{"id":170918,"date":"2026-02-18T13:20:38","date_gmt":"2026-02-18T21:20:38","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=170918"},"modified":"2026-02-19T09:26:09","modified_gmt":"2026-02-19T17:26:09","slug":"decoding-rabbi-pinchas-goldschmidt","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=170918","title":{"rendered":"Decoding Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><A HREF=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Pinchas_Goldschmidt\">Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt<\/a>. Former Chief Rabbi of Moscow. Major international figure through the Conference of European Rabbis. Influence today is diplomatic and symbolic but still significant across Europe.<\/p>\n<p>ChatGPT says: Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt is a transnational alliance diplomat whose power shifted from jurisdictional to symbolic without disappearing.<\/p>\n<p>As Chief Rabbi of Moscow, his authority was once concrete and local. He coordinated Jewish life under a hostile and unpredictable state. That role required credibility with Jews, tactical fluency with power, and restraint under pressure. Those traits later became portable assets.<\/p>\n<p>After leaving Russia, his influence reconstituted at a higher level. Through leadership of the Conference of European Rabbis, he operates as a representative node for a fragile continental alliance. European Jewry is small, exposed, and state-facing. It needs figures who can speak outward without provoking inward fracture. Goldschmidt fills that role.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/09\/StrangeBedfellows-PsychInquiryThirdRevision2.docx\">Alliance Theory<\/a> explains the transition. When direct control becomes impossible or dangerous, power migrates to recognition and representation. Goldschmidt no longer decides conversions or courts cases. He decides tone, framing, and legitimacy in elite forums. He signals who speaks for European Jewry and how.<\/p>\n<p>His stance toward authoritarian pressure elevated his status. By refusing alignment with state narratives that would compromise communal safety or integrity, he accrued moral capital across multiple sub-alliances. That capital converts into influence even without formal levers.<\/p>\n<p>His power today is diplomatic and symbolic, but that is exactly what European Jewry needs. Access to governments. Standing with international bodies. The ability to coordinate messaging across countries with different legal regimes and threat profiles. Those are coordination problems, not halachic ones.<\/p>\n<p>Notice what he does not do. He does not issue sweeping psak. He does not dominate internal debates. He avoids factional signaling. Those moves would shrink his coalition. His restraint keeps the umbrella intact.<\/p>\n<p>In Alliance Theory terms, Goldschmidt\u2019s authority now rests on trust across borders. He cannot compel. He can convene. In a vulnerable alliance, that can be decisive.<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt functions as a high-stakes mediator in an era where the traditional rabbinic model of local, territorial authority increasingly fails to meet the needs of a globalized, under-threat Diaspora. You might consider how his trajectory mirrors a shift from the rabbi as a judge to the rabbi as a geopolitical brand.<\/p>\n<p>In Moscow, his power derived from managing a specific, physically bounded community within a specific regime. This is jurisdictional authority. When he left Russia, he did not lose power so much as he underwent a process of de-territorialization. He transitioned from being a local commander to a networked diplomat. Alliance Theory suggests that in fragile environments, the most valuable player is often the one who provides the most &#8220;legitimacy&#8221; with the least amount of &#8220;friction.&#8221; By stepping away from the daily minutiae of local halachic disputes, he avoids the trap of taking sides in small-scale tribal conflicts, which allows him to maintain a broader, more robust coalition at the continental level.<\/p>\n<p>His role at the Conference of European Rabbis operates as a form of soft power that creates a unified front against external pressures like rising secularism, state-led restrictions on religious practice, or geopolitical instability. He solves a specific coordination problem: how to represent a fragmented group of national Jewish communities as a singular, coherent interest group before the European Union or the United Nations.<\/p>\n<p>This transformation highlights a key aspect of modern leadership within the Jewish world. Influence now flows toward those who can navigate &#8220;inter-group&#8221; dynamics rather than just &#8220;intra-group&#8221; ones. Goldschmidt acts as a bridge between the traditional world of the rabbinate and the secular world of international policy. His value lies in his ability to translate Jewish concerns into a language that global elites understand and respect. He provides a protective canopy. Under that canopy, local communities can disagree on theology or practice because he has already secured the political space for them to exist.<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Riccardo Di Segni of Rome and the unified model of Swiss Jewry offer a distinct contrast to the decentralized franchise system of Chabad. These regional leaders manage power through a &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; strategy that internalizes diverse sub-alliances within a single recognized structure. In Switzerland, the state-recognized Jewish community encompasses a spectrum from ultra-Orthodox Hasidim to secular Reform Jews. This model functions because the leadership knows where to cooperate and where to maintain separate jurisdictions. It prevents internal competition for resources and presents a unified front to the state.<\/p>\n<p>This centralized model relies on what Alliance Theory might call a coordination monopoly. By holding the &#8220;keys&#8221; to state recognition and communal resources, a Chief Rabbi or a communal board creates a high cost for defection. If a sub-group leaves the alliance, they lose legal standing and financial support. This is a &#8220;stabilizing&#8221; power. It prioritizes the survival of the collective over the rapid expansion of any one faction.<\/p>\n<p>Chabad operates on a fundamentally different logic that David Pinsof\u2019s framework identifies as a &#8220;distributed mission&#8221; or franchise model. In this system, each shaliach is essentially an autonomous entrepreneur. They are the president of their own local &#8220;brand.