in a 1940s YU graduate school lecture calls the prohibition on murder a hok, comparable to the prohibition on pork. Shapiro thinks this cannot be the Rav’s settled view because Noahide laws are not chukim. But the Rav is glossing the Akiva-Ishmael dispute, where Akiva holds that without God’s command we might commit murder. The Rav’s position is closer to a divine-command view than Shapiro grants. It tracks Maimonides in Guide 2:33, which categorizes the final seven Decalogue commandments as “generally accepted opinions” rather than rational. Marvin Fox (1922-1996) reads this as meaning we see the goodness only after revelation, not before it. Whether the Rav held this consistently, the position has standing in the Jewish philosophical tradition and is not something to write off as classroom provocation.
The color photographs of R. Jehiel Jacob Weinberg (1885-1966) in Montreux are striking for what they show about the gap between hagiographic representation and lived reality. Weinberg in those photographs looks like an old European rabbi sitting in a postwar Swiss town, surrounded by visiting students. The picture is small, the light is afternoon, the hat is the same hat. Color brings him forward in a way black and white does not. The same is true of the Djerba boys in the Alan Messner photograph. They are children at a Jewish school in a Tunisian island town in 2023. They could be from 1950 or 1900 except for the slightly different fabric of the shirts.
The Rav’s standing with feet together for the entire chazarat hashatz is one example of how a distinctive personal practice gets imitated by students and creates friction in shul. The Hadaya and Liebes argument about Maimonides on standing during chazarat hashatz is one of those cases where a creative lomdishe move gets undermined by textual scholarship, only for textual scholarship to be partly undermined by closer attention to Darkhei Moshe. The Saul Lieberman (1898-1983) recordings are worth listening to for the accent alone. The image of him drafting a teshuvah permitting collection of money on Yom Tov for Israel during the lead-up to the Six Day War, while Orthodox rabbis hesitate, fits Shapiro’s general portrait of Lieberman as a man comfortable taking responsibility for hard rulings.
Shapiro does not push these threads as hard as he might. The post hops from one item to the next in the manner of the bibliographic essay he has perfected over many years on this blog. The strength of the form is its range. The cost is that points get raised and dropped before they are pressed. The conversion question, the stainless steel question, the natural law question all deserve longer treatment. He tends to leave the harder problem in the footnote.

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Convenient Beliefs in the Halakhic Beit Midrash: Sperber, Hollander, and the Sociology of What Cannot Be Said

