New Jewish Agenda (Organization)
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New Jewish Agenda (Organization)
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New Jewish Agenda (Organization)
N.J.A.
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N.J.A.
NJA
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NJA
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Exist Dates
Biographical History
The New Jewish Agenda (N.J.A.) was a national Jewish organization (1980-1992) that had more than forty chapters. It saw itself as a "Jewish voice among progressives" and a "progressive voice among Jews." Based on its commitment to the Talmudic precept of "Tikun Olam" --the just reordering of society--the N.J.A. took positions in support of: economic and social justice; feminism, including women's reproductive rights; peace in the Middle East, including self-determination for both Israelis and the Palestinians; a worldwide nuclear freeze; and non-intervention in Central America. It also thought that Jewish gays should be accorded equal rights within the larger Jewish community.
New Jewish Agenda (1980-1992), aka “Agenda,” identified itself as “a Jewish voice among progressives and a progressive voice among Jews.” NJA was a multi-issue organization that included secular and observant Jews, Jews from the organized Left (principally the New Left of the 1960s-1970s), and politically unaffiliated Jews; it was organized into some forty-five local chapters. The political concerns of NJA were reflected in the names of the task forces through which the bulk of its activity was conducted: the Middle East Task Force (advocating a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and opposing settlements in the occupied territories), the Economic and Social Justice Task Force, the Nuclear Disarmament Task Force, the Central America Task Force (in particular opposing U.S. policy in El Salvador and Nicaragua), and the Feminism (later to include AIDS) Task Force, which reflected the strong presence of women and homosexuals in Agenda. NJA also sought to develop a progressive Jewish cultural and religious ethos, reflected in its creation of The Shalom Seders: Three Haggadahs (1984), and also devoted some attention to the issues of Soviet Jewry and Ethiopian Jews. The process-oriented, “participatory democracy” political culture of NJA complicated its efforts to deal with its infiltration, circa 1987, by the New Alliance Party, a political cult whose views were antithetical to those of NJA. The organization also faced hostility from mainstream organized Jewry for its critical view of Israeli foreign policy, ongoing financial difficulties, and the erosion of some of its membership to other, usually single-issue progressive Jewish organizations, and eventually disbanded in 1992.
- Sources
- Block, Ethan D. “One Voice Less for the Jewish Left: New Jewish Agenda, 1981-1993.” http://www.newjewishagenda.net/PDFs/onelessvoice.pdf)
- Nepon, Emily. “New Jewish Agenda: The History of an Organization, 1980-1992.” Senior thesis, Goddard College, 2006, and related material (http://www.newjewishagenda.net/).
- “New Jewish Agenda.” Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Jewish_Agenda). (March 2009)
New Jewish Agenda (1980-1992), aka “Agenda,” identified itself as “a Jewish voice among progressives and a progressive voice among Jews.” NJA was a multi-issue organization that included secular and observant Jews, Jews from the organized Left (principally the New Left of the 1960s-1970s), and politically unaffiliated Jews; it was organized into some forty-five local chapters. The political concerns of NJA were reflected in the names of the task forces through which the bulk of its activity was conducted: the Middle East Task Force (advocating a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and opposing settlements in the occupied territories), the Economic and Social Justice Task Force, the Nuclear Disarmament Task Force, the Central America Task Force (in particular opposing U.S. policy in El Salvador and Nicaragua), and the Feminism (later to include AIDS) Task Force, which reflected the strong presence of women and homosexuals in Agenda. NJA also sought to develop a progressive Jewish cultural and religious ethos, reflected in its creation of The Shalom Seders: Three Haggadahs (1984), and also devoted some attention to the issues of Soviet Jewry and Ethiopian Jews. The process-oriented, “participatory democracy” political culture of NJA complicated its efforts to deal with its infiltration, circa 1987, by the New Alliance Party, a political cult whose views were antithetical to those of NJA. The organization also faced hostility from mainstream organized Jewry for its critical view of Israeli foreign policy, ongoing financial difficulties, and the erosion of some of its membership to other, usually single-issue progressive Jewish organizations, and eventually disbanded in 1992.
- Sources
- Block, Ethan D. “One Voice Less for the Jewish Left: New Jewish Agenda, 1981-1993.” http://www.newjewishagenda.net/PDFs/onelessvoice.pdf)
- Nepon, Emily. “New Jewish Agenda: The History of an Organization, 1980-1992.” Senior thesis, Goddard College, 2006, and related material (http://www.newjewishagenda.net/).
- “New Jewish Agenda.” Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Jewish_Agenda). (March 2009)
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/265668425
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n83152708
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n83152708
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
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Internal CPF Relations
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Languages Used
Subjects
Antinuclear movement
Antisemitism
Antisemitism
Arab
Arab
Associations, institutions, etc.
Feminism
Human rights
Human rights
Jewish gays
Jewish radicals
Jews
Jews
Jews
Jews
Jews
Jews
Jews
Jews
Peace movements
Reproductive health
Self-determination, National
Social justice
Social justice
Women's rights
Nationalities
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Central America |x Politics and government |y 1979-
AssociatedPlace
Israel
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
United States |x Foreign relations |z Israel.
AssociatedPlace
Palestine
AssociatedPlace
Central America |x Politics and government |y 1979-
AssociatedPlace
Central America
AssociatedPlace
United States |x Foreign relations |z Israel.
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>