&#8221; While they are ideologically aligned with the Rebbe, they do not answer to a regional hierarchy or a communal board. This lack of centralized control allows for massive, rapid growth because it removes the friction of committees and consensus-building.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Comparison of Power Structures<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Big Tent (Switzerland\/Italy): Power is concentrated in a recognized representative body. It focuses on maintaining boundaries and managing &#8220;inter-group&#8221; relations with the government. This model is defensive. It protects existing structures and ensures that all &#8220;insiders&#8221; have a seat at the table, regardless of their personal level of observance.<\/p>\n<p>The Franchise (Chabad): Power is atomized. Each local unit grows by creating its own &#8220;market.&#8221; Chabad avoids the &#8220;zero-sum&#8221; resource battles of the Big Tent by funding itself independently. This is an offensive model. It prioritizes outreach and &#8220;on-the-ground&#8221; presence over formal diplomatic recognition within the existing communal hierarchy.<\/p>\n<p>Goldschmidt\u2019s current role at the Conference of European Rabbis attempts to bridge these two worlds. He uses the symbolic weight of a centralized &#8220;representative node&#8221; to coordinate a network of largely autonomous local communities. He does not own the franchises, but he manages the &#8220;global brand&#8221; that gives them credibility when they face hostile state actors. He solves the &#8220;coordination problem&#8221; for the decentralized groups by providing the one thing they cannot produce on their own: high-level international legitimacy.<\/p>\n<p>The tension in European Jewry today is between these two models. The Big Tent is struggling with the costs of maintenance and the decline of state-recognized religious authority. The Franchise model is thriving but often sits outside the formal &#8220;alliances&#8221; that negotiate with governments. Goldschmidt acts as the diplomat who tries to keep the Franchise and the Big Tent under the same protective umbrella.<\/p>\n<p>The legal battle over kosher slaughter in Belgium highlights the friction between the centralized Big Tent and the decentralized Franchise models. When the bans took effect in Flanders and Wallonia, the response required more than local defiance. It required a high-level legal and diplomatic counter-offensive that only a coordinated alliance could mount.<\/p>\n<p>The Big Tent model, represented by the Consistoire in Belgium and the Conference of European Rabbis, took the lead in the European Court of Human Rights. This is where jurisdictional power acts as a shield. Because these organizations have formal standing with the state, they can file lawsuits and negotiate with ministers as the &#8220;official&#8221; voice of the Jewish people. They treat the ban not just as a religious restriction but as an existential threat to the legal status of the minority group. Their power in this context is the power of the &#8220;legitimate representative.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The Franchise model, like Chabad, handles these challenges differently. Because they operate with more autonomy and less state-dependence, their primary response is often &#8220;on-the-ground&#8221; adaptation rather than high-level litigation. They might facilitate the import of meat from other jurisdictions or focus on maintaining communal morale. While the Big Tent fights the &#8220;macro&#8221; battle in court, the Franchise manages the &#8220;micro&#8221; reality of daily life.<\/p>\n<p>A coordinated alliance in this environment functions through several layers of influence:<\/p>\n<p>Legal Standing: Centralized bodies use their history and recognition to challenge laws that infringe on religious practice.<\/p>\n<p>Resource Sharing: Larger, more established communities provide the funding and legal expertise that smaller, independent &#8220;franchises&#8221; lack.<\/p>\n<p>Symbolic Unified Front: Leaders like Rabbi Goldschmidt ensure that the internal differences between these models do not leak into the public square. By presenting a unified front, they prevent the state from &#8220;picking off&#8221; smaller groups or using internal divisions to justify the bans.<\/p>\n<p>The Belgian case shows that while the Franchise model is better at rapid growth and outreach, the Big Tent is indispensable for large-scale &#8220;inter-group&#8221; defense. When the state moves against a core practice like shechita, the decentralized franchises are often too small to resist alone. They rely on the &#8220;representative node&#8221; to maintain the legal and social space in which they operate.<\/p>\n<p>Goldschmidt\u2019s role is to ensure that the &#8220;coordination monopoly&#8221; of the Big Tent remains strong enough to protect the entire ecosystem. He manages the &#8220;moral capital&#8221; of the alliance, making it politically expensive for European governments to ignore Jewish concerns. This is the transition you noted\u2014from a rabbi who decides a case in Moscow to a diplomat who protects the right to have a case decided anywhere in Europe.<\/p>\n<p>In countries like Belgium and Greece, the &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; Jewish organizations and their Muslim counterparts have formed tactical alliances that bypass traditional theological or political friction. These groups recognize that in the eyes of the European state, they are often &#8220;collateral damage&#8221; of the same secular or nationalist impulses.<\/p>\n<p>Goldschmidt\u2019s co-founding of the European Muslim-Jewish Leadership Council (MJLC) in 2015 provides a clear example of this. The council operates as a &#8220;representative node&#8221; for two disparate groups that face the same existential threats: bans on ritual slaughter (shechita and dhabihah) and circumcision (brit milah and khitan). By pooling their symbolic capital, they make it harder for the state to frame these bans as &#8220;modernization&#8221; or &#8220;animal welfare&#8221; without acknowledging that they are also infringing on the fundamental rights of two distinct religious minorities.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Tactical Convergence over Theological Agreement<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The logic of these alliances is strictly functional. They do not seek &#8220;interfaith trialogue&#8221; about the nature of God. They seek &#8220;inter-group coordination&#8221; about the nature of the law.