Applying Stephen Turner’s frame of convenient beliefs to the Daniel Sperber controversy yields reinterprets a beit midrash that has become methodologically aware of itself. Convenient beliefs, in Turner’s account, are the beliefs that survive within a profession because holding them serves the profession’s reproduction, status hierarchy, and coalitional interests. Sincerity is not the test. The test is whether the belief would survive if it stopped serving the structural needs of those who hold it.
Sperber’s project rests on a small set of beliefs that are extraordinary in their convenience.
The first: classical poskim were already doing what he is doing, only less explicitly. This grants retroactive legitimacy to his methodological program. He does not innovate; he recovers. The Geonim used context. The Rishonim attended to communal welfare. The Aharonim consulted historical realities. Sperber merely names what was always there. The belief is convenient because it solves the problem of justification at zero rhetorical cost. He never has to defend introducing academic methods. He only has to defend the claim that the methods were always present in concealed form. Whether this claim is historically accurate is a separate question. What concerns Turner’s frame is what the belief does for the holder. It allows Sperber to be radical and traditional in the same gesture.
The second: halakha contains dormant humane principles that modern conditions compel us to activate. This belief converts adaptation into fidelity. Without it, Sperber would have to admit that something new is entering halakha through him. With it, he is merely a midwife to truths that were always pregnant in the tradition. The convenience is double. It protects him from the charge of innovation. It also protects him from the charge of secularism, because the humane principles are presented as Torah’s own, not as imports from democratic culture.
The third: excessive stringency is a deviation from Torah rather than a safe default. This belief reverses the burden of proof in pesak. Under the older rabbinic ethos, the rigorous decisor occupies the safer ground; the lenient decisor must justify himself. Sperber inverts this. The lenient decisor occupies the safer ground because Torah’s own values pull toward dignity, compassion, and inclusion. The rigorous decisor must now justify cruelty. The convenience is enormous. It shifts the rhetorical default of the entire halakhic argument.
The fourth: the religious spirit of the community can be detected and used as evidence. The community whose spirit Sperber detects happens to be the community he writes for. The educated, dignity-attuned, university-trained Modern Orthodox laity appears as the population whose moral intuitions deserve halakhic weight. Less reflective communities, less morally articulate communities, communities that prefer rigidity. These do not appear in Sperber’s account as legitimate sources of halakhic data. The selection is not announced. It is structural. The community whose spirit Sperber finds normative is the community whose validation Sperber needs.
The fifth: openness to historical change is a Torah value. This belief allows Sperber to embrace historical consciousness without paying the price of historicism. He can acknowledge that halakha develops without admitting that development might have no internal limit. The acknowledgment becomes a form of piety rather than a threat to authority.
These beliefs hold together. Each protects the others. Together they let Sperber occupy a stable position from which he can produce continuous innovation while presenting himself as a conservator. The structural function of the belief cluster is to license a project that traditional rhetoric could not license openly. Whether Sperber holds these beliefs sincerely is irrelevant to the analysis. The beliefs are selected for, within his professional and communal habitat, by their capacity to perform this licensing function.
R. Aviad Hollander writes as a Modern Orthodox rabbi for an Israeli academic-religious readership. His habitat is the same hybrid space Sperber inhabits, only one rung over. He is the second-order observer of the first-order practitioner. The convenient beliefs available to him have a different shape but a related logic.
Hollander needs Sperber to be reconstructable as a hybrid figure rather than as a reformer in Orthodox costume. The reason is structural. If Sperber is a reformer, then Modern Orthodoxy contains the seeds of its own dissolution, and the hybrid academic-religious project Hollander represents is not a stable form but a holding pattern. If Sperber is a hybrid synthesizing rather than transitioning, then Modern Orthodoxy is a coherent project, and Hollander’s institutional position is secured. The reconstruction Hollander offers is not a lie. It is the reading of Sperber that allows Hollander to keep doing what Hollander does.
Hollander’s framing of the controversy as an expression of deeper structural tensions rather than as a referendum on Sperber’s rulings carries a similar convenience. If the controversy is structural, no one needs to win. The tensions play out and the work continues. If the controversy is a referendum, someone has to lose, and the losers might be either the educated MO laity whose intuitions Sperber validates or the rabbinic establishment whose authority he qualifies. By framing the dispute as structural, Hollander defers the question that would force a verdict.
The Weberian apparatus does similar work. Categorizing Sperber as a charismatic authority within a traditional system gives the reader a sociological vocabulary that classifies without judging. The reader learns what kind of figure Sperber is. The reader does not learn whether Sperber is right. Weber’s category is a way of describing Sperber that does not require a stance on his pesak.
Hollander’s refusal to caricature Sperber as either reformer or reactionary appears as analytical balance. It is also professional positioning. Endorsing Sperber would alienate the haredi-leaning end of the readership. Rejecting Sperber would alienate the liberal-leaning end. The middle is the only position from which Hollander can speak to both ends of his readership at once. Balance is what the position requires for its own viability.
The four diagnostic questions tighten the analysis. Who supplies Hollander’s status, income, and institutional protection? Religious-academic structures that depend on the academic-religious synthesis remaining defensible. Who does he risk angering by speaking plainly? Both flanks of his Modern Orthodox readership. Who benefits if his framing wins? The Modern Orthodox project as such, because the framing licenses MO’s continued existence without forcing it to resolve its internal contradictions. What truths would cost him his position? Three at least. That Sperber’s communal-feedback method has no internal stopping rule. That the religious spirit of the community is a euphemism for the sensibilities of a particular educated stratum. That Modern Orthodoxy may be a transitional sociological form rather than a stable synthesis. None of these appears in Hollander’s analysis. Their absence is structurally selected, not the result of any single choice.
Ernest Becker’s (1924–1974) account of hero systems clarifies what Sperber offers his readers. Modern Orthodox Jews live with a particular form of mortality anxiety: not death, but the death of their tradition through their own children. They cannot become haredi. They suspect their grandchildren may not remain Orthodox at all. Sperber offers a hero system in which adapting halakha to modern moral consciousness is the act of preservation. The brave decisor who innovates is the one who saves Torah from emotional irrelevance. Adaptation becomes virtue rather than failure. The hero system functions because it solves the immortality problem for an audience that needs a path between two kinds of dissolution.
Hollander’s essay reproduces the hero system one level up. The brave analyst who can hold the complexity of Sperber’s project without flattening it into reform or reaction is the one who saves Modern Orthodoxy from intellectual incoherence. Hollander becomes the figure who can be trusted because he resists easy categorization. The hero system rewards the very ambiguity that the convenient beliefs require.

