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Lori Z.'s avatar

Nice work Ryan, this was really interesting to me and look forward to seeing more data about this. Thanks

Richard Plotzker's avatar

We Jews have other survey sources that probe these questions in a more detailed way. The leading organization for doing this seems to be the Cohen Center at Brandeis University, which surveyed my community in 2022. https://www.brandeis.edu/cmjs/community-studies/delaware.html I was part of their random representative sample for that one. Filling out the questionnaire took a while. They basically concluded that we fall into four categories as Jews. About 40% are personally observant in some way and engaged with the community, about 20% have a DIY religion of personal practice but negligible community ties, 20% have communal attachment but no personal belief or practice, and 20% identify as Jewish culturally but largely opted out.

There are some important differences between Brandeis and Ryan's survey. These are all people who identify themselves as Jewish as their primary religion, not as secondary afterthoughts. The survey has a sponsor with an agenda to act on the results, that is shift the unengaged to engaged and ask them for money each year, or allocate money already under their control in a different way.

Matt, the prof who tabulated and presented the findings, indicated that the results of my area were similar to regional results that the Cohen Center had done elsewhere, so probably can be generalized.

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