<\/p>\n<p>Shared Legal Fronts: In the European Court of Human Rights, Jewish and Muslim legal teams often submit parallel arguments. They argue that &#8220;reversible stunning&#8221;\u2014the state\u2019s proposed compromise\u2014violates the core requirement of both faiths that the animal be healthy and conscious at the moment of slaughter.<\/p>\n<p>The &#8220;Collateral Damage&#8221; Narrative: Goldschmidt has frequently noted that many European bans are actually aimed at Muslim immigration but end up criminalizing Jewish life as well. By standing together, the two groups force the state to confront the fact that these &#8220;anti-immigration&#8221; measures have a broader, more destructive reach.<\/p>\n<p>Exchange of Best Practices: The Jewish &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; model, with its centuries of experience in state-negotiated autonomy, serves as a blueprint for newly forming Muslim representative bodies. In France and Britain, Muslim councils have explicitly modeled their organizational structures on the Jewish Consistoire or Board of Deputies to better navigate the &#8220;inter-group&#8221; dynamics of European politics.<\/p>\n<p>This tactical alliance creates a new kind of power. It allows both groups to maintain their internal &#8220;Franchise&#8221; or &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; identities while projecting a unified front to a common external threat. For a leader like Goldschmidt, this is the ultimate diplomatic move: he strengthens the Jewish alliance by building a secondary, temporary alliance with its &#8220;natural allies&#8221; on the ground.<\/p>\n<p>High-level tactical alliances, such as those forged by Rabbi Goldschmidt, often face severe internal friction from decentralized &#8220;franchise&#8221; groups who view these partnerships as a dilution of their religious brand or a betrayal of their core mission. In Alliance Theory terms, while a representative node like the Conference of European Rabbis (CER) seeks to maximize strategic capacity\u2014the ability to influence governments and courts\u2014the decentralized groups prioritize mobilizing capacity, which relies on maintaining a sharp, distinct, and often uncompromising identity.<\/p>\n<p>Within the Jewish world, the &#8220;franchise&#8221; model of Chabad or certain Haredi factions often views high-level interfaith diplomacy with skepticism. These groups frequently operate independently of state-recognized &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; structures and may see cooperation with Muslim leadership as a &#8220;fake interfaith&#8221; or &#8220;inter-fake&#8221; distraction. For them, power is not symbolic or diplomatic; it is concrete, local, and based on the immediate needs of their specific community. When a leader like Goldschmidt coordinates with imams to protect ritual slaughter, grassroots critics may worry that this &#8220;inter-group&#8221; coordination creates a false equivalence between the two faiths or provides cover for political actors they consider hostile.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Conflict of Priorities<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The tension between these models often centers on how they define success:<\/p>\n<p>Strategic vs. Mobilizing Capacity: Centralized alliances gain strategic efficacy by speaking to elite forums, but they often lose the ability to mobilize the &#8220;rank and file&#8221; who respond more to tribal or factional signaling.<\/p>\n<p>The &#8220;Zionism&#8221; Wedge: In countries like the UK, interfaith accords involving Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis have been rejected by grassroots Muslim coalitions who denounce him as a &#8220;staunch Zionist.&#8221; Similarly, progressive or anti-Zionist Jewish groups often feel that &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; leaders do not represent their political values.<\/p>\n<p>Competition for Authenticity: Decentralized &#8220;franchises&#8221; often claim to be the &#8220;real&#8221; voice of the people because they are on the ground. They may portray symbolic diplomats as &#8220;self-appointed&#8221; leaders who are more interested in elite recognition than in the daily spiritual survival of the community.<\/p>\n<p>Goldschmidt manages this by maintaining a careful distance from internal theological or partisan debates. He recognizes that his power rests on being a &#8220;convening&#8221; force. If he were to issue a sweeping psak or take a side in a local communal dispute, he would &#8220;shrink his coalition&#8221; and lose his status as a representative node. His restraint allows the &#8220;franchises&#8221; to continue their autonomous work while he manages the high-level legal and social &#8220;canopy&#8221; that protects the entire ecosystem.<\/p>\n<p>The canopy model managed by representative nodes like the Conference of European Rabbis (CER) relies on a specific financial architecture to maintain its coordination monopoly. While decentralized &#8220;franchises&#8221; often generate their own revenue through local fundraising or independent foundations, the &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; leadership secures power by controlling the flow of state subsidies and institutional grants.<\/p>\n<p>In countries like Germany, the state maintains a formal contract with a single umbrella organization\u2014the Central Council of Jews\u2014which receives millions of euros in annual subsidies. This organization then acts as the gatekeeper, deciding which local institutions receive funding for security, education, and staff. This creates a powerful incentive for smaller, independent groups to align with the centralized alliance. If a &#8220;franchise&#8221; operates outside this structure, it often pays a steep &#8220;independence tax&#8221; in the form of lost access to these public funds.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Coordination through Subscription and Services<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The CER has introduced a &#8220;Community Service Package&#8221; that formalizes this relationship through a subscription-based model. For a fixed monthly fee, smaller communities gain access to specialized services they could never afford on their own:<\/p>\n<p>Standardization as a Service: The package includes expert inspections of ritual baths and Torah scrolls, alongside Jewish status verification. This ensures that a small community in a remote area maintains the same &#8220;halachic brand&#8221; as a major center.