Posted in R. Aviad Hollander, R. Daniel Sperber | Comments Off on Convenient Beliefs in the Halakhic Beit Midrash: Sperber, Hollander, and the Sociology of What Cannot Be Said

DEI Discriminates Against Whites

Steve Sailer asks the wrong question. He treats non-grasping as a cognitive failure. It is a coalitional achievement.
The Bryant Rousseau case shows the operation. The hiring pool for deputy real-estate editor: a White woman, a Black man, an Asian woman, a multiracial woman. No White men. The multiracial woman got the job and lacked the listed real-estate journalism experience. The plaintiff has the listed experience. Under Title VII as written, and after Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services (2025) eliminated the heightened pleading standard for majority-group plaintiffs, that is a strong prima facie case of disparate treatment. After Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard (2023), the cultural permission slip universities had been operating under is gone, and Title VII never offered one to begin with.
So why the newsroom confusion? Read the reporter quote: “You’re giving the Trump administration a weapon while they’re trying to persecute journalists.” That is not analysis of the complaint. It is coalition speech. The grievance is not that Rousseau is wrong. It is that he went outside the in-group with a true claim. The “shitshow” of trying to identify him is intimidation of an EEOC charging party, which Title VII forbids, and the staffers cannot see the illegality because their moral vocabulary classifies him as a traitor rather than a victim.
The Charlotte Klein piece in New York magazine is a coalition document. Headline verbs do the work: “Claiming,” “Suing.” The other reporter’s “plenty of white guys at the top” defense is a tell. Title VII does not care about aggregate representation. It cares about this hire. The reflex to answer an individual disparate-treatment claim with a group-representation argument is exactly what SFFA rejected.
Anti-discrimination vocabulary at the Times is a coalition technology, not a description of the world. The vocabulary protects in-group members and disciplines defectors. Run the four diagnostic questions on the staffers quoted: who supplies status and income (the Times), who they risk angering by speaking plainly (editors, HR, peers), who benefits if the plaintiff’s framing wins (Trump’s EEOC, conservative legal foundations), what truth costs them their position (that their employer’s diversity commitments produced an illegal hire). Non-grasping is the rational response to those incentives.
Anti-racism is the hero system. Granting that anti-racism produces racial discrimination collapses the cosmology. The perceptual block is not stupidity. It is the cost of keeping the world coherent. Charles Taylor’s porous self cannot admit the disconfirming evidence without losing the enchantment.
Sailer’s piece works as reportage and falters as analysis because he treats his own clarity as the default and the Times’ fog as deviation. His clarity is the deviation. He occupies an exapted niche the institutional press cannot reach, which is why he gets read on this beat at all. The interesting move is not to mock the non-grasping but to map what the grasping costs. For Rousseau, the cost is now permanent. For the staffers chasing his identity, the cost of grasping might be larger than the cost of pretending not to.
The Times spokesperson’s defense (“a single personnel decision”) will not survive discovery if the plaintiff’s lawyers can put the paper’s own published diversity commitments in front of a jury. They can.

Posted in Diversity | Comments Off on DEI Discriminates Against Whites

NYT: What Are ‘Teen Takeovers’ and Why Are Police Struggling to Stop Them?

