I was reading an article the other day on Kveller (an online
Jewish parenting site where various people blog) about the writer’s decision to
send her youngest child to a Jewish day school after her two older children had
gone to a non-Jewish private school. (The non-Jewish school was for boys only,
and her youngest is a girl so she had to look elsewhere.) She spoke about all
the incredible, advanced learning her boys have gotten that made her never
question that decision, and then how she felt watching her daughter completely
comfortable with songs, prayers, and rituals in the synagogue that her sons
were awkward with or disengaged from.
This led to an interesting discussion in the comments among
parents who have chosen to send their children to Jewish day schools and those
who chose not to. One parent said that she resented the implication that kids
couldn’t be raised to be comfortably observant Jews if they are in public
school (or a non-Jewish private school). Another responded and said that this
is true if you are able to maintain a strong Jewish home, but that she was not
raised very observantly and her husband is not Jewish, so while she feels
comfortable with the culture of Judaism that is a part of her family’s everyday
life, she didn’t feel so comfortable with teaching the faith and religion and
DID feel the need for the help of a Jewish day school for that. She stated that
when you are not able to teach your kids much about religion at home, two hours
of Hebrew school twice a week just doesn’t cut it to help your kids be grounded
in their faith.
This whole conversation fascinated me (and there were many
other people involved in it), but this in particular resonated with me in that
I am kind of the opposite. I read so much about people having the “culture” of
Judaism but not the religion, while I feel I have more of the religion and have
to be taught the culture.
Right before my conversion in April, my mother-in-law
revealed to me that while her grandmother was very observant, her mother wasn’t,
so she was not raised with the religion of Judaism. She eventually felt the
need for her children to have what she didn’t, and that is when she attempted
to start involving them in a local synagogue. However, my wife and her brother
were teenagers and felt uncomfortable with this and were just never interested
in participating. My wife’s sister, however, who was seven years younger,
immediately gravitated toward it and began attending Hebrew school and became a
bat mitzvah. When my mother-in-law attended events at the synagogue for her
youngest child, she says she felt an immediate connection. She felt that
despite not feeling so familiar with the religion, she immediately felt like
she was with her people: the way they looked, the way they acted, their
mannerisms, the traditions, the sayings, the superstitions. This is what made
her feel like a Jew for the first time, to realize that she IS a Jew no matter
what.
THIS is what I feel the need to teach and pass on to my
children. I feel 100% comfortable with the religion of Judaism. It’s not so
different from the faith I grew up with, after all, and no different from what
I have believed for the past ten years of my life. That part of conversion was
nearly seamless for me. It is the culture that I have had to become accustomed
to. It is the culture that I crave, that I want to be at home with. I am an
eager immigrant who received my citizenship but will still always feel like an
outsider in a way. This is not in a bad way – I don’t feel ostracized or
isolated or left out. I just feel an eagerness to have what I can’t, because my
love and sense of belonging is so strong.
I want my kids to grow up identifying with their Jewish
heritage not just in their faith and religious practices, but in the way we
communicate as a family that matches what they see in other Jewish families,
patterns of relating that Jews can affectionately joke about because they know
it about themselves and see how it sets them apart. And this is yet another (if
newly realized) reason that I want to raise our family with an active temple
life. They will get some of the culture
at home; some of it has rubbed off on Nicole from her upbringing by a Jewish
mother (certainly her way of communicating, which is very different from
mine!), some of it has rubbed off on both of us from our exposure to our own
Jewish community at our temple, and some of it we learn piece by piece and incorporate
into our lives as we go along without even meaning to or realizing it. But what
we miss, I hope they are able to pick up elsewhere. And if not…then they will
grow up with their mixed culture of being an observant Jew raised by a convert
and a former agnostic, and that’s okay too. It will all be part of their story
and will make them the beautiful people that they will be.
Edit: I was talking to my friend Allyson about this over lunch yesterday, and she said that because I chose Judaism and because of my passion for it and the way I am already practicing it, my kids will have much more of a culture than unfortunately most American born Jews are giving their kids. Hearing that perspective put me a bit more at ease too.
Edit: I was talking to my friend Allyson about this over lunch yesterday, and she said that because I chose Judaism and because of my passion for it and the way I am already practicing it, my kids will have much more of a culture than unfortunately most American born Jews are giving their kids. Hearing that perspective put me a bit more at ease too.