The new
Pew survey on American Jewry reveals a fascinating statistic: 42% of those who
identity as Jews in the United States hold humor as an essential Jewish value.
Like most commentators on the survey this statistic bothered me. I took it as a
sign of the decadence of Jewish life in this country. It was the epitaph on our
gravestone: We Died Laughing. But
this morning my train of thought made a U-turn. Jewish humor may not be the
death knell of our people but a shofar blast of our new awakening.
What
does the humor of Gertrude Berg, Lenny Bruce, Woody Allen, Gilda Radner, Jon
Stewart, Lewis Black, Joan Rivers, Mel Brooks, Roseanne Barr, Andy Kaufman,
Groucho Marx, Sarah Silverman, Susan Essman, and many others have in common?
Irony and the ability to pull back the curtain on the lives we live to reveal
the madness at its heart.
Jewish
humor has for centuries been the way the powerless speak truth; the way we who
live in the absurd reality that is this world survive. Irony and humor is our
way of shining light on the absurd. No it doesn’t make it less absurd—nothing can
do that—but it does give a modicum of sanity by reminding ourselves that it is
absurd. Can you be totally insane if you know you’re insane?
The Pew
survey isn’t saying that Jews think Jews are funny, it is saying that Jews
honor the Jewish value of using humor to speak truth to power. Indeed with far
more Jews valuing humor over halacha (Jewish law), American Jews are simply lifting
the holy fool over the wholly observant. But the two need not be in opposition.
Listen
to Lawrence Gross from his 2009 review of the Penguin Classics edition The Talmud: A Selection:
“The
reader ought to be told, even in summary form, how the centuries that Jews
spent steeped in the Talmud laid the basis for the contributions that their
secularized descendants would make to world culture. The penchant for studying
godly law and lore, for example, engendered the interests and habits that
sparked later Jewish intellectual achievement; the open-ended Talmudic debates
set the stage for some Jews to think “outside the box” and chart new paths in
science and mathematics; the stress on rationality and quantification sharpened
Jewish business acumen, and the wordplay, irony and whimsicality encountered in
the Talmud bred a distinctive Jewish humor — no Talmud, no Woody Allen and no
Seinfeld.”
If Talmud led to Jewish humor, could not Jewish humor lead
to Talmud? Can we post-modern liberal and largely secular American Jews
recognize that what makes Jon Stewart Jon
Stewart is Judaism and its love of irony, skepticism, argument, and doubt?
And could we not in this way begin to reclaim the source of that
stance—classical Jewish texts themselves? Could we once again hear the call of
which irony is only an echo to not only laugh at the insanity of power but
confront it with truth? Is it possible that we can once again learn that to
confront the powers that be we must not only speak truth but embody
truth? And can we, with all due respect to my teacher Mordecai Kaplan (z”l), use
that realization to reconstruct ancient behaviors into modern counter-cultural
lifestyles?
I don’t have the answer to these and similar questions the
Pew survey raises, but to simply wring our hands over our people’s clinging to
humor is to miss the deeper hope that cling contains.
1 comment:
This is very thought provoking. Humor as a contrasting characteristic of belief values takes one down various ponderances ("that's heavy, man"). Thanks.
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