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Jonathan Sacks spoke to us all Britain has lost one of its greatest moral philosophers

"He made everyone feel included." Rabbi Lord Sacks in 2017. Credit: Bret Hartman via TED

"He made everyone feel included." Rabbi Lord Sacks in 2017. Credit: Bret Hartman via TED


November 9, 2020   5 mins

The Prince of Wales spoke at Rabbi Lord Sacks’s retirement dinner back in 2013. The men were good  friends, and both born in 1948, the year of the foundation of the state of Israel. “I realise we have now reached the official age of retirement,” Prince Charles joked and laughter rippled the room. “But I do hope yours is going to be a bit more realistic than mine.” Jonathan Sacks was retiring before Prince Charles had even started the job for which he was born. And now he has died. His retirement — not that he ever really retired — wasn’t long enough. Not nearly long enough.

Rabbi Sacks’s cancer overtook him quickly. It was only a few weeks ago that his office announced he was unwell. And many even in the Jewish community were unaware quite how poorly he was. In many ways, Jonathan Sacks was an intensely shy and private man. A scholar, a man of faith, a family man, with great personal warmth, a twinkle in his eye, and a very gentle yet penetrating sense of humour — but you probably wouldn’t call him emotionally demonstrative.

For a public figure, there was a deep reserve about him, which makes it all the more remarkable that he was able to communicate as directly and passionately as he did. His lush, resonant baritone voice made him a natural broadcaster, but it was his ideas and his way with words that enabled him to talk so directly into many people’s lives, touching things that made a difference to them whether Jewish or not. He was a serious person in the very best sense of that word. He took his responsibilities seriously: “To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God” as the prophet Micah put it. He will be remembered as one of the greatest Chief Rabbis this country has ever known.

The last time I saw him was at Shabbat dinner in Golders Green, just before the first lockdown began. We drank whisky, we chatted about theology, we sang loudly, thumping the table with delight. He was, of course, typically urbane and erudite. But he also danced about and played with my young boys crawling under the table, who are themselves Jews but with a Christian father. Taking the funeral in a chilly north London cemetery yesterday afternoon, Rabbi Harvey Belovski, the senior Rabbi at the Golders Green synagogue (where Rabbi Sacks had made his spiritual home for the last seven years) made reference to that evening, which he had hosted. It was, Rabbi Belovski suggested in his eulogy, evidence of Rabbi Sacks’s remarkable ability to reach out to those on the edge of Jewish life, indeed even to those beyond it, not only to make them feel personally valued but also to make them feel included in the great enterprise of connecting to the divine.

This inclusiveness did not always win him friends within the more conservative parts of the Jewish community. “Chief Rabbi to the gentiles” was how some unkindly put it. Indeed, he went to a Church of England school and he didn’t come from a long line of distinguished Rabbis like many of his predecessors. He was an East End boy and the first in his family to go to university.

Throughout his tenure as Chief Rabbi, he had the unenviable task of providing a point of focus for a very divergent family of communities, some deeply conservative, some liberal. The fact that he didn’t please all of the people all of the time was more an indication of the diverse nature of Anglo-Jewry than of his own failings. He didn’t attend the popular Reform Rabbi Hugo Gryn’s funeral, for which he was attacked. He did attend his memorial service, for which he was also attacked. He couldn’t win.

To many of us outside the Jewish community, he was the familiar voice on Thought for the Day who could read out the telephone directory and make it sound profound. His voice was calming, steady, resonant with purpose. And what he said was so full of hope. We need a new social settlement, he argued in his last book. One based on the priority of the “we” over the “I”. In Jewish theological terms, what we need is a covenantal relationship with each other, not just a legal contract based on our contractual obligations. And he was excoriating towards the anti-Semitism, the oldest hatred, that had been allowed to develop in the Labour Party. He also believed that Christian-Jewish relations in Britain are the best in the world.

