The Pew Report: Why the Orthodox Stayed Static

5
>>Follow Matzav On Whatsapp!<<

 jewishBy Rabbi Avraham Edelstein

The Pew study found 6.8 million American Jews[1], 25% more than the 2001 National Jewish Population Survey which found 5.2 million[2], but these are self-definitions with widely varying ideas about what it means to be Jewish. 1.3 million children are being raised at least partly Jewish. In a Jewish home in the United States, you’re more likely to find a X-mas tree – 32% – than a kosher kitchen – 22%. Nearly half of American Jews do not know the Hebrew alphabet,[3] and 34% said you could still be Jewish if you believe that J- was the Messiah.

Jews make up 2.2% of the American population, a percentage that has held steady for the past two decades.

The Pew results did not provide any radical news on the dismal state of intermarriage and lack of basic Jewish literacy and affiliation. Nor did we need Pew to tell us that the middle is falling out of the Jewish people (Conservative Jews are now only 18%), that the Orthodox, although showing little growth so far, should reflect big increases in the near future (see analysis below), and that the unaffiliated at 30% now comprise American Jewry’s second largest group after Reform at 35%. Ten years ago, 93% of American Jews told surveyors that their religion was Judaism. This year, only 78% of those who were raised as Jews and identify as Jews said that their religion was Judaism. Just 7% of Jews born between 1914 and 1927 say they have no religion; 32% of Jews born since 1980 say they have no religion.

The Conservatives are set to fall further. While 24% of Jews older than 65 identify as Conservative, only 11% of Jews aged 18-29 do the same, and this, from a movement that was the largest in America for most of the 20th Century. Just 36% of Jews brought up Conservative say that they are Conservative today. Most of those lost went to Reform, in particular the intermarrieds. The Reform will also show increasing attrition. Only 29% of people aged 18 to 29 are Reform, giving it an aging population. Only 55% of those brought up Reform are Reform today.

Non-Orthodox birthrates average around 1.7, and that includes births from non-Jewish mothers married to Jewish fathers. The average age of Conservative and Reform adults is now 55 and 54 respectively, and the trend points to these populations aging further with time.

Pew produced, in just one week, tens of articles, Facebook posts and Twitter comments on the current and future state of American Jewry. No journalist likes to be late with his story and, in a world where last year’s iPhone is out of date, the latest study always wins. The Pew study deserves attention, but only as a contrast to the dozens of studies that go on about American Jewry all the time. While it is doubtful whether the study will lead to any significant changes in funding priorities, Pew can be credited with keeping the issues alive, and perhaps energizing the missions and visions of those who know that American Jewry needs a lot of input.

Why the Orthodox stayed static

The results showed a plummeting Conservative (down to 18%), a stable Reform (at 35%), and a growing group of unaffiliated (at 30%). All of that we knew before. But the Orthodox percentage of the population did not go up. It was static at 10%.[4] This was a surprising result. Other studies led to the expectation of a growing Orthodoxy. The Orthodox proportion of American synagogue members has been going up from 11% in 1971 to 16% in 1990 to 21% in 2001, and maybe it went up again now. But with high birthrates (4.1 children per couple compared to 2.2 of the non-Orthodox), quick generational increase (the average Orthodox generation is about 30 years whereas it is about 40 years in the broader population[5]), Baalei Teshuva (150,000 according to Pew[6]) – we should have seen some growth. The study showed 330,000 who left Orthodoxy[7], (or put differently, only 48% of people who were brought up Orthodox remained Orthodox) so that would explain it.

But, this is not as bad as it sounds. The study showed that those who left Orthodoxy are mainly in the older demographic.[8] Just 22% of people 65 and older who were raised Orthodox are still Orthodox, while 57% of people aged 30-49 who were raised Orthodox are still Orthodox. By my calculations, most of those people left Orthodoxy when they were much younger, between 1970 and 2000 (12 years ago, I figured on 300,000 leaving during that period of time), but that should have meant an increase in the Orthodox percentage in the last 12 years, when the population was stabilizing.

