Resolution Adopted by the CCAR
CARING FOR THOSE WITH MENTAL ILLNESSES
Adopted by the 108th Annual Convention of the
Central Conference of American Rabbis
June, 1997
WHEREAS, the CCAR is deeply concerned for the physical, emotional and spiritual
well-being of every person in our society, and
WHEREAS, the millions of people who suffer from mental illness carry the added burden
of being shunned, avoided, and stigmatized by many of their fellow citizens, and
WHEREAS, the direct cost to society for the treatment of mental illness and substance
abuse comes to hundreds of billions of dollars, and
WHEREAS, acts of chesed including caring for the disabled are basic tenants of
Judaism, as well as essential elements of any society, and
WHEREAS, the mitzvah of hachnasat orchim, welcoming others into
our lives, calls on us to be particularly sensitive to the outcast and the scorned, and
WHEREAS, mental illness affects not only the individual but entire extended families,
and
WHEREAS, the religious community has a clear responsibility to help create aware and
sensitivity in responding to mental illness and the mentally ill, and to help reduce the
stigma which persons with mental illness and their loved ones experience, and
WHEREAS, most private health insurance policies discriminate against persons who
suffer from severe mental illnesses by imposing lower lifetime limits, lower annual caps,
higher deductibles, higher co-pays and other limits on coverage that are not imposed for
other diseases of the body,
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the CCAR
call upon its members to work with their congregations, chaplaincies, and other
constituencies to inform them of the necessity for greater sensitivity with respect to the
mentally ill and their needs, and to help reduce the stigma of mental illness, and
call upon its members to participate in communal efforts aimed at providing a more
positive attitude toward those suffering from mental illness, and
call upon its members to work with persons afflicted with mental illness and their
families so that they may feel welcome within our synagogues, as Abraham made
strangers feel welcome in his home, and
call upon its members to visit patients, when appropriate and professionally advisable, in
psychiatric hospitals and other mental health care facilities, and to join groups that seek
to provide housing and employment for de-institutionalized persons, and
agree to work with the Union of American Hebrew Congregations to establish a Joint
Commission on Mental Illness, and
commend the work of the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI) in Washington,
and the work of Pathways to Promise: Interfaith Ministries and Prolonged Mental
Illnesses, in St. Louis, and encourages our colleagues to be in touch with them, and
Call upon its members to support and advocate for federal and state legislation that
protects against all forms of discrimination by health insurance carriers in the coverage
of severe mental illnesses relative to other diseases of the body.