<\/p>\n<p>The Subsidy of Scale: By pooling the resources of 700 Orthodox leaders, the CER can provide mohel services, guest lecturers, and legal advocacy at a fraction of the cost an independent group would face.<\/p>\n<p>Strategic Professionalization: The &#8220;Hulya&#8221; program and other initiatives focus on training rabbis in &#8220;soft skills&#8221; like fundraising and conflict resolution. This shifts the rabbi\u2019s role from purely spiritual to a professionalized manager of the community&#8217;s assets.<\/p>\n<p>This financial structure reinforces the symbolic authority of leaders like Rabbi Goldschmidt. While he does not directly control the bank accounts of every local synagogue, he oversees the &#8220;institutional infrastructure&#8221; that makes communal life viable. Decentralized groups like Chabad often bypass this by building their own parallel funding networks, which explains why they are frequently seen as &#8220;rivals&#8221; to the centralized Rabbinate. They do not just compete for congregants; they compete for the right to define the economic and legal framework of Jewish life.<\/p>\n<p>The &#8220;canopy&#8221; works because it provides a defensive advantage. When the state threatens to cut funding or restrict religious practices, the individual franchise is too small to be heard. The representative node, backed by the collective wealth and legal standing of the alliance, becomes the only entity capable of negotiating the terms of survival. This ensures that even the most independent groups eventually find themselves under the umbrella, if only for the sake of their own security and legitimacy.<\/p>\n<p>The gap between elite Jewish leaders and the &#8220;rank and file&#8221; on the issue of Islamic migration is not merely a difference of opinion; it is a fundamental clash between two different types of power within the Jewish alliance.<\/p>\n<p>Elite leaders like Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt operate as diplomatic nodes. Their power is external-facing and depends on maintaining high-level relationships with state actors and international bodies. For these leaders, &#8220;pro-migration&#8221; or &#8220;pro-Muslim&#8221; stances are often tactical maneuvers to secure the Strategic Capacity of the Jewish community. They recognize that in a secularizing Europe, the legal rights of Jews (such as circumcision and ritual slaughter) are tied to the legal rights of Muslims. If the state bans a Muslim practice, the Jewish practice usually falls next as &#8220;collateral damage.&#8221; By supporting the rights of Muslim immigrants, these elites are actually building a defensive &#8220;canopy&#8221; for Jewish tradition.<\/p>\n<p>Regular Jews, however, live within the Mobilizing Capacity of the community. They do not experience the &#8220;symbolic&#8221; benefits of a meeting in Davos or a joint statement with an Imam; they experience the concrete reality of their neighborhoods. For them, mass migration often correlates with a tangible rise in street-level antisemitism and a shift in local demographics that can make Jewish life feel physically insecure.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Divergence of Interests<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Elite Perspective (Top-Down): Elite leaders view the state as the primary threat. They fear that &#8220;anti-immigrant&#8221; laws passed by right-wing nationalists will eventually be turned against Jews. They believe that by aligning with other &#8220;outsider&#8221; groups, they can prevent the state from &#8220;nationalizing&#8221; religious identity and narrowing the space for all minorities.<\/p>\n<p>The Grassroots Perspective (Bottom-Up): Regular Jews often view the &#8220;newcomers&#8221; as the primary threat. They see the radicalization of youth and the import of Middle Eastern conflicts into European and American streets. For them, the &#8220;inter-group&#8221; diplomacy of the elites feels like a luxury they cannot afford when their children are being harassed at school or their synagogues require armed guards.<\/p>\n<p>Alliance Theory explains this as a coordination failure. The elite leaders are playing a &#8220;long game&#8221; of institutional survival, while the grassroots are playing a &#8220;short game&#8221; of physical safety.<\/p>\n<p>Elite Jewish leaders often maintain a pro-migration or pro-Muslim stance because they operate within a framework of high-level legal and political protection. These leaders view the security of Jewish life as inextricably linked to the broader principle of religious freedom within secular states. From their perspective, if a government successfully bans a Muslim practice like ritual slaughter or circumcision, it creates a legal precedent that can immediately be used to target Jewish life. They treat these other minority groups as tactical shields. By defending the rights of the largest minority group, they ensure that the legal &#8220;canopy&#8221; remains broad enough to cover the Jewish community as well.<\/p>\n<p>Regular Jews often have a different perspective because they experience the direct social consequences of migration. While elite leaders deal with ministers and international courts, the rank and file live in neighborhoods where demographic shifts can lead to increased friction or physical threats. For many individuals, the rise in antisemitic incidents is more relevant than the preservation of a high-level legal theory. This creates a split in priorities where the leadership is focused on the long-term survival of the legal &#8220;alliance,&#8221; while the community is focused on the immediate survival of the &#8220;tribe.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This divide reflects the difference between strategic capacity and mobilizing capacity. The elites prioritize strategic capacity, which is the ability to influence power structures and maintain a seat at the table with the state. Regular Jews prioritize mobilizing capacity, which is the ability to protect their own borders and maintain a sense of internal security. When the elite strategy of inter-group cooperation appears to compromise local safety, the community loses trust in the centralized leadership.<\/p>\n<p>This gap is precisely what causes the rise of decentralized &#8220;franchises.&#8221; When the &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; leadership appears to prioritize the interests of an external alliance (with Muslim groups or the state) over the immediate safety of its own members, the members lose trust. They stop looking to the Chief Rabbi for protection and start looking toward more radical or independent leaders who promise to prioritize &#8220;tribal&#8221; security over &#8220;diplomatic&#8221; capital.