Of course that 10% is highly vibrant by any variable: Their educational institutions, birth-rate, or level of commitment.[9] In addition, the Orthodox are no longer an economically deprived group. There is no longer an incentive to leave Orthdoxy in order to climb the socio-economic ladder. “I’m predicting that younger Orthodox will have much higher retention rates,” Stephen M. Cohen[10] said. “Orthodoxy has raised the bar, so today’s version of what it means to be Orthodox is more compelling and cohesive than in previous generations.” (Pew did reveal some disturbing things about the Orthodox though. Only 83% say religion is very important in their lives. 14% do not. And 2% say they do not believe in God.)

But beyond that, in my opinion, the study is underestimating the current number of Orthodox. It is showing 600,000 Orthodox Jews (10%), when really there are closer to a million (about 17% out of 6.6 million). So, how did the study get it wrong? Firstly, the sample was randomized. However, due to the concentration of the Orthodox Jews in particular areas, randomization is likely to skew the results away from the Orthodox. (And so, for example, I cannot find a single Orthodox person who was contacted by the survey.)

In addition, the sample includes many non-halachic Jews, and this increases the sample size and dilutes the Orthodox percentage.

Furthermore, local community studies show a greater increase in the Orthodox population than the Pew study. The population of Orthodox Jews in the New York area grew by more than 100,000 between 2002 and 2011, according to a survey published in 2012 by UJA-Federation of New York.

[I have another proof that the results are off. The study showed that 79,200 of the 150,000 Baalei Teshuva came from the unaffiliated, while only 47,520 came from the Conservatives. Yet, experience has taught us that most Baalei Teshuva came through the Conservative movement.]

It was also pointed out[11] that Jews who attend Chabad and other outreach centers probably were counted wrong. There are 875 Reform synagogues in North America (representing the strongest branch of Judaism) while there are 959 Chabad centers. Jews attending these places often will not define themselves as Orthodox because the definition of Orthodox means fully observant. But really they are Orthodox Mechalalei Shabbat, even though they will be identified as Conservative or Reform. (Such Jews may or may not be official members of a Reform or Conservative community, but their primary attendance will be at the Chabad center.)

In any case, Orthodoxy is showing a vibrancy that should lead to a significant increase over time. Their birthrates are far more than twice those of other Jews, who clock in at 1.7 children per couple (not all of whom are halachically Jewish), below the replacement level of 2.1. The Orthodox age profile is young (as opposed to Conservative and Reform adults (55 and 54, respectively), and their intergenerational retention rates for the younger age groups are very high.

This answers a question I was asked about the study. If, as the study shows, we gained 150,000 Baalei Teshuva and lost 350,000 born-Orthodox, should we not put more money into retention than into Kiruv? Retention now is high, as I stated above. (In any case, only a tiny percentage of money is allocated to kiruv compared to the broader Orthodox world. Here is not the time to spell this out. But, just as an example, Lakewood Yeshiva has an operating budget of $35 million a year and a capital campaign budget of another few million; that equals or exceeds the total amount of non-Chabad outreach projects on all the campuses of North America combined.)


[1] The new population estimates are not based on a new survey. Rather they were synthesized from the data of nearly 350 recent surveys of the U.S. adult population, with more than 320,000 respondents and 6,900 Jewish respondents. Titled “American Jewish Population Estimates: 2012,” the study was conducted by the Steinhardt Social Research Institute and the Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies at Brandeis University.

[2] However, because the methodology used was completely different, the newer numbers cannot be used to demonstrate an increase in the U.S. Jewish population.
[3] Only 12% said they could have a conversation in Hebrew, with another 5% volunteering they could “sort of” do so.

[4] The 2001 NJPS study showed the Orthodox at 8%.

