I can ‘do Jewish’ on just $40,000 a year
Last year, I was a 45-year-old
married father of four children, a member of a large American Modern
Orthodox Jewish community, and I didn’t have a penny saved in the bank. I
decided to get serious about my finances and sit down with a financial
planner. He told me that in order for me to be able to pay for my four
children to go to college, and to have any semblance of a retirement for
myself and my wife, we would need to save 50 percent of our net income
for the next 20 years.
We began to itemize my family’s major expenses:
Day school tuition – approximately $80,000 post tax dollars a year. Currently consuming nearly 50% of our post tax annual take home pay.
Housing and utilities – near a synagogue, walking distance, big enough for 4 kids, another large sum of money.
Health insurance – my employer only pays 50 percent, leaving me with almost $900 a month to pay to cover the family
2 cars
Jewish Summer camp – with 4 kids in various combinations of summer camps, both home and away, plus all associated flights and gear, approx $20,000.
Kosher food – At times coming to more than $1,000 a month
Additional outlays: to Jewish charities, synagogue dues + building fund, and more, as well as life insurance, tolls, and random other surprises.
Dollars left for savings, investment, college tuition, wealth building: Zero
We reviewed this short list of items and my
advisor said, “You realize the greatest expense to your life is your
religion. It is consuming over half of your post tax take home pay. You
are paying almost $150,000 a year to ‘do Jewish.’”
And that’s when I realized I had forgotten to include Passover on the list.
I’m not alone
This was the wakeup call of the century for
me. I was raised to believe that religion came first; that everything
was ‘holy’ and a ‘mitzvah’; that the more you spent on your Judaism the
better it was in God’s eyes. And I now realized I had been completely
neglecting the financial health and future of my family.
The first thing I did was to ask around how
other people were managing it. Word on the street was that to do
everything on my list in a “second tier” community, not something in the
greater New York area, one would have to earn more than $500,000 a
year. Now I work very hard and I do pretty well, but I will most likely
never make half a million dollars a year. Granted, some people in the
community do, but not many.
What I saw was far more people who were – if
they were willing to admit it – getting steady monthly checks from their
parents to survive. Adult children 50 years old still living off
handouts from their parents in order to “do Jewish.” Some parents had
large fortunes and were easily able to afford to help several adult
children, but some were slowly being bled dry. I had one grandmother
tell me, “It’s wrong that the day schools are now trying to fund
themselves off the backs of the grandparents, now that they have already
broken the parents.”
Even more concerning, were the large number of
families, doctors, lawyers, investment professionals, who, when asked
in confidence, replied that they don’t have two pennies to rub together.
And that was before their children were setting off to years in Israel
and very expensive college in New York.
The day I left the synagogue forever was the
Saturday the rabbi preached that day school tuition does not fulfill the
obligation to give 10 percent of one’s income to charity — and that
from a rabbi making $350,000 a year, along with free tuition, free
housing, and free food expenses. As I angrily began to walk out of there
for the last time, my neighbor grabbed my tallis and told me “The day
the rabbis pay full tuition is the day that the tuition crisis will be
solved.”
‘You’re in or you’re out’
Let’s spend a little more time on the tuition
crisis in Modern Orthodox day schools, since this was the greatest
expense for me. With four kids in school and an upper middle class
income, I was told I had to pay full tuition for all four kids with no
sibling discounts (and no reprieve from constant fundraising calls).
At one point, I went to the school president, a
major donor (independently wealthy) to the school. I explained that
keeping all my kids in the school would mean never saving a penny for
retirement or college, and asked if there was any plan for helping
working middle class parents, such as capping tuition at a percentage of
income, or providing a sibling discount. His reply: “You’re in or
you’re out.”
So I took myself out.
I enrolled my kids in an excellent private
secular school for a third the cost of the “excellent” Jewish day
school. And now, a year later, you know what I’ve found? That my kids
are not running a year behind public school in their education; That
kids actually have discipline and respect for their teachers; And even
more importantly, that all children who misbehave are handled in the
same manner, instead of letting the children of the wealthy supporters
get away with murder. And even more interesting, this amazing secular
school had all of…drumroll…one principal — the Day School I left had
five. Enough said.
In hindsight, I remember when a Muslim I
worked with asked me one day why I was so stressed out. I said because I
have to make so much money to pay for my kids to go to school. He asked
me how much tuition I was paying per kid and when I answered $20,000,
he said, “Wow, you’re getting screwed. We in the Muslim school are
paying only $5,000.” Of course their school also had only one principal.
I had now left day school and synagogue, and
my life was only getting better. Not just financially, but emotionally
as well. I actually didn’t have to work as hard, and started to have
more time with my family. I knew fathers working five jobs to pay the
Jewish bills, or taking jobs out of town, showing up for weekends at
home, or even putting their families in Israel and flying back one week a
month.
This is no recipe for ‘Shalom Bayit.’