<\/p>\n<p>Goldschmidt\u2019s challenge is that he cannot easily explain his tactical maneuvers to the public without undermining their effectiveness. If he admits that his &#8220;pro-Muslim&#8221; stance is a calculated defense of Jewish ritual, he loses his credibility with Muslim partners. If he remains silent, he loses his credibility with his own community. His power today rests on this delicate, often invisible, balancing act.<\/p>\n<p>The rise of alternative Jewish security organizations is a direct result of a growing perception that established leaders prioritize political standing over physical safety. These groups often operate outside the centralized &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; structures and focus on immediate, community-level defense rather than long-term diplomatic strategy. This shift is most visible in the contrast between organizations like the Community Security Trust in the United Kingdom and the more decentralized Shomrim patrols.<\/p>\n<p>The Community Security Trust functions as the professionalized, state-recognized representative of the Jewish community. It works closely with the government and the police to secure major institutions and monitor antisemitic trends. Its power is jurisdictional and symbolic. It manages millions of dollars in government grants and presents a unified face to the British state. This is the model of elite coordination that focuses on maintaining the legal and political &#8220;canopy&#8221; for the entire community.<\/p>\n<p>Shomrim represents a fundamentally different model of power. These are neighborhood watch groups, often composed of volunteers from Haredi communities, who prioritize rapid response and visible deterrence in the streets. They do not wait for the police or the centralized board of deputies to issue a statement. Their legitimacy comes from their proximity to the people they protect and their ability to operate within the specific cultural and linguistic context of their neighborhoods. While the Community Security Trust focuses on &#8220;inter-group&#8221; diplomacy with the state, Shomrim focuses on &#8220;intra-group&#8221; security and local self-reliance.<\/p>\n<p>This divergence creates a new set of alliance dynamics within the community:<\/p>\n<p>Resource Competition: Decentralized groups often compete with official bodies for the donations of community members who feel that the centralized leadership is too slow or too politically correct.<\/p>\n<p>Strategic Conflict: Elite leaders sometimes worry that &#8220;unauthorized&#8221; patrols will provoke the state or the local population, thereby damaging the community&#8217;s carefully managed reputation.<\/p>\n<p>Information Silos: Because these groups operate independently, they sometimes maintain their own intelligence on local threats, which may not be shared with the centralized leadership or the state authorities.<\/p>\n<p>This shift mirrors the broader transition you noted in Rabbi Goldschmidt\u2019s career. As the centralized leadership moves toward symbolic and diplomatic power, a vacuum opens up at the local level. The &#8220;franchise&#8221; security groups step into that vacuum, providing the concrete protection that the symbolic alliance can no longer guarantee. This ensures that while the elite leaders are busy securing the community&#8217;s legal rights at the highest levels, the local groups are securing the community&#8217;s physical safety in the street.<\/p>\n<p>Elite Jewish leaders often favor censorship and the regulation of hate speech because their primary goal is to maintain the stability of the communal &#8220;canopy&#8221; within elite institutional spaces. These leaders operate in high-level environments\u2014such as universities, international bodies, and government agencies\u2014where the &#8220;rules of the game&#8221; rely on decorum, safety, and the prevention of social friction. For a diplomatic node like an organization president or a high-ranking rabbi, a surge in extremist speech is not just an abstract challenge to the First Amendment; it is a threat to the coalition they have built with state actors. They view censorship as a tool to filter out &#8220;low-signal&#8221; noise that could provoke the state into cracking down on all minority groups or lead to the physical destabilization of communal life.<\/p>\n<p>The regular Jewish population often values free speech more highly because they operate within the &#8220;market of ideas&#8221; where open expression is their primary defense against marginalization. For the average person, free speech is the mechanism that allows them to challenge the prevailing narratives of the state or the very elite leadership they feel does not represent them. They recognize that any power given to a central authority to &#8220;censor&#8221; today can be turned against Jewish interests tomorrow. This mirrors the difference between those who manage the institution and those who live within the culture. The elites seek to control the &#8220;tone&#8221; to ensure institutional access, while the rank and file seek to preserve the &#8220;right&#8221; to ensure they still have a voice.<\/p>\n<p>This divergence can also be explained by the different threats each group faces:<\/p>\n<p>Institutional Reputation vs. Personal Autonomy: Elite leaders are primarily concerned with the &#8220;brand&#8221; of the community in the eyes of the global elite. They fear that the &#8220;wrong&#8221; kind of speech\u2014whether from their own community or from outside it\u2014will damage their standing and reduce their influence. Regular Jews are more concerned with their personal autonomy and the ability to speak their truth without fear of professional or social cancellation.<\/p>\n<p>The &#8220;Safety First&#8221; Doctrine: Many elite organizations have adopted a &#8220;safety&#8221; framework where words are increasingly treated as a form of violence. This justifies censorship as a protective measure for vulnerable populations. Regular Jews, especially those in more traditional or &#8220;franchise&#8221; models, often view this framework as a move toward a &#8220;therapeutic&#8221; state that prioritizes feelings over the robust, often messy, debate that has historically characterized Jewish intellectual life.