Strong Jewish Links of "Atheist Guide"
Compiler - Simon Rocker
(reprinted by permission from Jewish Chronicle, London, England, June 8, 2001)
In his latest book, Chief Rabbi Dr. Jonathan Sachs observed that there had been a "disproportionate" number of
Jewish atheists. So it would probably come as no surprise to find that the author of a new book who argues that God is bad
for us is a former president of Oxford University Jewish Society.
Daniel Harbour's "An Intelligent Person's Guide
to Atheism" is part of Duckworth's "Intelligent Guide" series, which has previously included a work on Judaism
by Rabbi Shmuel Boteach. Indeed, the media-friendly rabbi helped the 26-year-old student clinch his book deal.
"I
was at Shmuley's birthday party in London and the head of Duckworth was there as well," Mr. Harbour explained during
a visit to his native London from America, where he is studying for a doctorate in linguistics at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.
His grandfather, the late industrialist Sir Emmanuel Kaye, was a sponsor of the Anglo-Jewish journal
of Orthodox thought, "L'Eylah," at the time it was published jointly by the Chief Rabbi's office.
But despite
attending a Jewish secondary school in Australia, the young author - who has a degree in mathematics and philosophy from Balliol
College, Oxford - did not see the attractions of religion.
Not only is atheism philosophically preferable, he argues.
It is also morally so, being grounded in a rational world-view which has yielded both scientific and social progress. Religious
sentiments, he writes, are "often impediments and rarely allies to moral progress."
Not that Mr Harbour
has relinquished his attachment to Jewish culture. "When someone says that Judaism without God is meaningless, that is
a comment about them," he observed. "It's a failure to grasp what the heritage has to offer.
"My favourite
aspects of Judaism are, as Sir Isaiah Berlin once said to my grandmother, 'the words and the food.'"
Raised in
an environment of "Friday night, High Holy-days Judaism," Mr. Harbour moved with his family from Paddington to Sydney
as a child.
He recalled his Jewish school, Moriah College, as having "an amazing number of dedicated teachers,
who attempted to give us a religious education. If I go to synagogue, I know what's going on.
"But the best things
I got out of it were a more concrete Jewish identity and a reasonable command of classical Hebrew, which has come in quite
handy while working in theoretical linguistics."
His book is peppered with Jewish references to Maimonides, the
Bible Codes and to his Uncle Morry, chartered-surveyor-turned-spiritual-healer Morris Tester.
In one test case, he
uses the emancipation of the Jews to demonstrate that rationalist intellectuals, rather than religious leaders, have advanced
the ideals of democracy.
Mr Harbour believed the question of whether Jews could survive as a cultural, as opposed
to a religious, group threw up parallels with other communities.
"I work with two Native American tribes
on language documentation and education projects," he told the JC. "One of the tribes is in Oklahoma, the buckle
of the Bible belt. Members still perform many of the dances they used to, which all had spiritual meaning. But now they assiduously
claim they're dancing for recreation. That's symptomatic of a very broad experience in many disparate communities."
What
worries him about Judaism is "that a lot of the reaction to secularists serves to make it increasingly meaningless to
many people - to come down with harder and harder rabbinic lines on issues that demand compromise, such as the situation with
agunot (women denied an religious divorce). I think that's a prime case of where the law is going in the wrong direction."
On
the "Intelligent Guide" jacket plug, Rabbi Boteach describes Mr. Harbour as "an intellectual steamroller,"
whose book cannot fail to stimulate "even devout believers like myself."
The two will be appearing at the
book's U.S. launch in the autumn. "He's planing a debate," the author said. "I'm planning a discussion."