Kosher food came next. I set a $200 a month
limit for my wife on spending in the local Kosher butcher shop. Some
chicken breast, some wings. There is no health benefit to eating meat
more than maybe twice a month. Now that I look at the prices, I am
actually shocked the communities have not simply boycotted these
establishments en masse.
Passover? Forget about it. We just do it at
home now. I toss that one up there as a luxury on par with buying a
country club membership or a small yacht.
Summer camp? Chabad. In fact, we have been
getting more involved with Chabad. At least they don’t make Judaism all
about the money. Sure, they also need community support to exist, but in
return they provide full-service Judaism at a reasonable price. That in
my opinion, will effectively position Chabad as the ‘last man standing’
of US Jewish Orthodoxy, as the far right Jewish communities become
increasingly impoverished due to the failure to educate their kids for
the workforce, and as the Modern Orthodox numbers continue to dwindle
under lack of commitment, unbearable costs and attrition in the college
years and beyond.
Time for a revolution
Over the past year, our family has rewritten
our financial future. We now live on half of our income and invest and
save the rest. And thanks to this new president, the financial markets
have been doing great. We pulled our kids out of Jewish day school and
they are getting a better education in a better environment, and we
supplement their Jewish education via Chabad. I am now able to
comfortably “do Jewish” for $40,000 a year, the sum my financial planner
told me needed to be our limit. You know what, we may even be able to
go away next year for Passover!
The overpriced balloon of the Modern Orthodox experience rests on three core flaws:
Jewish organizations are too top heavy, with
too many positions filled by wives and cronies, and with amply-paid
rabbis who are out of touch with the financial woes of their
congregants.
There are too many very wealthy board members
controlling too much of the decision-making for the wider Jewish
community. It’s time to get some working class and even poor people on
the boards of schools and JCCs.
Too many sheep just go right along, with their
heads buried in the rear end of the sheep in front of them. It’s time
for a revolution.
What kind of revolution?
How about launching a month-long community
boycott of all neighborhood kosher markets? (Start two weeks before
Passover.) Or pulling the kids out of day school, demanding charter
schools, and insisting that the local rabbis earn their fat salaries by
holding lowcost Jewish after-school programs in the synagogue.
As we gear up for the High Holidays – by the
way, my Chabad doesn’t charge mandatory ticket fees – it’s time to take
an honest look at where Modern Orthodox Judaism is going. For me it was a
$150,000 a year post tax commitment, a sum of money that most people never even come close to earning.
Religious leaders have no right to complain
about intermarriage rates in the US when the religion is being priced
out of affordability. And don’t even get me started on the shidduch
crisis, although if you look honestly at the problems of matchmaking
and failure to find a mate, there too you find that much of the problem
also comes back to who has the most money. It’s time to take back our
religion, to make it more accessible to Jews of all financial
situations.
Those who stand in the way of this progress
should be expelled from the community. The legacy rabbinate and
top-heavy institutions are not sustainable in the long term. They’ve
bankrupted the parents. They are now trying to bankrupt the
grandparents. That was never the way this religion was supposed to be.
***
THE UOJ ARCHIVES - MARCH 2008
6-Stop purchasing and eating all meat and poultry products - for one week - starting Sunday - the week of March 30 - until they drop their prices by 25% - and Yisroel Belsky is removed from the OU! You can survive on fish, dairy products, fruit and vegetables for a week! Pigs! That's just before Pesach when the Jewish Cow Mafia jack up their prices by 25%! Tell them you will now take control of the "kosher" meat industry, by regulating prices and hashgochos!
READ IT ALL:
http://theunorthodoxjew.blogspot.com/2008/03/taking-judaism-back-from-con-artists.html
***
Can You Hear Me Now? - Part 4 - Taking Judaism Back From The Con-Artists!
THE UOJ ARCHIVES - MARCH 2008
6-Stop purchasing and eating all meat and poultry products - for one week - starting Sunday - the week of March 30 - until they drop their prices by 25% - and Yisroel Belsky is removed from the OU! You can survive on fish, dairy products, fruit and vegetables for a week! Pigs! That's just before Pesach when the Jewish Cow Mafia jack up their prices by 25%! Tell them you will now take control of the "kosher" meat industry, by regulating prices and hashgochos!
READ IT ALL:
http://theunorthodoxjew.blogspot.com/2008/03/taking-judaism-back-from-con-artists.html
http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/i-can-do-jewish-for-40000/?utm_source=The+Times+of+Israel+Daily+Edition&utm_campaign=488e47afc1-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_09_12&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_adb46cec92-488e47afc1-55186525
http://theunorthodoxjew.blogspot.com/search?q=jewish+cow+mafia
http://theunorthodoxjew.blogspot.com/search?q=jewish+cow+mafia
2 comments:
The grandfather promoted Jewish education and you support public school?
I do not support public school education at all. My grandfather believed that Jewish children should have access to affordable, and if necessary, FREE Jewish education!
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