Rabbi Aryeh Lebowitz, Dean of RIETS |
The people at places like BMG must be having a field day
with what just happened at YU, which recently recognized such a club. They are
either laughing in ridicule or outright condemning YU for officially
recognizing a club that identifies as gay. They may even use this as proof that
their philosophy of isolationism is the right way for a Jew to live in a world
gone mad with depravity.
But the truth is, if that is how the people at BMG feel,
they are wrong. Their world does not recognize the possibility that there may
very well be a significant number of gay people learning in their own Beis
HaMedrash. People who would never dream of coming out of the closet. So they
live in constant fear of being exposed. Or they may sin on the down-low and
hope they never get caught. Either way, they must suffer mental anguish over
desires they know are clearly forbidden by the Torah. Acting on those desires is
what the Torah calls an abomination.
This kind of struggle can lead to severe depression and even
suicide. It was recently revealed that there has been a spate of suicides in
Lakewood. It would not surprise me if, in some cases, they were by people
struggling with these issues.
It seems to me that if the rabbinic leadership had a better
understanding of what people with these kinds of struggles go through, they
would not be ridiculing or condemning what YU has done. Instead, they would be
more understanding and accepting of it, realizing that YU’s approach to
tolerance on this issue is not only acceptable but laudable.
In fact, YU’s Roshei Yeshiva and BMG’s Roshei Yeshiva are on
exactly the same page on the issue of homosexuality - the Torah’s page. No one
at YU thinks that having pride in being attracted to members of the same sex is
in accordance with Torah values.
So how does Hareni fit into this? Did YU compromise on these
values? According to LGBTQ advocates who agreed to this new organization, it
might seem like they did. But that is false. The only thing that might be true
is this sentence uttered by the group’s co-president, Hayley Goldberg,
"You are allowed to be a queer Jew on campus at Yeshiva University."
That’s because being gay is not the sin. Acting on it is.
Here’s what YU’s leading Roshei Yeshiva had to say in response to what
must have surely been the greatest possible misunderstanding of what YU agreed to:
In a series of public statements since the March 21 settlement, senior rabbis at Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary (YU’s rabbinical school) have repeatedly asserted that the only LGBTQ+ club they would tolerate at the school—and the one they say was approved—is one that encourages celibacy.
Were the school forced to recognize a club that espoused pride in queer identity, one RIETS Rosh Yeshiva (head rabbi) indicated he would quit.
“It would be akin to the Yeshiva being asked to teach the New Testament,” said Rabbi Aryeh Lebowitz, RIETS’ director of ordination, in a March 28 episode of Halacha Headlines, a podcast about Orthodox community issues. “You would sooner shut down the Yeshiva than teach the New Testament.”
Rabbi Schachter called Goldberg and her co-presidents “wiseguys” who had lied to The New York Times about the deal’s terms. He described homosexuality as one of the most “egregious and vile” forms of behavior and recommended therapy for Jews attracted to the same sex. He also stated last week that he rejected LGBTQ+ “ideology, lifestyle, and behavior.”
Lebowitz, who became the head of the ordination program last year, described LGBTQ+ people as having “a yetzer hara to do very serious aveiros (sins) of arayos (sexual immorality).”
So why have a group like Hareni at all? That’s because the
Roshei Yeshiva at YU recognize that this problem exists and that it can, and
often does, lead to suicide. Something that has happened with at least one
student at YU. They see Hareni as a legitimate way of dealing with this ‘impossible’
problem. The only solution that aligns with Jewish law, as they see it, is a
path of celibacy.
In Rabbi Schachter’s view, the university was helping the
plaintiffs by offering a support group that helped them achieve that goal.
Unfortunately, the pride community had an entirely different
understanding of what Hareni was supposed to be. Their goal is for gay people
to have pride in who they are. Which, by definition, means having pride in
behavior that is sinful in the extreme. No rabbi who calls himself Orthodox
could ever agree with that. One can be a proud Jew and be gay, but one cannot
be proud of being gay.
I pretty much expected that this was the only way in which
Hareni could be approved: Love the sinner, hate the sin. And of course, to strongly discourage every
Jew from sinning. A club that does that should be applauded. But pride in being
gay? That would be no different than being proud in being a thief. Or of any other
sinful behavior.
Not that I haven’t said all of this before. But I’m glad to see
YU’s Roshei Yeshiva saying it publicly. And I’m quite happy to remind all YU’s critics
on the right about this club - that they might just be on the wrong side of the
issue.