The New York Times says: “Across the country, police and city officials are trying to crack down on sometimes violent youth gatherings, but the teens themselves say they need some way to socialize and blow off steam.”
Steve Sailer writes:

Never forget that you must always forget about the Floyd Effect. We wouldn’t want to learn a lesson as a society about what precisely caused black deaths by homicide and car crash to soar 44% and 39% respectively during the second triumph of Black Lives Matter because that would be embarrassing to the New York Times…
Any bets on how many paragraphs it will take the NYT before it mentions the word “black?” Excuse me, I meant, before the NYT mentions the word “Black.”

The NYT article reads as evasion at every level. The paragraphs march through sociological setup before reaching the racial pattern at paragraph 23. Even then the racial pattern enters through Steinberg (b. 1952) and Henning, not through the reporters. The reporters never write the sentence “most teen takeover violence centers on Black teens.” They let academics gesture at it while criticizing how others frame the issue.
The equivalence-making in the NYT does much work. The 1952 Korean War anxiety quote, the comparison to skateboarders, the Steinberg line about every generation thinking the kids are doomed. All of this softens what the article describes elsewhere: a 15-year-old in Detroit hiding from gunfire, an Oklahoma City lake shooting that killed one and wounded 22, takeovers ending with arson against police cars. Reporters cannot have it both ways. Either the takeovers resemble skateboarding, or they include gang shootings.
The Henning quote about “Black and Latino youth gatherings” lumps two groups whose homicide rates differ by a factor of six. CDC numbers for 2024 show Black youth firearm homicide rates 6.3 times Hispanic rates and 22.6 times White rates. The lumping is no slip. Distinguishing would force the question of what Black youth violence reflects, and the article exists to avoid that question.
Steinberg’s claim that adult concern reflects “dog whistling” runs into a problem. The 1990s superpredator panic tracked real numbers. Juvenile homicide arrests peaked in 1993 at historic levels and fell sharply afterward. The panic got the rhetoric wrong but the trend right. Calling the response a panic erases the data that drove it. The same pattern repeats with this article. The framing tells readers their concern reflects bias when their concern reflects observation.
The capitalization split deserves attention on its own. The NYT capitalizes Black and writes white lowercase. The choice rests on the claim that Black names a shared culture and identity while white names only a demographic category. The argument has supporters, but the consequence reads as uneven dignity-attribution. A reader who notices the asymmetry notices that the paper assigns moral weight to one group and not the other. Once noticed, the paper loses a measure of authority.
Reader comments tell the rest of the story. The top-voted responses come from self-identified liberals, interracial couples, urbanites who live near the takeovers. They reject the article’s frame in plain words. “It’s a behavioral problem.” “Apathetic, uninvolved, or absent parents.” “Where are the parents?” The editors aimed at one audience and missed it.
The reporting fails at the craft level too. The reporters do not appear to have attended a takeover. They do not interview anyone who organizes one. They quote a Detroit Youth Advisory Panel teen who uses the word “modality.” They quote academics. The takeover participants stay offstage. The story lacks the detail that would tell you who these kids are, where they come from, what schools they attend, what gangs claim what corners, where the guns originate. The article stays high-altitude and leaves the ground-level reporting to the comment section.
The article does include useful detail almost by accident. The Detroit mayor met with takeover organizers herself and brokered concrete responses. The Chicago police superintendent said plainly that the fights get worse over time. Mayors and police chiefs handle streets. They cannot afford the article’s framing. The gap between people running cities and reporters writing about cities runs through the piece.
The proposed responses – late-night basketball, youth advisory panels, more public space – have been proposed continuously since the Kerner Commission in 1968. None has stopped the recurrence. The article does not note this history.
