A Florida rabbi protested Donald Trump – and lost his job

Ben Sales

Rabbi David Paskin, kneeling third from left, and other rabbis at AIPAC's annual policy conference gather in a corridor of the Washington D.C. Verizon Center to protest a speech there by GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump, March 21, 2016. (Facebook)

Rabbi David Paskin, kneeling third from left, and other rabbis protesting Donald Trump’s speech at AIPAC’s annual policy conference in Washington, D.C., March 21, 2016. (Facebook)

NEW YORK (JTA) — A Florida rabbi must leave his pulpit after his protest of Donald Trump’s speech at the annual American Israel Public Affairs Committee conference riled congregants.

David Paskin, who serves as rabbi of the Conservative Temple Beth David synagogue in the south Florida city of Palm Beach Gardens, will leave his position in July. In March, Paskin was one of a group of Conservative rabbis who led a protest of Trump’s speech at the annual conference of AIPAC, the Israel lobby.

Some two months later, Paskin’s contract was not renewed.

Trump was in the midst of a campaign for the Republican presidential nod at the time of the conference; he is now the presumptive nominee.

Temple Beth David denied that Paskin’s Trump protest cost him his job. Executive Director Steve Bogad called the parting a “mutual decision.” Paskin also used the word “mutual” to describe his departure, and said the synagogue did not tell him the decision was due to his protest.

But he told JTA he had no idea about the decision before the AIPAC conference, and described it as unexpected.

A congregant with knowledge of the matter told JTA that the Trump protest factored into the decision to not renew Paskin’s contract. Two congregants told JTA that synagogue members were upset that Paskin led the walkout, and that the protest was so public.

“I had no indication that we were going to separate before the Trump activism,” Paskin told JTA. “Did I ever imagine that the normal tension that exists from time to time between congregation and clergy, did I ever imagine those would lead to a separation? I did not.”

Paskin, along with Rabbis Menachem Creditor and Jesse Olitsky, led the protest of Trump at the start of his March 21 speech at the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C. Some 300 attendees walked out of the arena during the event. The three rabbis’ contingent numbered about 60 of those. AIPAC leadership later apologized for the enthusiastic response of many of the 18,000 remaining audience members to Trump’s criticism of President Barack Obama.

On March 25, four days after Trump’s speech, Paskin wrote an open letter to his community on Facebook explaining the reasons for his protest and acknowledging the “turmoil” it caused in the community.

“My family has been threatened and, yes, many at Temple Beth David have been unsettled by my choice to participate,” he wrote, adding later, “I am sorry that my actions have caused pain amongst some in our community. I hope we have a chance to share together in a respectful dialogue. I promise to respect your opinions and choices. I only ask that you do the same for me.”

Paskin told JTA he felt a duty to speak out. He said he will continue publicly opposing Trump.

“I don’t pull any punches,” he said. “I’m pretty transparent about what I feel and what I think. Could I have been more delicate? I’m sure I could have been. I speak my heart, and I heard a call and an obligation to speak out, and I took that. I acted on my values and I don’t regret that.”

Other rabbis who protested Trump at the conference have not experienced professional difficulties as a result. Creditor, who has publicly supported Obama in the past, is a vocal advocate on behalf of Israel and against gun violence. He said his activism doesn’t get in the way of his pulpit duties at Congregation Netivot Shalom in Berkeley, California, because he makes sure to build relationships with congregants who may disagree with him, and aims to create a climate of pluralism.

“After services, we actually spend the time talking to each other,” he told JTA. “Preaching is one mode of rabbinic function. Relationships are the entirety of rabbinic function. There needs to be a kind of humanity that goes along with leadership.”

Other rabbis who generally remain apolitical see Trump as a special case whose positions necessitate protest. “The goal of our congregation is to be a big tent, to welcome in everybody who walks through our doors,” said Olitsky, rabbi of Congregation Beth El in South Orange, New Jersey. “I hope that every Jewish community stands for something. If people don’t feel welcome because we take a stand against bigotry, misogyny, hate, then we’re prepared to take that stand.”

Shmuel Herzfeld, rabbi of Washington, D.C. Orthodox synagogue Ohev Sholom-The National Synagogue, said protesting Trump isn’t about politics but rather confronting “an existential threat to our world.” Herzfeld, who also attended the AIPAC conference, was escorted out of the arena during Trump’s speech when he wrapped himself in a prayer shawl and began denouncing the candidate as “wicked.”

Even so, he has refrained from opposing Trump from the pulpit.

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