Paul Mendlowitz

How the Ultra-Orthodox Rabbis Destroyed Reason and Common Sense – Victims Galore

There was a time when Judaism produced giants who saw no contradiction between Torah and reason. The greatest example remains Maimonides, the Rambam, who was simultaneously a rabbi, physician, philosopher, scientist, and legal scholar. He believed that the human mind was one of God’s greatest gifts and that ignorance was not a virtue. To know God required study, observation, and intellectual honesty. Judaism, in his view, demanded rigorous thinking.

Yet somewhere along the way, large segments of the ultra-Orthodox world abandoned that tradition. Reason slowly became suspect. Critical thinking became dangerous. Questions became acts of rebellion. Intellectual curiosity became something to suppress rather than cultivate. Entire communities increasingly defined piety not by wisdom but by obedience.

The tragedy is not merely educational. It is civilizational. When children are taught that secular knowledge is worthless, when science is treated as a threat, when history is rewritten to fit ideological needs, and when independent thought is discouraged, a culture inevitably begins to shrink. The result is not greater holiness but greater dependency. A society that fears questions eventually loses the ability to answer them.

The irony is that the rabbis who often proclaim themselves defenders of tradition are, in many ways, rejecting one of Judaism’s oldest traditions—the tradition of argument, inquiry, and debate. The Talmud is not a book of slogans. It is a book of disagreements. Page after page records fierce arguments among scholars who challenged one another relentlessly. The sages understood that truth emerges through struggle and examination, not through the silencing of dissent.

Many contemporary ultra-Orthodox leaders have instead built systems in which authority itself becomes the highest value. The rabbi is not merely a teacher but an oracle. Decisions about education, employment, politics, military service, medicine, and even personal family matters are often surrendered to a small clerical elite. The consequence is predictable: common sense becomes subordinate to institutional interests. Reality itself becomes negotiable.

One sees the effects in communities where young men can spend decades isolated from the practical demands of modern life while depending upon others for economic support. One sees it when educational systems graduate students unable to function effectively in broader society because they were denied essential skills. One sees it when ideological loyalty becomes more important than truth.

The damage extends beyond the ultra-Orthodox world.
When religious leadership presents ignorance as virtue, critics often conclude that Judaism itself is hostile to knowledge. Nothing could be further from the truth. The Jewish tradition that produced the Rambam, the commentators, the scientists, the physicians, and the great legal minds was built upon intellectual rigor. It celebrated the disciplined use of reason.

The challenge facing the Orthodox world today is not whether it can preserve Torah. Torah has survived empires, persecutions, and exiles. The challenge is whether it can rediscover the confidence that truth has nothing to fear from knowledge. A Judaism afraid of reason is a Judaism that has forgotten its own history.

The greatest threat to faith is not science. It is not modernity. It is not secular education. The greatest threat is leadership that mistakes conformity for conviction and obedience for wisdom. When common sense becomes an enemy, both religion and society suffer.

A community that teaches its children how to think will endure. A community that teaches them only what to think eventually finds itself unable to confront reality. The rabbis who abandoned reason may have won control over their institutions, but they did so at the cost of one of Judaism’s most precious inheritances: the belief that God expects human beings to use the minds He gave them.

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'The Unorthodox Jew' is a blog that critically examines aspects of Orthodox Judaism, offering in-depth analysis and commentary on contemporary issues within the community. Authored by an Orthodox writer, the blog delves into controversial and often sensitive topics, aiming to foster dialogue and reflection. With a focus on accountability and transparency, the blog serves as a platform for discussing challenges and advocating for change within Orthodox Jewish practices and leadership.
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