The deepest evasion concerns the post-2020 homicide spike. The article calls it “pandemic highs” without engaging the timing. Murders rose sharply in summer 2020, after the Floyd protests and the police pullback that followed, not in spring 2020 when the pandemic began. Treating the spike as a COVID effect protects a reading. Treating it as a Floyd effect might force questions the paper has chosen not to ask.
You have an article that knows what it cannot say, says everything around it, and produces a comment section that fills in the gap.
Sailer (b. 1958) does what he often does: read the article through, count paragraphs to the racial admission, and audit the framing against the data.
The NYT piece performs several coalition-protective moves at once. The lede frames the issue as a perennial worry about youth, with a 1952 quote about Korean War anxiety supplying historical cover. The implication runs: every generation panics, this is just the latest panic. Then the article cites Laurence Steinberg (b. 1952), who attributes concern to “dog whistling” about Black kids gathering. Then it quotes Kristin Henning comparing current police response to White skateboarders in the 1980s, as if the empirical question of violence levels has been settled. Skateboarders did not shoot each other.
Sailer’s data point lands here. Black youth ages 15 to 24 die by firearm homicide at 22.6 times the rate of White youth and 6.3 times the rate of Hispanic youth, per CDC WONDER 2024. The Hispanic comparison kills the “Black and Latino youth” lumping Henning supplies. Lumping is the move that hides the gap, and any honest reporter checking CDC tables sees it in five minutes.
Through Pinsof, “dog whistle” works as a coalition vocabulary. The word lets readers refuse the empirical claim without engaging it. The professor supplies the vocabulary; the reader uses it; the loop closes.
Through Turner’s convenient beliefs frame, the experts hold structurally selected positions. Steinberg cannot say in the New York Times that Black youth violence runs empirically high without coalition cost. Henning, a Georgetown juvenile justice scholar, cannot frame the question as “what produces this rate gap” without losing standing in her professional networks. Their employment, citation patterns, invitations, and professional reputation all depend on the frame they supply. The article reads as if these were neutral expert opinions. They are coalition-aligned positions delivered through expert credentialing.
Through Alexander’s cultural trauma frame, the 1990s superpredator episode has been coded as trauma where Black youth were victims of White panic. That coding erases the empirical crime spike of those years. Once the trauma frame locks in, recurrence of the phenomenon gets read as recurrence of White panic, not recurrence of the phenomenon. The article performs that read.
Now the comments. The top-rated reader responses reject the article’s frame, hundreds of upvotes each. These are paying NYT subscribers, mostly liberal, mostly urban. Their pushback signals a credibility gap between the editorial coalition and the subscriber coalition. The editors write for an imagined progressive reader who wants the dog-whistle frame. The actual reader paying twenty-five dollars a month wants someone to say plainly that mob violence by teens of any race deserves arrest and prosecution, and that the racial pattern is real and worth addressing rather than burying.
Sailer’s Law of Mass Shootings holds again at Lake Arcadia. Eighteen-year-old gang member, switch-equipped pistol, gang dispute that started as a fight between two women. The shooting maps to the gang-shooting category, not the AR-15 ideological-mass-shooter category that drives gun-policy media coverage.
The sixteen-year-old who used “modality” gives the game away. The journalist found a kid on Detroit’s Youth Advisory Panel rather than a kid attending the takeovers. The takeover participants do not get quoted. The kids on the youth board, who already speak the institutional vocabulary, do.
The gap to watch is mayoral versus editorial. Mary Sheffield in Detroit appears to take the issue more seriously than the NYT framing suggests. Democratic mayors handling actual streets pay a political price the editors do not. That price might force adjustments the editorial line cannot.

