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The Faith Column

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Reflections on Jewish Identity

  • Posted by Rabbi Janet Burden
  • 12 December 2006

How Jews are not simply a race or a religion - they are an extended family with all that implies

The word used for people who change their religions is ‘convert.’ I prefer the term 'Jew-by-choice' to describe my own identity. It acknowledges that my personal history is different from those who were born Jewish, but the end result is the same: I am a Jew – a Liberal Jew.

I am part of a community of 13,254,100 souls world-wide (according to the Jewish Agency for Israel). My life is bound up with that of the Jewish people all over the world. It’s like belonging to an extended family, with all that the metaphor implies.

I don’t like some of my family’s political views. I often disagree deeply with their theology. What they do affects me, sometimes in ways I don’t like. Nonetheless, I stand in a relationship of particular responsibility to them.

This does not oblige me to give unquestioning support to everything that is done in the name of our people, nor does it limit my concern to my co-religionists. Both suggestions would be abhorrent to me. Nonetheless, the familial bond between us calls on me to support my fellow Jews when and how I can and to exercise wisdom and restraint in any rebuke I offer.

Over 6,000,000 Jews live in North America; the vast majority of these in the United States. Many claim, however, that Israel’s Jewish population will exceed that of the USA during 2006.

In Europe and the rest of the world, the Jewish population is shrinking, largely due to assimilation and low birth rates, and partly due to emigration to Israel. Thus, world Jewry has come to have two ‘centres of gravity’: America and Israel.

A substantial majority of the Jews in both of these population centres are largely or completely secular; that is, their Jewish identity is based on cultural identification, not on religious belief.

It is this phenomenon that makes being Jewish different than, say, being Christian or Muslim. We are not simply a religion, nor are we a race: we are a people.

Judaism is, as Mordechai Kaplan put it, a religious civilisation. Through countless generations of our people, our religion has shaped us: not just through our ways of thinking and acting, but also through our food, our music – even our sense of humour. Thus, even those Jews who proudly claim to be atheists do so in response to this shared history and heritage.

This, then, is something that unites all Jews: we share unique reference points on the maps of our consciousness.

Whether a Jew scrupulously observes kashrut (the Jewish dietary code) or rejects it as a barrier to social integration, s/he will have an opinion on the subject.

We also share the Jewish festivals that punctuate our year, such as Passover in the spring and Rosh Hashanah (New Year) in the autumn.

These give Jews a kind of dual consciousness: we live by both the Jewish and the Gregorian calendars; we are both of the wider society and slightly apart from it.

Some have said that to be Jewish is inherently to be ‘inside-out.’

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3 comments from readers


12 December 2006 at 19:39

I cannot differentiate your exceptionalist philosophy from that of the US Christian or Sunni Moslem fundamentalists. You all believe- without a shred of evidence- that you are significantly 'different' to other humans and you believe that your cultural group warrants special consideration because of this.

Me? I'm just another human.

adi_coruńa
12 December 2006 at 21:08

Hello Janet,

I've found your article lovable. I share with you the idea that Judaism is more than mere religion. It is religion ("an evolving religious civilization" is a good definition), but it is religion that generates culture. Rabbi Leo Baeck thought the Jewish people as two interconnected cores: Israel and the Diaspora. But I (humbly) believe he was wrong. I think there're two interconnected cores, but they are Identity and Creed+Religion+Faith. I call the first "Jewishness", and the second I call "Judaism".One cannot live without the other. Some people prefer the first one (they are not very practising, some even non-believers), but they feel a very hard connection with other Jews: through art, music, language, or the State of Israel. Others (and I include myself here) consider that they form a part of a universal religious brotherhood, they share that sentence of I. I. Mattuck, when he said: "we are a people of religion, but surely not a nation". For still others (the majority I suppose) being a Jew is the sum, the perfect sum of both aspects, reaching a point where they cannot separate them, because they live their Judaism in the border, in the connection actually. Identity and Religion are a perfect sum in the Jewish community. We Jews cannot dissociate one from the other. That is the reason why a Jew that converts to another faith is no longer a Jew. And why other Jews, religious Jews, cannot forget or kill in themselves the familiarity, the sense of community with other Jews, even from really distant parts of the world: because we are a community beyond religion but from religion. Maybe, some of us don't pray, or study the Jewish texts, or go to synagogue.. but maybe he pays the light-tax, or has painted and designed the windows of the temple or the Holy Ark.

taghioff.info
13 December 2006 at 21:24

Oh there is nothing strange in that. All humans want to belong in some way or another? Are you "just a human" when you go to visit your family? How is it not "just human" to want to belong.

The difference between Janet's identity and that of fundamentalists, is that her form of belonging is not aggressive or exlcusive. As she says she is a convert, and as I know, the kind of liberal Jewish society she hangs out in is very uncomfortable with the thought of their identity being implicated with the oppression of others.

I really don't think that humanism, or the principles of tolerance that it is derived from, sits well with a presumptive attitude towards other people's choice of community.

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About the writer

Rabbi Janet Burden was ordained in July 2002. Born and educated in the US she now lives in Britain. She previously worked for Oxfam.

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