‘News’ Archive

JMN Boston’s Chanukah Party a Success!

JMN Boston hosted a wonderful Chanukah party in Boston for over 90 people on December 11, 2011.  Funded by a $1,000 Innovation Grant from Combined Jewish Philanthropies, a vibrant team of local JMN’ers (some long-term, some brand new) organized the event in partnership with Temple Israel, the largest synagogue in the area.

Before the party, we made a significant outreach effort, sending a beautiful flyer (thank you, volunteer graphic artist Nicky McCatty!) to synagogues, Jewish day schools, secular Jewish organizations, Hillels, parents’ list serves, etc. with a cover letter asking for help identifying folks who might be interested.  The event was listed or better yet featured on various web sites, including Jewish Boston and Interfaithfamily.com.

At the party, there were a variety of activities for people of all ages.  We had a “Human Bingo” game where we got to know each other by asking questions about our backgrounds and life experiences.  Children drew pictures of their families on a mural titled, “My Jewish Family,” and engaged in Chanukah-themed art projects.  Adults were invited to join facilitated discussions about the future of JMN Boston, and exploring synagogue membership.  We had the JMN poster displayed, and enjoyed some sufganiyot (Dunkin’ Donuts style – this was Boston after all!).  We played the multicultural CD, “Songs in the Key of Hanukkah.”

Everyone formed a big circle at the end for singing and closing words. Everyone was asked to fill in a detailed sign-in form so we could gather information about the participants and stay in touch.

The night after the event, a young adult who had attended sent me this message, “THANK YOU SO MUCH for planning the event and welcoming me into the circle…I felt right at home.  It was the first time I’ve ever experienced being with so many Jews of Color.  It was the first time I ever felt like I belonged in a Jewish group at all.”  If just one person had that experience, it was a true success.

We’re looking  forward to our next steps as we build our local JMN chapter.

~Becky Shuster, JMN member & leader

 

New lecture series in Oakland hopes to generate a better acceptance of Jews of color

by Dan Pine, staff writer

JWeekly.com

Dawn Kepler tells the story as a cautionary tale.

It’s about a little girl of Chinese-Jewish ancestry, raised Jewish in the Bay Area. One day an older woman approaches the child in synagogue and tells her, with every good intention, “You’re always welcome here.”

As if she wouldn’t be?

That sort of subtle insensitivity to Jews of color bothers Kepler a great deal. That’s why she has organized a free lecture series on the subject of Jewish diversity, “What Color are Jews?” Sponsored by Lehrhaus Judaica, the once-a-month series will start Oct. 23 and run through March 2012 at Temple Sinai in Oakland.

Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin of Temple Sinai, who is of Chinese descent, will join a discussion on Asian Jews. The first panel will be on Asian Jews, and by that Kepler doesn’t mean Jews living in Shanghai or Mumbai. She’s means Oakland, San Francisco and Palo Alto.

“If you think of Jews of color, you think exotic foreign Jews, not the person sitting next to you in shul,” Kepler said. “Since I started on this project, many people suggested a lecture on Jews of Uganda. I said no. I want to talk about the Jew sitting next to you who is black and Jewish.”

That, too, will be the topic for one of the series’ panel discussions. The list of other topics includes: Jews from Argentina (led by Argentine- born Rabbi Roberto Graetz of Lafayette’s Temple Isaiah); how multi-racial Jews develop their Jewish identity; and the demographics of the Jewish community of the future.

Founder of Building Jewish Bridges, a Berkeley nonprofit that reaches out to interfaith families, Kepler says the impetus for the series came out of personal experience.

“I have my own relatives and friends who are multi-racial,” Kepler said. “You can hear one too many stories about people being checked at the door for their Jewish identity.”

Kepler noted that the local Jewish community is more diverse than some realize. She cited a recent demographic study that found 13 percent of East Bay Jewish families are multiracial.

“That means at least every 10th Jew is a Jew of color or in a family with a Jew in color,” she added. “So how can we be more welcoming, more sensitive?”

She hopes the series will provide some answers.

The panel on Asian Jews will feature Rabbi Jacqueline Mates-Muchin of Temple Sinai. She is of Chinese ancestry and understands the challenges of feeling part of the Jewish community when one looks different.

“I’ve had people ask if I was adopted,” the San Francisco native said. “In rabbinical school, one  woman said to me ‘You’re a nice Chinese girl. You can be just as Jewish as the rest of us.’ ”

Mates-Muchin will return to the series Nov. 13 to deliver a lecture titled “Diversity from a Biblical Perspective.”

“Some of it is pretty direct,” she said. “It is said we left Egypt ‘in a mixed multitude.’ So right from the start, the early laws talk about the stranger in the community. We were already mixing.”

At the same time, she concedes that there are mixed messages in the text, as well as in Jewish culture.

“We have been able to be inclusive and adapt, become new people, incorporate new ideas,” she said. “That’s how we survive. Yet there’s a feeling within the text that we are hesitant to want to change. It’s a constant tension.”

Kepler wants to see some of that tension surface in the series’ panel discussions. She wants the sessions to be safe places for attendees to ask what she calls “awkward questions.”