Posted in Blacks, Journalism | Comments Off on NYT: What Are ‘Teen Takeovers’ and Why Are Police Struggling to Stop Them?

The Silent Son

A young Orthodox man at twenty-three, raised in Pico-Robertson, schooled at a yeshiva, sitting next to his father at the Shabbos table. He has been using oxycodone for two years. He has not told his parents. He has not told his rabbi. He has not told his closest friend from yeshiva. He has not told anyone at all. Three months from now he will die in a rented apartment. The toxicology will confirm fentanyl. His parents will tell the chevra kadisha he had a heart attack. The death certificate will list cardiac arrest. The death will join an unwritten list that everyone in the community half-knows about.
The question this essay tries to answer is not why the parents chose the heart attack frame. The question is why the son said nothing for two years.
The standard explanations focus on stigma, denial, and concealment. Those are real. They sit at the institutional level. They explain how communities manage information. They do not reach the interior of the young man who has the secret in his pocket. To get there, look at the masculinity he has been shaped by since he was nine years old.
In a yeshiva-formed Orthodox home, the young man is taught from boyhood that he is a link in a chain. The chain runs back to Sinai. It runs forward to grandchildren who do not yet exist. His daily learning, his future marriage, his children, his standing in the kehillah, all of these depend on him remaining a link that holds. The Hebrew vocabulary expresses the role with precision. He is a koveia itim, one who sets fixed times for study. He is a future baal ha-bayis, the steady pillar of his home. His ideal is the talmid chacham, the wise student whose discipline anchors the community. None of these terms permit chaos. None of them permit a body that has stopped obeying him.
When that young man develops a chemical dependency, he does not have a clean word for what is happening to him. The vocabulary he has been given for human struggle runs through religious categories: yetzer hara, the inclination to evil; teshuvah, repentance; bitachon, trust in divine providence; nisayon, the test sent to refine him. These categories carry centuries of moral seriousness. They have sustained Jewish men through harder conditions than most contemporary Orthodox Jews face. They are not built, however, for the phenomenology of opioid receptors, dopamine depletion, panic attacks, dissociation, or compulsive return to a chemical that has stopped giving pleasure and now only quiets withdrawal. He has the experience. He does not have the words.
The clinical vocabulary that might describe him plainly sits on the other side of a wall the community has reasons to keep up. To pick up that vocabulary is to admit that his condition has stepped outside the religious frame his family lives inside. It is to import the language of the goyish therapist, the secular hospital, the twelve-step meeting populated by men whose lives bear no resemblance to his own. The bridge between the two vocabularies is narrow. Few young men are taught how to walk across it.
So he interprets himself with what he has. The religious vocabulary turns his condition into moral verdict. He is not sick. He is failing. He is not in the grip of a chemical disorder. He is yielding to the yetzer. The proper response is not detox and a sponsor. The proper response is more learning, more davening, more discipline, more shame, more teshuvah. He tries all of it. None of it works. Addiction has chemical contempt for willpower. The young man does not know this yet. He concludes the failure is in him. He has been told all his life that the religious tools work. When they fail, he reads himself as the broken instrument.
The next layer is the family. He understands the arithmetic before anyone teaches it to him. His sister is in the marriage market. His younger brother is about to enter yeshiva ketana. His mother has spent twenty years building the family’s position in the community. His father teaches a daf yomi shiur and serves on a school board. To say “I am addicted and I need help” is not a private admission. It is a sentence that detonates outward across every member of his home. The matchmakers will hear within a week. The shul will hear within two. The school will hear within three. His sister’s prospects will narrow visibly. His brother’s yeshiva options will quietly contract. His parents’ standing will shift from substantial to suspect. He carries this arithmetic in his head every time he considers speaking.