<\/p>\n<p>The Gatekeeper Incentive: Censorship naturally empowers the gatekeeper. By deciding what is &#8220;acceptable&#8221; or &#8220;hateful,&#8221; elite leaders consolidate their roles as the essential representative nodes of the alliance. If anyone can say anything, the leader\u2019s role as the arbiter of &#8220;legitimate&#8221; opinion is diminished. Free speech is fundamentally decentralized and &#8220;franchise-friendly,&#8221; which makes it a natural preference for those who operate outside the centralized hierarchy.<\/p>\n<p>This gap creates a situation where the leadership is constantly trying to &#8220;nationalize&#8221; or professionalize communal discourse to keep it aligned with elite secular norms, while the community pushes back to maintain the &#8220;wild&#8221; and unmediated nature of public debate. This is not just a disagreement over policy; it is a battle over who gets to define the boundaries of the Jewish alliance in the 21st century.<\/p>\n<p>Jewish media outlets often function as the primary battleground where the tension between elite respectability and provocative debate plays out. Many established Jewish newspapers, such as those owned or funded by local Jewish Federations, operate as an arm of the communal leadership. These publications often prioritize a sense of civic responsibility, which can lead to the suppression of internal controversy in favor of presenting a unified and positive image to the outside world. Editors at these outlets frequently walk a tightrope, balancing their professional desire for investigative depth with the institutional pressure to protect the community\u2019s reputation and secure its &#8220;moral capital&#8221; in elite forums.<\/p>\n<p>Independent Jewish media outlets like Tablet Magazine or The Forward provide a different model by leaning into the &#8220;marketplace of ideas&#8221; that regular Jews often prefer. While The Forward historically represented the center-left secular majority, newer independent platforms often embrace a more provocative style that challenges the centralized &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; consensus. These outlets are more willing to publish dissenting voices\u2014including those that elite leaders might consider &#8220;fringe&#8221; or &#8220;dangerous&#8221;\u2014because their legitimacy comes from their ability to drive conversation rather than from state or institutional recognition. This freedom allows them to act as a &#8220;watchdog&#8221; for the community, exposing the very coordination problems and internal fractures that elite diplomats like Rabbi Goldschmidt try to keep under the protective canopy.<\/p>\n<p>The conflict between these two media models reflects the broader alliance dynamics within the Jewish world:<\/p>\n<p>Institutional Control: Federation-funded papers often lack a &#8220;buffer zone&#8221; of editorial independence, leading to a &#8220;dampening effect&#8221; on reporting that might be critical of communal leadership or its diplomatic strategies.<\/p>\n<p>Economic Incentives: As traditional funding for Jewish journalism declines, the pressure on &#8220;captive&#8221; newspapers to promote institutional agendas increases, while independent outlets must rely on their ability to stay relevant and provocative to maintain an audience.<\/p>\n<p>The Reputation Trap: Elite leaders fear that unfiltered debate in Jewish media will be weaponized by external enemies or used to justify state-led restrictions, while regular Jews often feel that &#8220;sanitized&#8221; news is a form of gaslighting that ignores their lived reality.<\/p>\n<p>This struggle highlights the same split you noted between the strategic needs of the elite and the personal autonomy of the people. While the &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; media seeks to professionalize and control the communal brand to ensure high-level access, the independent &#8220;franchise&#8221; media provides the raw and unmediated discourse that regular Jews use to navigate their own lives. This internal friction is a sign of a vibrant, if messy, ecosystem where power is constantly being contested and redefined.<\/p>\n<p>The rise of social media and platforms like Substack has effectively shattered the coordination monopoly that established Jewish newspapers and leaders once held. In the past, the &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; leadership could control the communal narrative by maintaining strong relationships with a few key editors and institutional publishers. This created a centralized gatekeeping system where dissenting opinions or internal critiques were often relegated to the margins to preserve a unified front. Today, any individual with a Substack or an X account can bypass these institutional filters, reaching thousands of people directly without needing the approval of a communal board or a federation-funded editor.<\/p>\n<p>This shift has empowered the &#8220;franchise&#8221; model of Jewish identity and thought. Because the cost of entry for publishing is now virtually zero, the competitive advantage has moved from those who have &#8220;institutional standing&#8221; to those who have &#8220;high-signal&#8221; content. Alliance Theory suggests that when the cost of communication drops, the power of a central representative node to define the &#8220;legitimate&#8221; consensus weakens. Leaders find it increasingly difficult to keep &#8220;inward fractures&#8221; hidden when every local dispute or controversial decision can be broadcast to a global audience in real-time. This exposure forces a level of transparency that often makes elite diplomatic maneuvers\u2014like tactical alliances with other groups\u2014much harder to sustain without facing immediate backlash from the grassroots.<\/p>\n<p>Several specific consequences have emerged from this decentralization of information:<\/p>\n<p>The Decline of Institutional Branding: In the past, a title like &#8220;Chief Rabbi&#8221; or &#8220;President of the Federation&#8221; carried an automatic weight in the media. Now, those titles often matter less than the &#8220;likes&#8221; and &#8220;shares&#8221; generated by an independent writer who can articulate the frustrations of the &#8220;rank and file.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The Rise of &#8220;Niche&#8221; Alliances: Substack allows for the formation of micro-alliances around specific interests\u2014such as Zionism, Halachic reform, or critiques of elite leadership\u2014that cross traditional denominational lines. These digital sub-groups often have more internal cohesion than the large, &#8220;diluted&#8221; umbrella organizations.