It's a matter of identity. Peter Beinart made waves by suggesting young links of london charms are turned off of Zionism by Israel's hawkish politics and the Jewish establishment's growing conservatism. But I'm more convinced by those Links of London Gingerbread Man link declining interest in Israel with declining interest in Judaism. In their 2007 study showing a "growing distancing" from Israel among the young non-Orthodox, Steven M. Links of London Globe Charm and Ari Kelman suggest the culprit isn't Israeli policies but - wait for it - intermarriage. "Intermarriage reflects and promotes departure from all manner of Jewish ethnic 'groupiness,' of which Links of London H Charm attachment is part," Cohen wrote in response to Beinart. It's an uncomfortable finding, and Cohen has taken shots from rabbis, activists, and families who insist strong Jewish identities persist within intermarriage. But the finding is consistent with the voluntary nature of contemporary Jewish belonging. In Disraeli's day, a Jew could join the church and still never be considered anything but a "foreigner."
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