So he stays silent. The silence is not cowardice. It is loyalty wearing the wrong clothes. He believes he is protecting the people he owes the most to. He believes that if he can just hold on, just push through this stretch, just summon enough willpower or faith or external structure, the addiction will burn out and no one will have to know. The belief is wrong but it is not absurd. It is what the religious vocabulary tells him about struggle. Hold on. Trust. Repent. Try harder. The vocabulary works for many trials. It does not work for fentanyl.
Meanwhile his public life continues. He attends Shacharis. He learns with his chavrusa. He sits with his father at the Shabbos table. He answers the rabbi’s questions in shiur. He performs the role he has been given. Orthodox formation produces this kind of external functionality at high quality. Boys learn early how to perform discipline publicly even when internally unraveling. Yom Kippur teaches it. Shabbos teaches it. The siddur teaches it. The visible performance of religious life doubles as training in the management of internal weather.
Parents are often shocked when the body is found. Outsiders assume they must have known. Sometimes they did. Often they did not. The son had built his concealment with the same skills the community trained him to develop. His public self performed reliably until the body could no longer keep up.
When the body is found, the family enters a grief that has no place in their public world. There is no liturgy for the death of a son to fentanyl. There is no agreed sequence of communal acknowledgment that lets them mourn without imploding. The death is theological scandal and social catastrophe braided together. In that vacuum, the family reaches for the heart attack frame.
The frame is not pure deception. Overdoses culminate in cardiac arrest. The medical reality and the social euphemism overlap enough to give the family a survivable narrative. The parents can sit shiva. The community can come and weep. The siblings can finish their semester at school. The father can return to his daf yomi shiur. The mother can take the casserole dishes back to the women who brought them. The machinery of religious life keeps turning.
The euphemism is partly a kindness the family extends to its surviving members. It protects the younger sister whose shidduch chances might otherwise drop overnight. It allows the father to walk into shul without becoming an object of scrutiny. It preserves the possibility that the dead son can be remembered as a holy soul taken too soon rather than as a problem child whose private life ran out of road. Most of all, it gives the survivors enough narrative ground to keep functioning.
Critics read this as denial and they are partly right. Denial is in the room. So is grief, so is shock, so is the practical management of multiple children who still need to be raised. The fuller reading treats the euphemism as triage. Tightly interwoven moral communities cannot absorb unlimited reputational chaos without destabilizing the institutions of trust, marriage, and continuity that sustain them. The family chooses the frame least likely to produce secondary casualties. The choice is intelligible. The cost falls on the next struggling son, who learns once more that his condition has no name in this community.
The unresolved question is translational. How does a community add a vocabulary for chemical dependency without dissolving the religious vocabulary that has held it together for centuries? The wholesale import of secular therapeutic language will not work, and many Orthodox observers correctly resist it. The expressive individualism of therapeutic culture corrodes the communal obligations Orthodox life rests on. The challenge is to translate, not to replace. To honor the existing moral grammar while adding terms that describe human fracture without converting fracture into moral verdict. To let a son say I am addicted and I need help without that sentence detonating his family.
Until the translation exists, the silent sons will keep going silent. The families will keep choosing the heart attack frame. The next mother will hear the word fentanyl from a coroner who does not know the cost of saying it plainly. The cruelty of the pattern is that the silence emerges from virtues the community has every reason to defend. The young man’s silence is not a defect. It is the price of his loyalty to a home that has not yet found the words to keep him alive.