But despite his willingness to speak into contemporary concerns, all of what he said was grounded in a very intense personal relationship with God. It ran through him like the words in a stick of Blackpool rock. And here, I think, we get to the most remarkable thing about Rabbi Sacks as a religious leader: he was not a man who threw around cheap certainty. He did theology without any of the sort of intellectual defensiveness that lesser religious leaders can sometimes adopt. His wasn’t a brittle faith of dogmatic assertion, it was something that grew out of decades of daily interrogation of the infinite.

In his eulogy, Rabbi Belovski made reference to the troubling story in the Book of Genesis, the Aqedah, in which God asks Abraham to sacrifice his son. Those who ponder its dark mystery find no easy answers. Indeed, as many of the great rabbis of the past have argued, it is a text that won’t allow a simple resolution. Theology often feels contradictory, at odds with itself. But for men like Jonathan Sacks, this became a source of strength not of weakness; an invitation to “antifragility” — an idea that he was much taken with. Living the contradictions meant refusing cheap understanding, and so became an invitation to a more capacious appreciation of the world in all its profound and disturbing complexity.

From this intellectual base, all his book and sermons, lectures and broadcasts flowed. Rabbi Sacks became a powerful emissary for orthodox Judaism throughout our national life — and internationally too. And no Jewish thinker could avoid being in mental conversation with his ideas. “All modern Jews are students of Rabbi Sacks, whether they know it or not, whether they acknowledge it or not, or whether they like it or not,” as Rabbi Belovski claimed yesterday.

The ceremony itself was modest, given lockdown — bleak even. The current Chief Rabbi was unable to attend, having received a message to confine himself to home from a test and trace app message received on Friday. In normal times, thousands would have been there. But in the end, it was fittingly simple, with family and senior Rabbis standing in a flat and exposed landscape, saying farewell to the man who had done so much to inspire the Jewish community over the last half a century. Dayan Ivan Binstock, senior Rabbi of the St John’s Wood Synagogue, read out a message from the Prince of Wales. The tone was perfect.

“It was with the most profound personal sorrow that I heard of the death of Rabbi Lord Sacks. With his passing, the Jewish community, our nation, and the entire world have lost a leader whose wisdom, scholarship and humanity were without equal. His immense learning spanned the sacred and the secular, and his prophetic voice spoke to our greatest challenges with unfailing insight and boundless compassion. His wise counsel was sought and appreciated by those of all faiths and none, and he will be missed more than words can say.”


Giles Fraser is a journalist, broadcaster and Vicar of St Anne’s, Kew.

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Jeremy Lefroy
Jeremy Lefroy
3 years ago

Thank you, Giles, for an excellent and moving article.

I recall a ‘Spectator’ article by Chief Rabbi Sacks in 2013 which I (as a Christian) found very powerful. He wrote that the new atheists say that “Darwinism is a science, not an ethic. Turn natural selection into a code of conduct and you get disaster. But if asked where we get our morality from if not from science or religion, they are unsure. They tend to argue that ethics is obvious, which it isn’t, or natural, which it manifestly isn’t either.”

He continued: “The history of Europe since the 18th century has been the story of successive attempts to find alternatives to God as an object of worship ““ whether the nation state, race or communism with the most terrible cost in human life. More recently we have turned to more peaceful forms of idolatry ““ the market, the liberal democratic state and the consumer society, all of which are ways of saying that there is no morality beyond personal choice so long as you do no harm to others.”

How much we need people like Lord Sacks cutting through the shallowness of much contemporary argument!

Antonino Ioviero
Antonino Ioviero
3 years ago

A great man of learning.

He will be sorely missed.

dunnmalcolm966
dunnmalcolm966
3 years ago

I am not Jewish but was envious of the way he led the people of his faith, better by far than any recent Archbishop of Canterbury

Paul Vallely
Paul Vallely
3 years ago
Reply to  dunnmalcolm966

It’s not a competition. Just be grateful that he was in this world for all of us.

Alan Thorpe
Alan Thorpe
3 years ago

As a committed atheist, I agree. Lord Sacks spoke to everybody. He is the only religious leader I have been prepared to listen to. The world needs more people like him.

