Progressive Jewish group launches think tank to counter spread of right-wing ideas

The think tank will fund research, host events with scholars, and publish essays that draw on Jewish traditions.

Rabbi Rachel Kahn Troster, T’ruah’s director of programs (left) and Rabbi Jill Jacobs, Truah’s executive director (right) marching along 5th Avenue. (photo credit: CHRISTOPHER PARKS)
Rabbi Rachel Kahn Troster, T’ruah’s director of programs (left) and Rabbi Jill Jacobs, Truah’s executive director (right) marching along 5th Avenue.
(photo credit: CHRISTOPHER PARKS)

Progressive Jewish leaders have launched a new think tank meant to counter what its founders see as an effort by a few billionaires to flood the Jewish world with conservative ideas. 

Emor, the Institute for Bold Jewish Thought, is a project of T’ruah, an advocacy organization of rabbis dedicated to promoting human rights and social justice. In Hebrew, “emor” is a directive meaning “speak.”

The think tank will fund research, host events with scholars, and publish essays that draw on Jewish traditions and teachings to influence public discourse and policy around issues such as racism, immigration and LGBTQ rights in the United States. Emor will also provide a forum for scholars and thinkers who are critical of Israel.

“The right has put significant resources over decades into thought leadership,” said Rabbi Jill Jacobs, the CEO of T’ruah. “In the Jewish world, we have Tikvah Fund and the Maimonides Fund and others who are investing very heavily in putting out conservative ideas that are cloaked in Jewish language and who are claiming authenticity. Emor is a response to the need for the progressive Jewish world to go really deep into our texts in our traditions and in our history and respond to the biggest questions of our moment.”

“In the Jewish world, we have Tikvah Fund and the Maimonides Fund and others who are investing very heavily in putting out conservative ideas that are cloaked in Jewish language and who are claiming authenticity."

Rabbi Jill Jacobs

Ahead of its official launch, Emor dipped its toes in the work of think tanks, linking up scholars for conversations about “democracy, nationalism and human rights in a Jewish state” and helping set up a symposium on democracy and Judaism. 

 Progressive activist group Jews For Racial and Economic Justice are demanding an apology from the Anti Defamation League in a letter signed by multiple Jewish politicians and leaders on Monday.  (credit: GILI GETZ)
Progressive activist group Jews For Racial and Economic Justice are demanding an apology from the Anti Defamation League in a letter signed by multiple Jewish politicians and leaders on Monday. (credit: GILI GETZ)

In the spring, Emor plans to publish a single-issue magazine called Freedom that “reclaims the idea of freedom from those who seek to use it in order to compromise the safety, security and rights of others,” according to a press release. 

Opposing ideologies

Over the past two years, progressive Jewish leaders such as Jacobs have watched with dismay as ideological rivals have rolled out a series of intellectual initiatives that have drawn attention inside and beyond Jewish communities. Last year, for example, saw the launch of Sapir, a journal of ideas edited by conservative commentator Bret Stephens on behalf of the Maimonides Fund. Sapir’s publisher doesn’t see it as a conservative publication and notes that it has published a range of views. (Maimonides is a supporter of 70 Faces Media, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency’s parent organization.)

Soon after, a new group known as Jewish Institute for Liberal Values, organized an open letter to warn of “social justice ideology,” as a “pernicious” force that is “antithetical to Judaism.”

More recently, the right-wing Tikvah Fund featured Republican politician Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida, as the keynote speaker at its Jewish Leadership Conference, where he and other conservatives railed against the left and argued that Judaism is more compatible with conservatism.

Jacobs said that what distinguishes Emor from these conservative initiatives, besides ideology, is how it’s being funded. She said that while right-wing ideas are being promoted in the Jewish world by just a relatively small number of ultra-wealthy donors, Emor is collecting smaller donations from a larger number of supporters. 

“This broader base of funding reflects that the majority of the Jewish community is not where those conservative publications are and is actually committed to human rights,” she said.