Posted in Addiction, Masculinity, Orthodoxy | Comments Off on The Silent Son

The Heart Attack Euphemism

Young Orthodox men, often married with children, keep dying of drug overdoses. Their families called the deaths heart attacks. The pattern shows up in LA, Brooklyn, Lakewood, and Queens. Rabbi Zvi Gluck of Amudim has reported more than sixty opioid-related deaths in New York Orthodox circles in 2017 alone. Most of those counts come from advocates rather than coroners, so treat them as advocacy estimates rather than verified epidemiology. The pattern is real. Insiders know.
The harder question is why.
Start with the four questions. Whose coalition gives the bereaved family status and income? Their shul, their school, their relatives, their matchmakers, their business contacts, their rabbinic references. Who do they risk angering by naming the death plainly? Every tier of that coalition. Who benefits if the heart attack frame wins? The siblings on the shidduch market, the parents preserving social capital, the institutions avoiding scrutiny, the community defending the convenient belief that frum life inoculates against addiction. What truth might cost them their position? That observance does not protect, that the high-boundary system produces hidden casualties, that the prized son was using fentanyl-laced pills.
The four questions land on the same answer. Calling it a heart attack is not denial. It is rational coalition behavior in a thick reputational market.
David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory makes the logic explicit. Beliefs and statements function as alliance signals. In a community where matchmakers, schools, and rabbis trade informal information, every public claim about a family is a coalition move. An overdose disclosed openly damages siblings, cousins, and future grandchildren. A heart attack closes the file. The family chooses the frame that protects the kinship coalition. This is not a flaw of frum life. It is what coalitions do under pressure.
Stephen Turner (b. 1951) names the second layer. Communities run on convenient beliefs that resist evidence because the costs of revising them fall on insiders. “Jews don’t have addiction problems” was a useful belief for decades. It flattered the community, confirmed the protective story of religious life, and licensed parents to overlook warning signs in their sons. The opioid wave shattered the empirical claim. The convenient belief persists anyway, surviving in softer forms: addiction is mostly a Modern Orthodox problem, or only the dropouts, or only the kids who went to college, or only Russian families. Each retreat preserves the protective frame for the next layer of insiders.
Ernest Becker (1924-1974) supplies the third layer. Every culture builds a hero system that tells men how to earn dignity and how to defeat death. The frum hero system runs on narrow paths: yeshiva achievement, marriage, kollel, parnassah, raising more frum children. The system produces high-functioning men by the thousand. It also produces men who fail one rung and find no second ladder. A young man who cannot study, cannot perform, cannot fit, cannot marry well, has few accepted scripts of manhood. Pills and powder offer a private exit from a public hero system that has stopped working for him. When he dies, the family cannot say he failed the hero system. So the body becomes a heart attack.
The Orthodox public self has clear boundaries, religious routine, communal supervision, an outside that stays outside. Drug use punctures that wall. Fentanyl does not knock. The body becomes porous to chemicals the buffered self was supposed to exclude. The euphemism rebuilds the wall posthumously. Heart attack restores the buffered story. Overdose admits the porousness the community has been pretending was someone else’s problem.
A biological frame sharpens the picture. Crypsis is the camouflage strategy organisms use to avoid predators by matching the background. The bereaved family practices social crypsis. The euphemism is protective coloring against the predators of the shidduch market, the school admissions committee, the business reference network. The cardiac language matches the medical background closely enough to disappear. Overdose deaths often do culminate in cardiac arrest. The family does not have to invent. It has only to choose the truer-sounding adjacent fact.
Jeffrey Alexander (b. 1947) reminds us that cultural trauma is not what happens but what gets named. A community decides which deaths become founding wounds and which deaths stay private medical events. Three overdose deaths in a year might become a communal reckoning, a series of memorial speeches, a wave of reform. Or they might stay heart attacks, absorbed quietly, each family carrying its grief alone. The choice is made by rabbis, parents, board members, and the matchmakers who decide whether a family’s losses get spoken aloud. Cultural trauma is a political act. So is its absence.
Randall Collins (b. 1941) explains how the silence holds at the level of daily ritual. Interaction ritual chains run on focused attention and shared mood. A funeral that names overdose creates one chain. A funeral that names heart attack creates a different one. Once the second chain begins, every shiva visit, every condolence call, every shul announcement reinforces the agreed frame. To break the chain mid-week, a relative must disrupt a high-emotion ritual that everyone has invested in. Almost no one does. The euphemism becomes load-bearing because hundreds of small rituals now rest on it.
The masculine layer deserves more attention. Young men in high-boundary religious communities often have limited emotional vocabulary outside religious categories. Failure registers as spiritual collapse, masculine inadequacy, and family betrayal at once. There is no available script for “I am addicted and I need help” that does not carry catastrophic implications for the speaker and the speaker’s siblings. So the addiction stays hidden until the body is found. Then the family inherits a death they had no warning of, and they choose the frame that lets them keep functioning. The heart attack euphemism is partly a kindness the family extends to its own surviving members.
None of this is unique to Orthodox Jews. Irish Catholic families hid suicides. Old WASP families hid alcoholism. Mormon families hid prescription dependence. Honor cultures across the world smooth deaths that threaten reputation. The relevant variable is not the religion but the density of the kinship network and the price of public information. Orthodox Judaism has both at high levels. The pattern shows up there in sharper form.
The picture has changed in the last decade. Amudim, Beit T’shuvah, Hatzolah’s Narcan training, frum recovery meetings, podcasts, memoirs, and rabbis who speak openly from the pulpit have broken the monopoly of silence. The euphemism still wins many funerals. It no longer wins all of them. The community now has at least two competing scripts where it had one.
The Orthodox community teaches that observance produces a man who’s disciplined and guarded against the disorders of the outside world. The drug deaths show that the porous self is closer to the truth. Bodies absorb what cultures pretend they exclude. Communities are made of porous people whether they say so or not. The heart attack euphemism is the buffered kehilla defending its story one last time, against the body of a son who proved porous.

JTA: As Opioid Crisis Grows In Orthodox Circles, Those Closest Speak Out
Times of Israel: Cocaine and Jews
Kveller: Opioid Addiction is Plaguing the Ultra-Orthodox Community
NBC News: Battling addiction in Orthodox Jewish community means breaking through silence
Report: How The Opioid Epidemic Affects The Jewish Community

Posted in Addiction, Drugs, Orthodoxy | Comments Off on The Heart Attack Euphemism