Gay History in the Making, I Guess

Advertisement

Today was the day that we’d worked for all these years: finally the doors of the Conservative movement have been opened to gays and lesbians. So why didn’t I celebrate?

It was a thrill standing in the cold today, huddling outside the Park Avenue Synagogue as the news dribbled in over cell-phones. Yes to Dorff (the “compromise” pro-gay position)… no to Tucker (the more radical one)… law committee members resigning… Admittedly, the minutiae are only of interest to a few dozen people in the world, but as one of them, it was a thrill to be on the front lines.

Yet after the euphoria wore off, it somehow feels like less momentous than one might have expected. Part of the reason, I’m sure, was that my own personal stake in the matter has lessened with time. I no longer care that urgently about how a group of Conservative rabbis interpret a verse from the Torah. Not as a personal matter, anyway; I do still care very deeply about the closeted Jews I meet all the time through my work, and about the larger repercussions that this decision has — basically, as one more religious group remembering that homosexuality is not as big a deal to God as some people would have us believe. But now that I’m in love, and partnered, it feels less like personal salvation and more like some other people finally figuring it out for themselves.

Part of the reason, too, was that this was a compromise, not a victory. This is probably how it should be — if activists like me are thrilled, it means that folks on the other side are infuriated. This way, my side got a ruling that will let gays into rabbinical school, and their side got a ruling that maintained the ban on at least one kind of (male) homosexual activity. Functionally, there is no real difference, since the opinion makes “don’t ask, don’t tell” the law of the movement. But since the opinion equivocated, our celebration is muted as well.

And of course, it really has been long in coming. I am enormously grateful to the immense amount of volunteer work by the rabbinical students in Keshet, JTS’s advocacy group on this issue. But even they seemed to feel like the decision was inevitable. Only an eleventh-hour procedural maneuver — which did derail the Tucker opinion — threatened what has, for several months at least, seem like a foregone conclusion. Yes, Virginia, there really are gay people in the world.

Not that there weren’t surprises, the most odious of which was certainly the surprise passage of the Levy opinion, which held that reparative therapy should be promoted as an option to those who seek it. Let me use this forum to share a little bit of My Jewish Learning on the subject: reparative therapy is a hoax. It doesn’t work. And it’s not reparative. First, the success rate of the “therapy” is less than 2%. Second, “success” is defined simply as being able to function sexually with a member of the opposite sex, while suppressing one’s desires for same-sex partners — that’s not repair, it’s deceit. Third, the “therapy” has been disavowed by all reputable psychiatric bodies, including the American Psychiatric Association. It’s basically aversion therapy, in which subjects are conditioned to associate a given stimulus (in this case, inappropriate sex objects) with nausea and disgust, coupled with browbeating so people feel guilty about their illicit desires.

I can’t believe that any rabbi who knew what this “therapy” entailed would ever recommend it to anyone, regardless of ideology. It’s a disgusting form of abuse, and should be outlawed in any civilized country. And how do I know this? Unlike, I suspect, Rabbi Levy and his supporters, I actually know people who underwent it. Kids — kids! — forced into it by their perhaps well-meaning but ultimately clueless parents. Adults whose rabbis recommended it to them. And others. The stronger of these people find it preposterous — the weaker ones find it deeply disturbing. For a thorough debunking of the claims that this “therapy” works, please read Wayne Besen’s Anything But Straight: Unmasking the Scandals and Lies Behind the ‘Ex-Gay’ Movement. As the title implies, it’s not an unbiased book. But the facts are the facts.

Still, I think such “therapy,” in the Conservative Jewish world at least, will remain a marginal phenomenon, and thus Levy’s tshuva is a marginal, if morally repellant, footnote. Conservative Jews tend to be worldly people, and a simple Google search will reveal this horrible practice to be the sham that it is. Really, it’s the last refuge of a scoundrel — the last option that some rabbis have to somehow maintain that homosexuality is a lifestyle, freely chosen and freely revocable. As one activist (not with Keshet) joked this afternoon, let’s see Rabbi Levy try reparative therapy — maybe he can “cure” his heterosexuality.

So, on the whole, a happy day, though I don’t know anyone breaking out the champagne. I’m very surprised that Rabbi Roth and others quit the Law Committee, particularly as Roth himself was so excoriating of those who parted with his movement over the issue of ordaining women as rabbis. And I’m certainly not rejoicing, even though it does mean the next Law Committee will be much more liberal than the present one. Mostly, I’m hopeful that, beyond all the details, this decision will help a simple, banal truth take hold in the world: that even if you’re religious, it’s OK to be gay.

Not earth-shattering to me anymore — but to some kid out there, it might be.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Discover More

Ordaining Gays and Lesbians: Denominational Approaches

Among each of the movements, admitting gay and lesbian students has been a cause of debate, concern...and learning.

UJ Accepts Gay Rabbinical Students

As expected, the University of Judaism made the first practical move toward integrating the Conservative movement’s new responsum on homosexuality: ...

Orthodox Judaism and LGBTQ Issues

Efforts to make the community more compassionate have stopped short of sanctioning gay relationships.

Advertisement