<\/p>\n<p>The End of the &#8220;Sanitized&#8221; Communal Brand: Because independent creators are not beholden to state grants or institutional donors, they are free to discuss the &#8220;taboo&#8221; topics that elite leaders prefer to avoid. This includes raw debates over migration, security, and the perceived &#8220;moral signaling&#8221; of communal institutions.<\/p>\n<p>This new environment creates a significant challenge for a leader who relies on symbolic and diplomatic power. When everyone is a publisher, it is nearly impossible to maintain a singular &#8220;tone&#8221; or &#8220;frame&#8221; for the community. The elite leaders are essentially competing for attention in a crowded marketplace where the &#8220;unmediated&#8221; and &#8220;provocative&#8221; often win out over the &#8220;careful&#8221; and &#8220;diplomatic.&#8221; This erosion of the coordination monopoly means that the protective &#8220;canopy&#8221; is now full of holes, allowing the messiness of actual communal life to be seen by everyone, for better or for worse.<\/p>\n<p>Independent platforms like Substack and X have dismantled the &#8220;coordination monopoly&#8221; of Jewish elites by allowing the rank and file to challenge Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) frameworks that the leadership once accepted as a necessary cost of doing business. Elite leaders initially adopted DEI as a tactical move to maintain access to university administrations and government bodies. They hoped that by &#8220;engaging and influencing&#8221; these programs, they could secure a seat for Jews at the table of protected minorities. From the perspective of a diplomatic node, this was a logical way to preserve the communal &#8220;canopy&#8221; within elite secular institutions.<\/p>\n<p>Regular Jews, however, have used social media to expose how these same DEI frameworks often categorize Jews as &#8220;white oppressors,&#8221; effectively removing them from the very protections the elites sought to secure. On Substack, writers like Bari Weiss or David L. Bernstein have argued that the &#8220;oppressor-oppressed&#8221; binary creates a zero-sum game that inherently targets Jewish success and identity. These platforms allow for the rapid sharing of &#8220;on-the-ground&#8221; evidence\u2014such as reports from DEI officials who exclude Jewish concerns\u2014that contradicts the &#8220;sanitized&#8221; narratives provided by centralized organizations like the ADL. This has led to a widespread revolt against &#8220;moral signaling&#8221; shifts that many Jews feel have made their communities less safe.<\/p>\n<p>The impact of this decentralized resistance has been profound:<\/p>\n<p>Erosion of Consensus: The &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; consensus that DEI is a &#8220;win-win&#8221; has collapsed as independent media highlights the &#8220;collateral damage&#8221; these programs inflict on Jewish students and professionals.<\/p>\n<p>Direct Pressure on Donors: Social media has allowed regular Jews to bypass the leadership and speak directly to major philanthropists. This has resulted in high-profile donor revolts at universities like Penn and Harvard, where the &#8220;rank and file&#8221; demand for the dismantling of DEI bureaucracies superseded the &#8220;engagement&#8221; strategy of the institutional elites.<\/p>\n<p>Challenging the &#8220;Expertise&#8221; of Leaders: Independent platforms have enabled critics to point out that elite leaders are often more concerned with their &#8220;strategic capacity&#8221; in elite social circles than with the actual &#8220;mobilizing capacity&#8221; needed to defend the community against new forms of ideological antisemitism.<\/p>\n<p>The elite leadership now faces a &#8220;legitimacy crisis.&#8221; While they still hold the formal levers of power, they no longer control the information that shapes how the community perceives those levers. The &#8220;franchise&#8221; media has created a feedback loop where the elite\u2019s reliance on moral signaling is constantly mocked and deconstructed, making it harder for leaders to maintain the &#8220;restraint under pressure&#8221; that their diplomatic roles require. This shift ensures that the future of the Jewish alliance will be determined not by a few men in a boardroom, but by the chaotic and unmediated debate taking place on the digital frontier.<\/p>\n<p>The digital revolt against Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) has forced a visible retreat among Jewish-led nonprofits and federations, shifting the power balance between institutional elites and the grassroots. In early 2025, several prominent organizations that once championed these frameworks began to publicly distance themselves from the specific terminology and bureaucracies of DEI. This reversal was driven by a realization that the &#8220;oppressor-oppressed&#8221; binary central to these programs often cast Jews as &#8220;white oppressors,&#8221; which stripped them of the very institutional protections that leaders like Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt had worked to secure.<\/p>\n<p>The institutional response has taken two distinct forms. Some liberal groups, led by the Union for Reform Judaism and the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, signed collective statements in early 2025 defending DEI as an &#8220;invaluable tool&#8221; for safety and inclusion. These organizations argue that abandoning these programs would leave LGBTQ Jews and Jews of color vulnerable. However, many other mainstream groups have shifted toward a &#8220;Universalist&#8221; model. This approach moves away from racial &#8220;affinity groups&#8221; and instead emphasizes merit and broad inclusion. This transition allows them to avoid the &#8220;ideological litmus tests&#8221; that critics on Substack and X have successfully framed as a form of institutionalized antisemitism.<\/p>\n<p>The influence of these decentralized platforms is evident in how they have influenced the financial and legal environment for Jewish nonprofits:<\/p>\n<p>The Donor Ultimatum: High-profile donors, mobilized by the &#8220;unmediated&#8221; reporting of independent writers, have bypassed communal boards to issue direct ultimatums to institutions. This has resulted in a &#8220;compliance-first&#8221; strategy where nonprofits strengthen legal oversight to ensure their programs do not accidentally facilitate the &#8220;traumatic invalidation&#8221; of Jewish experiences.