Michael Lerner, influential rabbi-activist and founder of Tikkun magazine, dies at 81 - Jewish Telegraphic Agency (2024)

When Michael Lerner and his then-wife Nan Fink launched Tikkun magazine in 1986, it was a shot across the bow of a Jewish establishment that he said had lost touch with its prophetic roots and was too unwilling to push Israel to seek peace with the Palestinians.

The mid-’80s was “a time when the liberal voices were being increasingly marginalized in the Jewish world,” Lerner told J. The Jewish News of Northern California earlier this year. “And there was no intellectually serious magazine at the time that could provide such a voice.”

Tikkun would go on to publish articles by writers who supported a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict while promoting a liberal agenda that included workers’ rights, feminism and nonviolence. The magazine, which took its name from a Hebrew term meaning “repairing the world,” helped popularize the term as a synonym for social action.

It would also catch the attention of First Lady Hillary Clinton, who in a 1993 speech at the University of Texas referred to what Lerner had begun calling the “politics of meaning” to describe his ideas for instilling psychological, ethical and spiritual considerations in public policy-making.

Clinton’s speech marked the high point of Tikkun’s influence, but it remained a home of Jewish liberal thought for another 30 years, until announcing earlier this year that it would be publishing its last issue.

Lerner died Wednesday at his home in Northern California. He was 81.

In April, Lerner told J. that Tikkun’s funding had dried up and that he had been unable to find a successor. Its last print issue, which was devoted to the topic of “re-envisioning socialism,” was published in spring 2020. The magazine continued to publish pieces online, along with annual highlights issues.

Michael Lerner, influential rabbi-activist and founder of Tikkun magazine, dies at 81 - Jewish Telegraphic Agency (1)

Tikkun published articles by writers who supported a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict while promoting a liberal agenda that included workers’ rights, feminism and nonviolence.

His wife and co-editor, Rabbi Cat Zavis, said he had been in declining health for several years.

A leader of in-your-face student activism in the 1960s, Lerner could be self-promoting and occasionally abrasive, and his long tenure at Tikkun was not without controversy. In 1997, he admitted writing letters to the magazine under pseudonyms. He defended the practice by saying he was simply taking things people had told him in conversation and putting them in writing.

He also traded barbs with former Harvard Law School professor Alan Dershowitz, who in a 2006 Jerusalem Post op-ed described Tikkun as “quickly becoming the most virulently anti-Israel screed ever published under Jewish auspices.”

In 2011, Lerner’s Berkeley home was repeatedly vandalized after he presented an award in ethics to South African Justice Richard Goldstone, author of a United Nations report on the recent Gaza war that said Israel had committed acts approaching war crimes.

In a Facebook tribute, Rabbi Jay Michaelson said Lerner had “a significant, historic impact on American progressivism and Jewish spirituality.”

“Tikkun was always, deliberately to the left of American Jewish liberalism,” Michaelson wrote. “Yet its progressivism valued nuance, dialogue, and complexity, often absent today.”

In an essay for JTA in 2006, Lerner defended President Jimmy Carter against charges by some in the Jewish establishment that the former president was anti-Israel. “The only real protection for a small country like Israel is to have good relations with its neighbors, and that is precisely what the occupation systematically undermines,” wrote Lerner. “Jimmy Carter is speaking the truth as he knows it. Doing so is very good for the Jews.”

In addition to the magazine, Lerner — who received private rabbinical ordination in 1995 — founded the Network of Spiritual Progressives, which offered classes through Beyt Tikkun: A Synagogue Without Walls, a Renewal synagogue that Lerner founded in 1996.

Lerner was born on Feb. 11, 1943, and grew up in the heavily Jewish Weequahic section of Newark, New Jersey, that also produced the novelist Philip Roth. He attended college at the University of California, Berkeley, where he became a leader of the Free Speech and anti-Vietnam War movements then roiling the campus.

