Click on the image to visit Temple Aliyah's website.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Rabbi David Hartman, 1931-2013


Rosh Hodesh Adar, 5773

Dear Friends,

This morning I attended the funeral of my teacher, Rabbi David Hartman, the founder of the Hartman Institute, who died on Sunday.  The funeral was held at the Institute, where Rabbi Hartman had taught and lectured on many, many occasions.  




Let me tell you a little about Rabbi Hartman. 

Rabbi Hartman was an extraordinary force.  He was a brilliant philosopher, an electrifying speaker and a caring mentor, and he was also a dreamer and a builder.  He was passionate and impassioned, with fiercely held and well-articulated views—and he was also a man with broad perspectives and a big heart.  Born into an ultra-Orthodox family in New York, he later became a true pluralist, respecting and seeking to further not just Orthodoxy, but the entire spectrum of Jewish religious perspectives. 

After making aliyah from Montreal soon after the Six Day War, Rabbi Hartman became a professor of philosophy at the Hebrew University. For anyone else, that might have been enough.  But it wasn’t enough for Rabbi Hartman. He wanted his influence to extend beyond the ivory tower.  He wanted to have a deep impact on Israeli society. 

And so Rabbi Hartman created the Hartman Institute (named after his father).  He gathered around him scholars from various Jewish disciplines (Bible, Talmud, Jewish History and Jewish Philosophy) and established a Jewish “think tank” to promote interdisciplinary Jewish scholarship.  The Hartman Institute has produced a respectable collection of published works.  But that wasn’t enough for Rabbi Hartman. He didn’t just want scholars to better understand what Jewish texts meant in the past, he wanted those texts to matter, and to make a difference, today.  And so he decided to use the Institute to create opportunities for North American rabbis—of all denominations—to come to Israel and explore Jewish texts together.  He wanted rabbis to work hard at listening to our sacred texts and to one another, and together to determine what kind of a difference those texts could make in our lives—and in the lives of the members of our congregations.

David Hartman loved rabbis, and he is responsible for bringing hundreds of rabbis to Israel for weeks at a time to learn, to grow, to reflect, to strategize, and to be renewed.  I am one such rabbi.  Between 2003 and 2008, I came to Israel twice a year to study at the “Machon,”—or, “the Institute,” as we affectionately called it—and I then became a Senior Rabbinic Fellow there. Since then, whenever I have come to Israel, I have stopped by the Machon to study in the library or to talk with colleagues. Just last week, I went there to sit in on a few lectures with the current cohort of rabbis studying in the Center for Rabbinic Enrichment.  (Included in that group, incidentally, is Rabbi Eric Gurvis of Temple Shalom in Newton, with whom I co-led a trip to Israel with nineteen ministers in 2009.) 

Without the Hartman Institute, it is possible that some of the many hundreds of rabbis who have studied there would have come to Israel at one time or another.  But it is highly unlikely that rabbis from different denominations, such as Rabbi Gurvis and myself, would have talked, much less studied, with one another in Israel.  That was Rabbi Hartman’s genius:  to create a mutually respectful Beit Midrash (study hall) in which all of our voices could be heard.

In addition to its rabbinic programs, the Machon now runs programs for cantors, educators, and lay leaders as well, which bring many newcomers—and many returnees—to the Institute each year.  One day, I hope that we can organize a group from Temple Aliyah.  Incidentally, not only Jews have benefitted from the Hartman embrace: each year, dozens of Christian clergy and laity visit the Institute to explore the meaning of the Holy Land to the Abrahamic faiths.  (Boston’s own James Carroll is a regular.)




Haval d’avdin v’lah mishtak’khin.  That’s a Talmudic phrase that means, “Alas, for those who are gone, and are no longer to be found.”  (Sanhedrin 111a.)  Rabbi Hartman was unique.  His energy, his fierce pursuit of truth, and his love of the Jewish People, were extraordinary.  He will be missed.

May his memory remain a blessing. 

Sincerely,

Rabbi Carl M. Perkins

P.S.  If you would like to read more about Rabbi Hartman, here are three recommendations: 
            (1.) the English-language homepage of the Hartman Institute, on which you can access writings and video clips of Rabbi Hartman teaching: click here
            (2.) a tribute to Rabbi Hartman, written by Professor Arnold Eisen, the chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America: click here.
            (3.) the obituary published in today’s Haaretz newspaper: click here