Mark Lilly
Mark Lilly
3 years ago
Reply to  Alan Thorpe

So you and all the others on this page are ok with supernaturalism (which, inflicted on children, is severe child abuse) homophobia and racism?

Michael Whittock
Michael Whittock
3 years ago

I was always glad when Rabbi Sacks did “Thought for the Day.” This will be good,I thought. It always had spiritual and theological substance in contrast to the fatuous banalities to which we get treated sometimes.
His broadcasts reminded me that for Christians the Jewish people are our brothers and sisters believing in the Lord God. Of course we have crucial differences particularly in regard to our response to Jesus of Nazareth. But we also have a commonality of faith which Rabbi Sacks did much to encourage I think. May he rest in peace.

Judy Johnson
Judy Johnson
3 years ago

I agree with you. As a Jewish Christian, I too looked forward to his ‘Thoughts for the Day.’ Further in the past, I always enjoyed listening to Hugo Gryn on The Moral Maze. As well as expressing knowledge clearly he was always courteous.

Tony Haley
Tony Haley
3 years ago

An excellent piece about a wise and gracious public figure.

Robin Bernstein
Robin Bernstein
3 years ago

Thank you Giles for this fabulous article. The best one I have read since the very sad passing of this intellectual giant of a man.

Alan Hughes
Alan Hughes
3 years ago

A great loss to us all. His wide words on the Radio often prompted me to rethink my views

Sharon Peters
Sharon Peters
3 years ago

How fitting, and how telling that all the previous comentors are unanimous in their praise of this unassuming leader.

David George
David George
3 years ago

Thank you Giles, yes a great loss.
He came to my attention with his interview of Jordan Peterson (Radio 4 and on Youtube) who I had been following – fair to say a meeting of great minds.

E m
E m
3 years ago

Sensitive, insightful portrayal of a man who sought to deepen, clarify and enrich the meaningful foundations of our human society. A Jew and an Englishman to the sterling core.

jonnymangas
jonnymangas
3 years ago

I’m a Catholic who used to attend the Hidden Gem in Manchester when Cannon Clinch used to lead the services, he often mentioned and quoted Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks in his homily and I became intrigued so I’ll looked up some of his talks and books and was always inspired.

He will be greatly missed, religious leaders who have that organic reach to people of other faiths or of none are sadly few and far between.

Joseph Berger
Joseph Berger
3 years ago

excellent, beautiful hesped (eulogy in English)

G Harris
G Harris
3 years ago

Judaism’s answer to Isaac Hayes.

Mellifluous.

Judy Keiner
Judy Keiner
3 years ago

It is not the case that Rabbi Lord Sacks did not come from a line of Rabbis. His mother was a descendant of a long and distinguished line of rabbis, the Frumkin family.

Aline Tayar
Aline Tayar
3 years ago

When the writer says Sacks was the first in his family to go to university, I assume he means his immediate family. He was after all related to Jonathan Sacks and to Abba Eban and to ‘Uncle’ Tungsten.

Bullfrog Brown
Bullfrog Brown
3 years ago

Very well written and portraying this ‘giant of brilliance’. I count myself fortunate to have lived during Rabbi Sacks’s life, and taken strength & learning from his wisdom. Our world is a poorer place without him.

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago

Semitic doctrines in all the variants (Judaism, Christianity, islam) are barely one step above the criminals in this world, and have not left behind the opportunistic scavenging nature of mankind’s remote ancestry.

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago

I will not take lessons in morality or abstract thought from a follower of one of the semitic doctrines (Fraser, Sacks or the Ayotolla of Iran) fails to see the evil and depravity that underpins the doctrine of islam.

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago

I will not take lessons in morality from a follower of one of the semitic doctrines (e.g. Fraser, Sacks or the Ayotollah of Iran) who believes that eternal punishment awaits those who do not belong to the gang that he belongs to.

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago

I will not take lessons in morality from a follower of one of the semitic doctrines (e.g. Fraser, Sacks or the Ayotolla of Iran) who believes that a person who solves the problems of poverty and disease, but does not worship their god, will end up in the waste chute of the after life.