In 1970, Lerner and others were arrested and charged with inciting a riot during a protest of the trial of the Chicago 7, a group of war protesters who had been charged with disrupting the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago. Lerner served several months in jail before the federal government dropped the main charges relating to the riot.

He later taught philosophy at several colleges, including San Francisco State University, the University of Washington, Trinity College and Sonoma State University.

In 1976 Lerner founded the Institute for Labor and Mental Health. He had been serving as dean of the graduate school of psychology at New College of California (now defunct) before launching Tikkun with Fink.

Lerner was the author of numerous books, including “Jewish Renewal: A Path to Healing and Transformation” (1994) and “The Left Hand of God: Taking Back Our Country from the Religious Right” (2006). In 2016, he spoke at the funeral of boxing great Muhammed Ali, whom he had gotten to know during the movement to end the Vietnam War.

In addition to Fink and Zavis, Lerner was married to Debora Kohn from 1998 through 2014. His survivors include one son and two grandchildren.

Lerner’s vision for the world, in particular when it comes to Israel, has not prevailed. Yet in the wake of the 1995 assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the demise of the Oslo peace accords he had championed, Lerner remained hopeful.

“The only way to speak about this conflict is to speak in a compassionate tone to both peoples,” he told the New York Jewish Week in 2015. “You have to speak with compassion to everyone involved in this.”

(Andrew Esensten of J. contributed reporting to this story.)

Michael Lerner, influential rabbi-activist and founder of Tikkun magazine, dies at 81 - Jewish Telegraphic Agency (2024)

FAQs

Is Tikkun magazine closing down? ›

In April 2024, the magazine announced its was closing due to a lack of funding, and the poor health of its founder Michael Lerner who could not find a successor.

Who is the founder of Tikkun magazine? ›

Michael Lerner, influential rabbi-activist and founder of Tikkun magazine, dies at 81. The Times of Israel.

What religion is tikkun? ›

Tikkun olam (/tiˈkuːn ʌˈlɑːm/; Hebrew: תִּקּוּן עוֹלָם, romanized: tiqqūn ʻōlām, lit. 'repairing of the world') is a concept in Judaism, which refers to various forms of action intended to repair and improve the world.

What does tikkun mean in English? ›

Tikkun is often translated as repair. But in the Hebrew Bible and in the early code of Jewish law called the Mishnah, it has a range of meanings: improve, fix, prepare, set up, or just “do something with…”

Is tikkun olam in the Bible? ›

Tikkun olam isn't mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. Instead, it first appeared in the Talmud, rabbinical commentaries compiled during the 1st millennium CE.

What is tikkun in Kabbalah? ›

Tikkun: Gathering Light and Souls

First, it means the gathering of the divine lights that had fallen into the realm of the qelipot as a result of the “breaking of the vessels.” Second, it means the gathering of all the holy souls likewise imprisoned in the qelipot.

Who is the Talmud creator? ›

Tradition ascribes the compilation of the Babylonian Talmud in its present form to two Babylonian sages, Rav Ashi and Ravina II. Rav Ashi was president of the Sura Academy from 375 to 427. The work begun by Rav Ashi was completed by Ravina, who is traditionally regarded as the final Amoraic expounder.

What magazines have been discontinued? ›

A to Z list of discontinued magazines
  • Advocate.
  • Affaires.
  • Affaires Plus (Les)
  • Allure.
  • Amazing Wellness.
  • Android Advisor.
  • Atlantic.
  • Backpacker.

What is the meaning of Tikkun in Kabbalah? ›

First, it means the gathering of the divine lights that had fallen into the realm of the qelipot as a result of the “breaking of the vessels.” Second, it means the gathering of all the holy souls likewise imprisoned in the qelipot. Tikkun is to be achieved by human beings through their contemplative action.

Who owns Mishpacha magazine? ›

Eli Paley is the owner of Mishpacha Magazine Group, publisher of the Hebrew & English Mishpacha Magazines, social activist, Jewish Funders Network member, philanthropist & Chairman of the Paley Foundation.

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