Friday, November 10, 2006

Know Your Jewish Community: Jewish Identity

Jewish identity is a can of worms.

I'd like to start with the following quote from Rabbi Aron Moss at The Human Touch:
"The biggest threat to Jewish survival is confused Jewish identity. Sadly, today in many Jewish schools and families, Jewish identity is built through teaching Holocaust awareness and a fear of marrying out. The Jewish community’s preoccupation with assimilation and anti-Semitism is not the solution, it is the problem."

I find that blog posts about Jewish identity fall into three categories:
1) abstract discussion about "what IS Jewish identity"
2) what are the "problems"
3) personal accounts/feelings/struggles

As for my personal account: I just told Harley, my identity is pretty darn confused. I can recite the b-attitudes off by heart, as well as all of the books in the New Testament, but until I was 16 or so, I didn't know enough Hebrew to follow along with the amidah*. As I have gotten older, my perspective has changed, I now firmly believe that people should be able to observe/not observe whatever the heck that they want and call it Judaism. After all Shabbetai Tzvi converted to Islam, and claimed that it was the culmination of his Jewish beliefs.

Although Israel is an integral part of my Jewish identity, it isn't for 1/3 of young American Jews. QRSwave of The Truth Will Set You Free lists a few non-Zionist Jewish identities that already exist, so that you can pick your own.

And because you missed my microsoft paint magic, I have included an image of some ways that people define Jewish identity. See if you can guess what the heck I meant by each (and no, the last part isn't blank by accident, it is so that you can fill in your own).

*The word Amidah comes from the Hebrew word for standing, and refers to the silent devotion, which is part of every prayer service. During the weekday it is comprised of 18 blessings, so it is often called the "Shemoneh Esrei" or 18.

3 comments:

Annie said...

Ben- that too, but he tried to play it off as a religious thing.

Anonymous said...

Annie, Shabbetai Tzvi isn't proof of the flexible and expansive borders of Judaism, as the crackdown on this break away sect was intense, and extended even to those who had the faintest whiff of Sabbatean influence.

I absolutely agree (I'm assuming you do as well) that Holocaustism is a terrible and ineffective basis for Jewish identity, or a replacement for Judaism.

Annie said...

DK- I am not claiming that he was accepted at the time by Jews, but that now he is pretty widely considered to be a Jewish sectarian.