[5] I made this calculation based on the average age when the Orthodox and non-Orthodox get married and the average length of marriage until the middle kid is born.

[6] The impact of this number is double because each person is leaving the non-Orthodox population and then joining the Orthodox population.

[7] Here too the impact of this number is double as per the previous note but in the opposite direction.

[8]Pew Orthodox Image

[9] According to Pew, the majority of Orthodox Jews are ultra-Orthodox. Modern Orthodox Jews make up 3% of America’s Jewish population. Ultra-Orthodox Jews make up 6%, according to Pew.

[10] Steven M. Cohen is a research professor at the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion and director of the Berman Jewish Policy Archive at New York University’s Wagner School of Public Service.

[11] http://www.aishfl.com/purplesheet/.

Read more at NER L’ELEF.

{Matzav.com Newscenter}


5 COMMENTS

  1. Nobody in my family was contacted, and I don’t know of anyone who has ever been contacted.

    I’m a 50y/o Baalei Teshuvah in a small community on the southern east cost. The conservative shul’s (2) are struggling for a minyan, the reform shul (1) is flush with members, and our orthodox shul (1) is growing and is primarily baalei teshuvah.

    Good article R’Steven.

  2. Before you go about writing shticlach torah answering why the orthodox stayed static, you have to first determine if the survey was accurate. Based on simple common sense and personal experience, it is quite hard to believe that Orthodox did actually remain static. The modern orthodox have lost a number of members and the yeshiva/chassidishe world has also lost a few. But these are totally outshadowed by the exponential birth rate of the latter groups. Most probably, the surveyors did not make equal contact with all groups of Jews. Not everything has to be used to forward your agenda, as honorable as it may be.

  3. “The study showed that those who left Orthodoxy are mainly in the older demographic.[8] Just 22% of people 65 and older who were raised Orthodox are still Orthodox, while 57% of people aged 30-49 who were raised Orthodox are still Orthodox. By my calculations, most of those people left Orthodoxy when they were much younger, between 1970 and 2000 (12 years ago, I figured on 300,000 leaving during that period of time), but that should have meant an increase in the Orthodox percentage in the last 12 years, when the population was stabilizing.”

    It is important to remember that OTD by age statistics are CUMULATIVE. While it is impossible without access to the original to make a definitive statement, the data presented seem consistent with a constant rate of dropping out of Orthodoxy throughout adulthood.

    “It is showing 600,000 Orthodox Jews (10%), when really there are closer to a million (about 17% out of 6.6 million).”

    We know from the Avi Chai Foundation censuses that there are only about 200,000 students in Orthodox day schools — and not all of them are from Orthodox families. With the high Orthodox birthrate, a million Orthodox Jews should result in many more students in school. The 600,000 number is probably pretty accurate.

  4. I have noticed a fascinating development in a few communities. In St Louis where I currently reside, we have 5 Orthodox shuls — Bais Abe, outside the community, which serves Wash U; Young Israel and Aguda, which are both around 70% FFB; Nusach Ari; and UCity Shul. The latter is growing exponentially with new members consisting of mostly middle age people, most of whom are from Conservative backgrounds, or Russian ex pats. But the truly fascinating thing is that this shul of 200 member families is almost 100% baalei tshuva. It was Aish HaTorah’s first regular stateside synagogue (I.e. Not one of their standard Aish Kirov centers). In my travels to various and sundry frum communities in the US, I have seen this phenomenon in many other middle American cities (I.e outside of the main large Orthodox centers of NY, Chicago, Baltimore, LA), in which case it’s not at all rare to find shuls and kehillos that are predominantly FFB. Rather in places like St Louis, Denver, Columbus, Pittsburgh, Dallas, Houston, it’s not at all uncommon to find major a Orthodox shuls that are overwhelmingly Baal teshuva, where the only FFB members are the rabbi and the children of the members.

Leave a Reply to no Cancel reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here