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Non-Jews raising Jewish kids now theyre heroes
At the recent Passover seder, we sang
Recently, interfaith couples have been getting a message from the Jewish community that raising Jewish children by participating in Passover seders and other Jewish activities is not enough. Instead, theyre hearing that only the conversion of the non-Jewish partner to Judaism will do. Now, following a new study on conversion sponsored by the American Jewish Committee, some Jewish leaders are suggesting even conversion isnt enough. A recent JTA article on the study (Study: Non-Jewish spouses not converting, April 20) quoted Steven Bayme, the AJCs director of contemporary Jewish life. We should not see conversion as the end of the story, he said. What were really aiming for is converts who enrich the Jewish community through Jewish activism. Which raises the question: When is enough enough? Conversion of non-Jewish spouses of Jews has stepped to the forefront of the organized Jewish communitys agenda in the past year. In November, Rabbi Eric Yoffie, the head of the Reform movement, gave a remarkable sermon on non-Jewish spouses and conversion. First, he called non-Jewish partners who commit to raise their children Jewish heroes and said they deserve celebration and gratitude. Second, he called for Reform temples to do more than just celebrate and thank non-Jewish spouses; he said they should ask, but not pressure; encourage, but not insist that non-Jewish spouses convert to Judaism. Taken on its own, Rabbi Yoffies idea of the soft sell on conversion is a worthy approach. Unfortunately, in the Reform movements own publicity about the speech, and especially in the major medias coverage, the notion of gratitude was almost completely lost. A New York Times article from Feb. 12, Reform Jews Hope to Unmix Mixed Marriages focused exclusively on the call for conversion. At InterfaithFamily.com, weve heard of more than one story from non-Jewish partners in interfaith couples who had carefully negotiated a decision to create a Jewish home and now fear being pressured to convert. To make matters worse, the AJC just released a study by Sylvia Barack Fishman, Choosing Jewish: Conversations About Conversion. Fishman interviewed 94 people in interfaith or conversionary relationships; only 37 of her subjects were formal converts to Judaism. Instead of seeing converts as a monolithic group, Fishman places them on a spectrum of Jewish involvement, from activist to accommodating to ambivalent. Whatever value this kind of categorization has as sociology, it could be the basis of disastrous policy. Any person who has decided to become Jewish has made a decision to change an essential part of his or her identity. Fishmans categories, and Baymes comments on them, send the message that making that decision is not enough. Converts must not merely be accommodating and God forbid they be ambivalent they should be activist (and even better yet, according to Fishmans loaded typology, they should be Activist Stars.) Its hard enough for converts to change a key part of their heritage now we must denigrate them for not achieving a standard that few born Jews ever achieve? In her study Fishman repeatedly calls for rabbis and spouses in interfaith relationships to advocate for conversion. She cites a handful of converts who say they would have appreciated being asked to convert earlier. But when Fishman looks at research on young interfaith couples, she finds they have entirely different attitudes: These younger couples have strong anti-pressure feelings, see pressure to convert as a negative, and would be turned off to Judaism if they were approached about conversion by clergy or even family friends. Lets be clear: Anyone who chooses conversion deserves a mazal tov! We should be delighted when anyone makes this wonderful personal decision. But conversion should not be the goal of Jewish outreach. Non-Jewish partners who are participating in Jewish life and, more importantly, raising their children as Jews should be accepted as they are, not as if they are somehow damaged goods because they didnt happen to have Jewish parents or have decided not to convert. As Reform rabbis and leaders begin to gently encourage conversion, it is essential they continue to offer statements of gratitude and acceptance to non-Jewish spouses who are raising their children as Jews. To those interfaith families raising their children Jewish, we should emphatically say Dayeinu it is enough. As for Bayme and Fishman and other significant voices in the Jewish community whose antipathy to intermarriage is unmistakable, we have only this to say: Enough is enough. Comment | | |
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