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You'll find dozens of articles and books on the subject. But one sentence embodies its essence: Reconstructionists see Judaism as an evolving religious civilization. Evolving -- because Reconstructionists engage in an ongoing dialog designed to keep Jewish principles and practices meaningful to the world in which we live, rather than set in stone. Religious -- because we embrace the core of Judaism based upon our shared religious inheritance. Civilization -- because in addition to these religious underpinnings, Judaism includes our far broader cultural, historical and intellectual heritage. Reconstructionism doesn't easily fit into a "straight line" model of Judaism from "most traditionally observant" (Orthodox, Chasidic) to "least traditionally observant" (Reform). Instead, we say that tradition has "a vote, but not a veto" as we examine how best to live as Jews in the twenty-first century. One example: the first girl to have a Bat Mitzvah was the daughter of the founder of Reconstructionism.
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