Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, January/February
1998, Page 70
Demographics
Honey, I Shrunk the Community
By R. Clemente Holder
Former Reagan administration Assistant Secretary of
State for Inter-American Affairs Elliott Abrams had his 14 minutes
of fame back in 1986 during the Iran-Contra hearings when it was
disclosed that he "inadvertently" had put a $10 million
contribution for the Nicaraguan Contras from the Sultan of Brunei
into the Swiss bank account of a man then described as a "Swiss
businessman." There it accumulated more than $200,000 in interest
before it was discovered and retrieved.
What most U.S. journalists (perhaps "inadvertently")
didn't report was that the Swiss businessman was in fact an Israeli-Swiss
dual citizen closely associated with former Israeli Prime Minister
Shimon Peres who, in conjunction with State Department and White
House consultant Michael Ledeen, then a protegé of National
Security Adviser Robert (Bud) McFarlane, originally cooked up Irangate,
a scheme to get U.S. permission for Israel to sell at sizable profits
American arms to the Ayatollah Khomeini's government during its
eight-year war with Saddam Hussain's Iraq.
All that, and the close brush with jail of some Irangate
participants before they were pardoned by President George Bush,
is behind Elliott Abrams now. In fact, he has gotten religion. He
describes himself as a "somewhat observant Conservative Jew"
who attends synagogue every Sabbath and who has written a book called
Faith or Fear: How Jews Can Survive in a Christian World.
The brief book describes the demographics of America's
Jewish community as "a disaster in the making." He explains:
"Of the 6.8 million people who are Jews or of Jewish descent,
1.1 million say they have no religion and 1.3 million have joined
another religion. This means that one-third of the people in America
of Jewish ethnic origin no longer report Judaism as their current
religion."
By our calculations, using Abrams' figures leaves
an American Jewish community of 4.4 million, meaning about 1.7 percent
of the U.S. population of 260 million. It gives rise to questions
as to why America's Islamic population hasn't yet been able to make
any discernible impact on U.S. Middle East policy. Clearly Muslims
already outnumber America's Jewish population, whose leaders, informed
Americans agree, are calling the Mideast shots for the United States.
American Muslims are variously estimated at five to
eight million people depending upon whether only those who attend
a mosque regularly are counted, or instead the total is based upon
all Americans who describe themselves as Muslim. Since Islam is
America's (and the world's) fastest growing religion, the numbers
may presage at least a diminution of the influence of the organized
U.S. Jewish community on U.S. policies in the Middle East and South
Asia.
It's pertinent to mention here that there also are
about two million Arab-American Christians, whose outlook on the
the Israeli-Palestine dispute seems identical with that of the great
majority of American Muslims.
Israeli Demographics
An official breakdown of Israel's 1997 population
total of 5,863,000 also yields interesting statistics. Of these,
4,702,200 are Jewish, 872,000 are Muslims, 190,000 are Christians,
and 100,000 are Druze. Taking the Jewish population figure at face
value (and no one does, since Israel counts any former Jewish resident
as still present so long as they visit Israel at least once every
four years), that provides a total of 9.1 million Jews in the U.S.
and Israel, of whom up to 600,000 or 700,000 may actually be counted
in both places. The total of Jews living in the rest of the world
outside Israel is generally assumed to be about the same as the
Jewish population of the United States.
Since Elliott Abrams, son-in-law of Commentary
editors Norman Podhoretz and Midge Decter, is a self-proclaimed
Zionist, his forecast of "disaster" seems accurate from
his point of view.
Fruits of Intermarriage
An extract by Yaakov Arnold in The Jewish Week
of New York from a study by Bruce A. Philips entitled Re-examining
Intermarriage Trends, Textures and Strategies, which was commissioned
by the American Jewish Committee, provides additional information
pertinent to the figures above. In the U.S., according to the study,
52 percent of all Jews marry someone out of the faith. Of the children
of these marriages, nearly two-thirds are raised outside of the
Jewish faith.
According to the extract, of the children of mixed
marriages in the U.S., 33 percent are reared as Christian only,
25 percent are reared as Jewish and Christian, 24 percent are reared
with no religion, and 18 percent are reared as Jewish only.
Personally, we think we'd fit in best with those kids
being reared as both Jewish and Christian. "Only in America,"
as we used to say when we all felt good about ourselves.
R.
Clemente Holder writes on environmental and demographic issues from
Washington, DC. |