"Seminar Tries Science to Revive
Faith"
The Wall Street Journal - November
11, 1996
by Calmetta Y. Coleman, Staff Reporter
A few months ago Deborah Grayson considered
Judaism the religion of her ancestors, incompatible with
science. She viewed the Bible as myth and the miracles it
described - the Red Sea's parting, for instance - as metaphors.
Today, Ms. Grayson says she is a believer.
She eats kosher and is shopping for a synagogue among Conservative
and Orthodox temples.
Ms. Grayson says she was convinced by Discovery,
a fast-spreading religious seminar that purports to offer
scientific proof that G-d exists. "I walked in a secular
atheist and walked out believing that the Torah had been
handed down by G-d to Moses on Mt. Sinai," says Ms. Grayson,
a 24 year old graduate student of Social Work at Columbia
University.
In the past year, about 240 U.S. Jewish community
centers, schools and synagogues - eager to expand their membership
have paid Aish HaTorah, the Jerusalem based organization
that runs Discovery, about $1,000 to put on each Discovery
seminar. Aish HaTorah a non-profit Jewish education group
whose mission is to persuade secular Jews to observe Judaism
has put about 60,000 people world-wide through the seminar
since 1987 - more than one third of those just in the past
two years.
Many of today's campaigns to bring observant
Jews to temple try appealing to the heart, portraying Judaism
as offering spiritual fulfillment and a sense of belonging.
But Discovery's crusaders against assimilation are taking
a different tack - appealing to the intellect.
Discovery
teachers point to computer analysis of the Torah - the first
five books of the Old Testament that they say proves G-d
hid codes in the text to foretell later events. Treating
the Torah text like a word seach puzzle, researchers looked
at every other letter or skipped an equal number of places
between letters to find names like Norman Schwartzkopf and
Anwar Sadat, as well as warnings of the Holocaust.
Of course, using that method the names could
show up in any thick book, say "War and Peace." But statisticians
who did experiments on Leo Tolstoy's work say that related
words don't appear in as close proximity as in the Torah.
One group of mathematicians who used computers to search
for the names of prominent rabbis in the Torah even published
their research in the journal Statistical Science in Ausust
1994.
Such findings show an intentional design
that only G-d could have created, believers argue. And if
so, is there any question that Jews should live as the Torah
instructs them? "We had to give an intellectual presentation
to give people a reason to believe in G-d." says Rabbi Noah
Weinberg, founder of Aish HaTorah. Discovery is just one
of the outreach programs of 23 year old Aish HaTorah, which
also offer seminar on Jewish historty and the Bible from
a religious school in Jerusalem.
Aish HaTorah's roots in Orthodox Judaism
give some mainstream religious Jews pause. "They're a lot
more to the right" in their teaching than even some Orthodox
American congregations says Shmuel Goldin, chairman of the
Israel Commission of the Rabbincal Council of America and
a Bible professor at Yeshiva University in New York.
As for codes research, he says, "They use
it very wisely, but it's a little bit more mystical, al little
bit more esoteric than the approach I would take."
Indeed, not all religouis jews find the intellectual
argument compelling. Rabbi Asher Lopatin of Anshe Shalom
B'nai Israel Congregation in Chicago fears the seminar could
lead to a worship of numbers.
But like many Jews, he worries even more
about assimilation and intermarriage. Intermarriage is so
common place among American Jews - about half marry non-Jews
- that their population has been static since 1970 at about
5.5 million. Consequently, the Rabbi says he might consider
sponsoring a Discovery seminar at his temple.
The codes research also falls in line with
a tradition of Jewish scholarships that emphasizes close
textual analysis of the Torah and other religious literature,
says Rabbi Eugene Fink, director of development for the Rabbinical
Seminary of America. Theories of codes in the Torah dates
back to medieval times, you could see computerized word searches
as simply a high-tech twist.
The upshot, religious leaders who don't take
Discovery too seriously sometimes promote it anyway. Hundreds
of non-Orthodox Jewish organizations have held Discovery
Seminars and it is beginning to attract interest from some
Reform Temples. An eighth-hour seminar held by Congregation
Beth Am Temple in Longwood, FL two years ago, drew more than
500 people and caused a favorable buzz. Still, the Temple's
Rabbi, Merril Shapiro calls the codes research "cotton candy
for the mind, a fun game." Also helping Discovery's expansion
in the US; an array of high-profile spokesmen and supporters,
such as talk-show host, Larry King, Elliot Gould, and Kirk
Douglas. Mr. King says he has been actively involved with
Aish HaTorah for two years, and is a board member on one
of its committees. But his involvement is strictly cultural.
Mr. King refers to himself as a "classic agnostic" and says
he isn't even familiar with the code teachings of the Discovery
Seminar.
Mr. Gould, and others, were recruited by
Irwin Katsof, an Orthodox Rabbi who is in charge of marketing
Discovery in the US. In July, Rabbi Katsof spotted Mr. Gould
on a flight home from Rio De Janeiro. The Rabbi upgraded
to first-class to sit near Mr. Gould. During the flight he
gave the actor his pitch, popping a promotional video tape
into the first-class VCR, and in September, Mr. Gould appeared
at a seminar in Manhattan and talked about his own need to
learn more about Judaism. At a seminar at Universal Studios
in June, Mr. Douglas drew 300 people, the largest crowd at
any one seminar all year. Meanwhile, Jason Alexander who
plays George Costanza on "Seinfeld", is scheduled to host
a seminar in Los Angeles, early next year. "I would be shocked
if we didn't have 1000 people at the seminar." Rabbi Katsof
says.
The Rabbi, who graduated from a Jesuit college
thinking the beliefs of Judaism were "absolutely nonsensical" embraced
the religion during a trip to Israel where he embraced Aish
HaTorah. There he joined a group of Rabbis who had gotten
the idea of developing the Discovery Seminar from another
group that was teaching the codes in Israel. "Sometimes you
have to sell the sizzle, and not the steak." the Rabbi jokes.
Within the next two years he hopes to win
over at least 10% of the 1.4 million US Jews between the
ages of 20-30, a critical demographic group. "If we reach
them then, when they're deciding who they'll marry, we'll
have made significant progress in bringing people back to
Judaism," Rabbi Katsof says.
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