Sodom and Gonorrhea
In the early 1970s, while I was CEO of the Seagram Company, public
dialogue about gay rights was largely nonexistent in corporate America.
Social discourse had not yet even evolved into the “don’t ask, don’t
tell” ethos that dominated the following decades. Homosexuality was
simply not discussed and therefore, by implication, was shameful.
During that time, as the head of a company with thousands of
employees, personnel issues often came across my desk. One day, the
director of human resources came into my office with a recommendation to
terminate one of my brightest executives. I found myself puzzled that
anyone would want to fire such a promising young man until the director
leaned in and confided in a hushed tone, “Well, you know, he’s a
homosexual.”
The declaration did persuade me — but not in the way he had hoped.
The promising young executive continued on to a distinguished career
at Seagram, and the HR director was soon let go. Although my choice was
shocking to the director, the decision was obvious to me: to fire a
person because of their sexual orientation was not only wrong, it was
bad business. It was discrimination, plain and simple, and would not be
tolerated in the company I ran.
More than 40 years later, I still feel such discrimination to be
unequivocally wrong, but my views on the subject of gay rights have
evolved. Particularly today, as we celebrate the U.S. Supreme Court’s
decision to recognize the legality of gay marriage, I now see marriage
equality as a moral imperative because of my Jewish roots.
Just as the high court has shown moral bravery in its recognition of
gay marriage, the Jewish community should follow its example in our
myriad communities. As Jews, we should remember that our tradition
upholds the bond between two loving people and the families they create
as a source of strength and commitment to the betterment of the world.
“Justice” is a word we are taught early in life, and we are reminded
constantly that it is a principle we should uphold and promote. In
Hebrew, the word tzedek is used to promote acts of loving kindness and
righteousness. Its diminutive, tzedakah, is translated as charity, but
it is much more. We are taught in the Torah, in the book of Deuteronomy
16:20: “Justice, Justice shall you pursue.” In Hebrew, “Tzedek, tzedek
tirdorf.”
It is a vital, active imperative for the Jewish people to be on the
front lines of issues protecting and promoting the rights of any group
being treated unfairly. To take approximately 10 percent of the U.S.
population and tell them they are second-class citizens is clearly
unjust. As Jews we are instructed to seek justice for the stranger, the
widow and the orphan because too often society discriminates against and
takes advantage of those without advocates.
I have come to see the protection of gay marriage as a manifestation
of the Jewish value of seeking justice for those who are enslaved. To
those who cover their prejudice with reference to biblical injunctions
against homosexuality, I ask if they are willing to live by every other
law listed in the Torah. For such literalists, I submit that the very
Torah portion of Leviticus that they so often quote also enjoins us to
harbor no hatred against our brother and our neighbor.
To freeze Judaism in time because of ancient biblical edicts is to
deny that Judaism is a mighty river that moves forward through time, a
living entity that changes course and becomes renewed through what it
meets on the banks. Like a river, it retains its essential character
although it is constantly renewed and evolving.
Today, the Jewish pursuit of justice must channel itself against the
denial of marriage equality. For Jews, who have suffered so much
throughout history at the hands of prejudice, to stand idly by while any
group is treated so unfairly is unequivocally wrong.
I have been inspired in my thinking on gay rights and marriage
equality by a woman I have known since she was a teenager. She is now
the leader of Keshet, a group that promotes equality for the LGBT
community in the Jewish world.
Idit Klein first came to my attention when she was in high school.
She was a student on a program I founded called the Bronfman Youth
Fellowship that targets Jewish teens of exceptional promise from an
array of backgrounds. In my conversations with her over the years, I
have learned that the issues facing LGBT Jews are ones on which all Jews
need to speak out.
Within the Jewish community we must endeavor to include and celebrate
the diversity of families and couples within all aspects of religious,
communal and institutional life. When our communities continue to open
their tents as our forefather Abraham did, to include all who wish to
participate in Jewish life, our people’s possibilities expand and gain
strength.
Edgar M. Bronfman, the former CEO of the Seagram Company Ltd., is
president of the Samuel Bronfman Foundation, which seeks to inspire a
renaissance of Jewish life. He is the author of “The Bronfman Haggadah”
(Rizzoli Press) created in conjunction with his wife, artist Jan
Aronson.
Every year nearly 20 million new STDs — sometimes called venereal disease or sexually transmitted infections (STIs) — occur in the United States.
Oral sex and throat cancer: Michael Douglas HPV report spotlights "epidemic"
Jewish values :
Prop 8 Plaintiffs Get Call from Obama Live on MSNBC
A gay couple who filed the California Prop 8 case was being interviewed by MSNBC on the Supreme Court steps when President Obama called in mid-interview from Air Force 1 to congratulate them.
Obviously, the “call-in” was coordinated between the Dem partisans running MSNBC and the operatives at the White House.
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