<\/p>\n<p>The &#8220;Collateral Damage&#8221; Argument: Rabbi Goldschmidt and other European leaders have consistently argued that many secular or nationalist bans on religious practices are aimed at Muslim immigration but end up harming Jewish life. This &#8220;collateral damage&#8221; logic is now being applied to DEI; leaders argue that while these programs were designed to combat racism, they have accidentally institutionalized a framework that treats Jewish success as a sign of &#8220;privilege&#8221; rather than the result of centuries of survival.<\/p>\n<p>A Shift in Language: Many federations have recently &#8220;scrubbed&#8221; their websites of specific DEI jargon. They have replaced it with language focused on &#8220;belonging&#8221; and &#8220;community cohesion.&#8221; This move satisfies the elite need for institutional respectability while signaling to the &#8220;rank and file&#8221; that the leadership has heard their concerns about ideological radicalization.<\/p>\n<p>The result of this digital revolt is a more fragmented and defensive Jewish alliance. The &#8220;Big Tent&#8221; leaders can no longer rely on a single, top-down strategy to manage the community\u2019s reputation. Instead, they must navigate a world where every donor, volunteer, and congregant has access to a parallel information stream that is often hostile to the elite consensus. This ensures that the future of Jewish institutional life will be defined by a constant negotiation between the strategic needs of the diplomatic node and the visceral demands for safety and authenticity from the people on the ground.<\/p>\n<p>The Union of Mohels of Europe (UME) provides a compelling example of how a &#8220;representative node&#8221; can use self-regulation to preempt state intervention and maintain communal autonomy. Founded by the Conference of European Rabbis (CER) under the leadership of Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, the UME operates as a centralized professional body that standardizes the training, certification, and medical practices of ritual circumcisers across the continent. This model is explicitly designed to solve a coordination problem: how to protect a millennia-old religious ritual from being criminalized or &#8220;medicalized&#8221; by secular governments that view the practice as a violation of bodily integrity. By establishing its own rigorous standards, the UME allows the Jewish community to argue that it is already a &#8220;responsible actor&#8221; that does not require the heavy hand of state oversight.<\/p>\n<p>This system of self-regulation acts as a strategic buffer between the community and the state. In countries like Belgium and Germany, where ritual circumcision has faced significant legal challenges and police raids, the UME provides the communal &#8220;canopy&#8221; with a powerful defense. When authorities claim that circumcisions are being performed by &#8220;unlicensed&#8221; practitioners, the UME can point to its own roster of certified mohels who have undergone both halachic and medical training. This &#8220;professionalization&#8221; of the ritual is a form of symbolic capital; it translates a religious obligation into a language of &#8220;best practices&#8221; and &#8220;safety standards&#8221; that secular ministers and judges can recognize. By mirroring the structure of a medical board, the UME preserves the essence of the &#8220;franchise&#8221; (the local mohel\u2019s practice) while providing it with the legal and social protection of the larger alliance.<\/p>\n<p>The UME model illustrates several key principles of communal survival in a hostile environment:<\/p>\n<p>Preemptive Standard-Setting: By creating its own rules before the state can impose them, the UME retains control over the definition of the ritual. This prevents the &#8220;erasure&#8221; of religious practice that often occurs when a state attempts to redefine a spiritual act as a purely medical one.<\/p>\n<p>The &#8220;UK Model&#8221; Influence: The UME is modeled after the Initiation Society in the United Kingdom, which has successfully regulated circumcisions for three centuries. This historical precedent provides the UME with a &#8220;pedigree&#8221; of reliability that strengthens its standing in negotiations with European institutions.<\/p>\n<p>A Shield Against Factionalism: Because the UME represents a broad coalition of Orthodox leaders, it prevents the state from &#8220;picking off&#8221; individual communities or using internal disputes to justify a blanket ban. The central representative node ensures that the alliance remains unified on this existential issue, even if they disagree on other matters.<\/p>\n<p>Rabbi Goldschmidt has noted that ritual circumcision only became a &#8220;hot-button&#8221; issue in Europe following the arrival of millions of Muslim immigrants whose own practices often lacked a similar centralized regulatory body. By positioning the Jewish community as a self-regulating entity, the UME creates a &#8220;moral distance&#8221; between Jewish practice and the less-standardized methods that often draw the most intense state scrutiny. This is a classic &#8220;inter-group&#8221; diplomatic move: the elite leadership secures the safety of its own &#8220;tribe&#8221; by demonstrating a level of organizational sophistication that the state finds difficult to ignore. This successful model of self-regulation suggests that the best way for religious minorities to maintain their autonomy is to build their own institutional &#8220;gatekeepers&#8221; before the state decides to build them for them.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt. Former Chief Rabbi of Moscow. Major international figure through the Conference of European Rabbis. Influence today is diplomatic and symbolic but still significant across Europe. ChatGPT says: Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt is a transnational alliance diplomat whose power &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=170918\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[43035],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-170918","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-alliance-theory"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/170918","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=170918"}],"version-history":[{"count":7,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/170918\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":171183,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/170918\/revisions\/171183"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=170918"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=170918"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=170918"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}