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago

I will not take lessons in morality from a follower of one of the semitic doctrines (e.g. Fraser, Sacks or the Ayotollah of Iran) who believes that eternal punishment awaits those who do not belong to the gang that he belongs to.

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago

I will not take lessons in morality from a follower of one of the semitic doctrines (e.g. Fraser, Sacks or the Ayotolla of Iran) who worships an alleged supreme being who sat back while eight million Jews were killed.

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago

I will not take lessons in morality from a follower of one of the semitic doctrines (e.g. Fraser, Sacks or the Ayotolla of Iran) who worships an alleged supreme being who sat back while the whole of the human race was drowned except for two of the supreme being’s favourites.

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago

I will not take lessons in morality from a follower of one of the semitic doctrines (e.g. Fraser, Sacks or the Ayotollah of Iran) who worships an alleged supreme being who ordered a human being to kill his own son.
(Genesis 22).

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago

Did Jonathan Sacks explain that non-Jews are not seen as equal to Jews in the primary Jewish texts? One of the most extreme forms of racism in history. Only to be exceeded by Christianity and islam.

Cave Artist
Cave Artist
3 years ago

I wish I could join in the adulation, but his wholehearted support for Israel and its policies gave succour to those causing terrible suffering and death to the people of Palestine. I for one would not presume to guess at his relationship with the creator.

Mark Lilly
Mark Lilly
3 years ago

As part of the atheist movement which, according to accounts on this page, Sacks ridiculed, and understanding as I do that despite all evidence to the contrary readers will find my remarks tasteless, I nevertheless, as a matter of simple self-respect, feel compelled to recall that when I asked Sacks some years ago at a public forum whether he was prepared to distance himself from the campaign of his predecessor as Chief Rabbi, Emanuel Jacobovitz, that imprisonment should be reintroduced in Britain for homosexuality (detailed in Chaim Bermant’s biography), – a view which, in the opinion of Margaret Thatcher’s biographers led that lady to ennoble him – he prevaricated disgracefully before declining. That such a person should be thought worthy of eulogy is I suppose indicative of our culture – and indicative of Mr Fraser.

Stanley Beardshall
Stanley Beardshall
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Lilly

Hello
Totally accept the facts in your post and refer to my following post. Now that one of the world’s most pernicious chiefs has been rightly ejected, why do we have to put up with any of these malicious and manipulative people? Two examples: the folk in frocks at the Cenotaph yesterday intoning religious drivel and the BBC’s continued assault on commonsense called “Thought for the day” Dear me, it is, after all, the 21st century and we surely must have learned by now that “hang all the priests” wasn’t such a bad idea…

ak1214
ak1214
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Lilly

This type of brainless comment is far more indicative of our culture than anything Rabbi Sacks had said or Mr. Fraser has written.

Andrew McGee
Andrew McGee
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Lilly

Well said! Nice to see some sense entering into these rather sickening sea of praise. He was not at all a man for the 20th-century or for proper individual freedom (wouldn’t have claimed to be, of course). No loss to humanity, in my view. And if you want to condemn this comment as brainless too, go ahead.

gregm8644
gregm8644
3 years ago
Reply to  Andrew McGee

Not brainless. But crass, insensitive, discourteous, insulting and unworthy.

Tami Misledus
Tami Misledus
2 years ago
Reply to  gregm8644

If you think that is discourteous, you need to listen to the semitic doctrines where their gods have absolutely no consideration for those who who do not worship the psychopathic source of semitism.

Adrian
Adrian
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark Lilly

Condemnation is a popular pastime, but maybe Rabbi Sacks didn’t like playing that game.

Stanley Beardshall
Stanley Beardshall
3 years ago

Oh, how sad. Even in a year which surely has made every thinking human question his faith, the readers of Unherd still include the deluded and the insane. What a pity; not much hope for rarional thought, then, if a man who believed in male circumsion and that eating certain foods is sin is lauded on this site..whooooo!