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THINK AGAIN:
Half the story on homosexuality
By Adam Jessel
(September 6) The hottest buzz at the recent Jerusalem Film Festival surrounded Sandi
DuBowski's Trembling Before God, a documentary about Jews from Orthodox backgrounds
dealing with their homosexuality. The film has become the subject of a massive
international promotional campaign.
No one would deny the film's power. DuBowski captures the pain and loneliness of his
subjects in a series of intense, heart-wrenching interviews. Those interviewed desperately
miss the lifestyle, community and family closeness of the traditional Orthodox world.
Had DuBowski sought only to sensitize us to the torment of those torn between their
religious beliefs and their same-sex attractions, he would have performed a valuable
service.
But DuBowski does more than that. Trembling Before God is a polemic arguing that
the Orthodox community should not just be more accepting of people with homosexual
attractions, but that it should also be more accepting of homosexual behavior.
The film assumes that same-sex attraction is irreversible, and therefore cannot be morally
proscribed.
DuBowski conveys the impression that those with same-sex attractions are uniformly
rejected by a cold, unsympathetic Orthodox society. Yet two lengthy interviews he
conducted with Rabbi Aharon Feldman and Rabbi Nathan Cardoza, both of whom have had
extensive contact with Jews struggling with same-sex attractions, are each reduced to a
single sentence.
While it is true that the Torah and halacha unequivocally prohibit homosexual acts, there
are a growing number of Orthodox rabbis, educators and therapists who offer encouragement
and support to struggling homosexuals. Anyone who doubts this should read "Letter to
a Homosexual Ba'al Teshuva," published in Jewish Action by a prominent rosh
yeshiva and distributed widely on the Internet.
DuBowski denigrates the possibility that people can change the nature of their sexual
attractions. The therapies mentioned in the film range from the draconian to the
ridiculous - electric shock treatments, libido-controlling drugs, snapping oneself with a
rubber band, and eating figs. Ignored are all the conventional tools of psychotherapy.
Many individuals have benefited greatly from such therapy. In a paper presented at this
year's annual convention of the American Psychiatric Association (APA), Columbia
University professor Robert Spitzer presented a study of 200 men and women who have
experienced a significant shift from homosexual to heterosexual attraction and have
sustained that shift for more than five years. At the time of the study, three-quarters of
the men and half the women were married.
Spitzer's conclusion: "Contrary to conventional wisdom, some highly motivated
individuals, using a variety of change efforts, can make substantial change in multiple
indicators of sexual orientation."
Lest Spitzer be suspected of being a homophobe, it was he who spearheaded the 1973 removal
of homosexuality from the APA's list of psychiatric disorders.
SPITZER'S message, however, was not one DuBowski was interested in presenting. Jewish
support groups that help people deal with and overcome homosexuality, such as JONAH (Jews
Offering New Alternatives to Homosexuality), are not even mentioned in the film, and are
conspicuously absent from the resources listed in the film's credits and at the film's
promotional web site.
"The film was done completely out of a love of Judaism," DuBowski told an
interviewer. "Let the film open heartsÉ There's no ideology being served that you
have to follow."
But if so, why did he not show us those who seek to overcome their same-sex attractions -
those who have grown disillusioned with homosexual relationships, those who wish to marry
and have children, those who are already married and wish to eliminate the interference of
same-sex attractions? What about those who simply feel that sexual desire is not a license
to ignore a Divine imperative? The voices of these strugglers appear to have been censored
out.
DuBowski claims that he was unable to find any who have overcome their same-sex
attractions, or who are striving to do so, who were willing to be interviewed. Yet I
attended the movie with one such person, now married. He told me that DuBowski interviewed
him, but that the interview was cut from the final product.
Another man, Sam, who describes himself as a recovering homosexual, explained, "I
spoke with DuBowski on the phone when he was making the film, and he told me he doesn't
believe in change. He didn't seem interested in meeting any Jews who were in the process
of change either. I feel disappointed," says Sam, "because everyone in the film
equates homosexual attractions with engaging in homosexual activities. Even worse, the
film gives the mistaken impression that there is no hope for those who want to change, and
that there is nowhere for us to go."
"My feeling is that the film was very one-sided, not really objective," Hannah
wrote to DuBowski. "An entire dimension was omitted - the possibility for
change." Now in her forties, Hannah struggled with homosexuality for decades before
discovering a therapist who was willing to help her overcome it.
"I can't help but wonder why you didn't present this side of the homosexuality
issue," she wrote. "It's a long, arduous and very painful journey, but I've
never in my life felt better about myself."
Trembling Before God includes many scenes designed to make Orthodox practice look
strange and exotic. While they make the film entertaining, the inclusion of so many such
scenes does not justify the film's glaring omissions.
Where are the stories of all those who don't view acting on their homosexual attractions
as an option? Are their struggles not heroic and inspiring? A film including their stories
should be shown together with DuBowski's. Much of that footage may, in fact, have already
been shot. It's lying on DuBowski's cutting room floor.
The writer is a therapist in Israel who runs a support group in Jerusalem for
men struggling with homosexuality, and counsels people by phone around the
world." Shlomo Jessel can be reached at Jessel@softhome.net.
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