|
The Call to the Torah, Now Heeded Online

Photo by
James Bates 2004
By CHARLES DeLaFUENTE
JUDAISM is
more than 5,000 years old. The Internet has been around for a tiny fraction
of that time. But a rabbi with a specialized Web site has brought ancient
tradition and modern technology together, providing conversions to Judaism
in a process that is largely accomplished online.
The rabbi, Celso Cukierkorn, offers an online conversion course to anyone
who wants to become Jewish. A PC and a Web connection bring the rabbi
and converts from as far away as Australia and New Zealand together
for online study and even the final exam.
Rabbi Cukierkorn (he pronounces it COOK-your-corn) is a convert himself,
of sorts, to computer technology. He grew up in São Paulo, Brazil,
and recalled that students learned to use computers at his high school.
But the equipment was boxy mainframe technology, probably from the 1960's,
he guessed, and he did not pursue computer training beyond high school.
"Until the mid 90's, I wasn't computer-literate," said Rabbi
Cukierkorn, who is 34. "But then I realized that there are different
ways to touch people," and that the computer was one of them.
His ancestors, who were rabbis, "traveled from village to village
to bring the message of God," he explained. "Right now it's
the same thing, except I don't go to a specific place. I can do that
from the computer."
Rabbi Cukierkorn also conducts in-person conversion classes at Congregation
B'Nai Israel, a Reform synagogue in Hattiesburg, Miss. But modern technology,
he said, provides him with "a wonderful way to help people who
cannot find a rabbi to convert them or who live in places where they
don't have a rabbi or their schedule will not allow them to convert"
in more traditional ways. Most of his online students learn about his
Web site, www.conversiontojudaism.org, from people who have taken his
course or from rabbis, he said.
The online curriculum, which is divided into eight units, is a blend
of books and online material, some of which Rabbi Cukierkorn wrote.
It is customized for each student, depending on prior knowledge of Judaism.
One of the units, for example, is what the rabbi calls "the life
cycle of the Jewish year," beginning with Rosh Hashana, the Jewish
New Year, and proceeding through other holidays and festivals in chronological
order.
At the end of each unit, there is a quiz. The curriculum requires about
80 to 120 hours of work, which can take from three months to more than
a year to complete.
In addition to the online coursework, the process requires attendance
at a conversion seminar. One was held recently in Beverly Hills, Calif.,
and another is scheduled soon in Miami Beach. Rabbi Cukierkorn said
he hoped to hold one in New York at least once a year. The course is
followed by a final exam, also given online, that has 100 questions.
But unlike most tests, there is no predetermined passing score. The
rabbi said he looks to see "how they feel and what's inside them."
He reads the answers "to see a bigger picture."
"That's what this is all about," he said. "We're not
looking for intellectual capabilities." The rabbi said that he
generally lets the convert decide how much to pay, and that the payments
have ranged from almost nothing to $2,500.
Many conversions involve someone who has married or plans to marry a
Jew, but some people give other reasons, the rabbi said. One of the
more unusual involved people who had seen the movie "Schindler's
List" and decided individually that they wanted to become Jewish.
One of the rabbi's online students, Melissa Davimos, 38, of Boca Raton,
Fla., said she wanted to convert before her daughter, Spencer, was born.
She said she was unable to find a synagogue in Boca Raton that welcomed
converts, so she turned to the Internet. She said she and her husband,
who is Jewish, planned to join a synagogue soon and to have a baby-naming
ceremony there for Spencer, who is now three months old.
Another participant, Ana Scherer, of Florianopolis, Brazil, said by
e-mail that she was born a Catholic, but that at age 12 she "came
to a conclusion that Catholicism was not my true call." Mrs. Scherer,
34, said she began studying online in Brazil and continued when she
moved to Sunny Isles Beach, Fla., in 2000.
Rabbi Cukierkorn, who was trained as an Orthodox rabbi and graduated
from the Ayshel Avraham Rabbinical Seminary in Monsey, N.Y., said he
had not encountered criticism that people who seek conversion online
are not serious enough about their desire to become Jewish.
Rabbi Ismar Schorsch, the chancellor of the Jewish Theological Seminary
of America in New York, the academic and spiritual center of Conservative
Judaism, said that the Conservative movement requires at least a year
of study by prospective converts, including learning Hebrew, and requires
"a good deal of human contact," although the process does
not all have to be face-to-face.
Rabbi Schorsch said it sounded to him like the Web site program met
the second test and was "on the right track" for the first.
Rabbi Cukierkorn said his process for conversion online was identical
to the one he uses in his synagogue. "The only difference is that
I might do the conversion interview over the phone," he said.
Asked where the majority of his converts came from, the rabbi paused,
then said: "I have people everywhere. They come from wherever God
touches their souls."
Published: July 1, 2004 in the New York Times
|