The conversations, she hopes, will help move the Jewish community toward being 100 percent accepting.

“We’re all flawed,” she said. “We’re all on this journey together. Generally in the Bay Area we all embrace the idea that the Jewish community is very diverse. Now let’s do a better job of it.”


“What Color are Jews? Exploring the Diversity of Our Community Locally and Globally”
starts Oct. 23 and ends March 28, 2012 at Temple Sinai, 2808 Summit St., Oakland. Seven sessions. Free. Information: (510) 845-6420 or http://www.bit.ly/odnLhx.

Chinese Jews feel more at home in Israel

By Benjamin Haas, Los Angeles Times
October 16, 2011

Reporting from Jerusalem and Beijing— As a child growing up in Kaifeng in central China, Jin Jin was constantly reminded of her unusual heritage.

“We weren’t supposed to eat pork, our graves were different from other people, and we had a mezuza on our door,” said the 25-year-old, referring to the prayer scroll affixed to doorways of Jewish homes.

Her father told her of a faraway land called Israel that he said was her rightful home, she recalls. But “we didn’t know anything about daily prayers or the weekly reading of the Torah.”

Jin has since fulfilled her father’s dream. On a hot summer day in Jerusalem, where she works as a tour guide for Chinese citizens visiting Israel, Jin, who now goes by the Hebrew name Yecholya, wore a long khaki skirt, indicative of her conservative religious views, and Teva-like sandals, the national footwear of Israel.

Jin and her relatives belong to a community of Chinese Jews that was established in the 9th century by Persian traders who traveled along the Silk Road to Kaifeng, at the time China’s capital.

Records documenting the group’s history are spotty, but experts do know that some of the Jewish traders settled in Kaifeng and eventually built a synagogue with official recognition from the emperor. After the last rabbi in Kaifeng died in 1809, many began to forsake their religious practices while holding on to certain traditions, like the prohibition against pork and the celebration of a communal meal on Passover.

Then in 2005, Shavei Israel arrived. The privately funded conservative religious organization, based in Jerusalem, specifically targets descendants of Jews who have lost their connection to the religion, such as those forced to convert to Catholicism during the Inquisition in Spain.

“Chinese have a strong reverence for ancestry,” said Michael Freund, founder and chairman of Shavei Israel. “Even though they don’t know how to read the Torah, they know they’re Jewish.”

So far the organization has helped 14 Jews, out of an estimated 3,000 who live in Kaifeng, move to Israel. But Freund complained that Israel’s bureaucratic and religious red tape has prevented Shavei Israel from bringing over more of these Chinese Jews.

Because the community intermarried and based Jewishness on patrilineal heritage rather than matrilineal, the norm in Judaism, Kaifeng Jews who want to move to Israel need to undergo Orthodox conversions under Israeli law.

The process takes a year or more of study at an Orthodox yeshiva, and requires a final examination before a rabbinical court.

Jin was brought to Israel with three others from her hometown by Shavei Israel specifically to begin the conversion process. Once converted, she was eligible to remain in Israel under the country’s Law of Return. The statute allows Jews to claim citizenship, which she did along with her three Chinese classmates. Jin’s father remains in China, although she said he hopes to join her soon.

At first, Jin and others were indignant about the need to formally convert to Judaism.

“According to me and my family, we were always Jewish,” she said. “I was confused why we needed to go through the conversion process.”

But after she started studying in Jerusalem, Jin said, she realized how little she knew of Jewish traditions and rules.

Jin eventually became such an expert in prayers before meals, Freund said, that she stumped him at a dinner with other Jews from Kaifeng at a kosher sushi restaurant, where they discussed which prayer should be uttered first: the one for the rice or for the fish.

“This is something that I, or most Jews for that matter, would never have given a second thought,” Freund said. “It shows how much they can add to Judaism.”

The first family of Kaifeng Jews to immigrate to Israel was almost sent back to China. Shlomo and Deena Jin (no relation to Yecholya Jin) had overstayed their tourist visas in 2005. As they faced deportation, Shavei Israel worked with authorities to allow them to stay after going through the conversion process. Shlomo, at the time in his late 40s, endured a circumcision to complete the conversion.

More recent arrivals have been in their early 20s and most have felt more at home in Israel than in Kaifeng.

Wang Yage said he stood out his whole life. His house was filled with Hebrew books, a language no one in his family understood, and even his name was different: It’s the transliterated version of Jacob, a biblical name.

After studying one year at Henan University in Kaifeng, the 25-year-old jumped at the opportunity to move to Israel. He hasn’t looked back.

“I feel Israel is my home and I’m more comfortable here,” said Wang, who now refers to himself as Yaakov. “Israelis help you out when you need it; it’s like belonging to a big family.”

After his conversion, Wang plans to become a rabbi to help Kaifeng Jews immigrate to Israel. If he succeeds, he will be the first Chinese rabbi in almost 200 years.

Despite this progress, bureaucracy in Israel and China may prevent larger-scale immigration. According to Shavei Israel, the Israeli Ministry of the Interior has been reluctant to give visas to a group not officially considered Jewish by Israel’s chief rabbinate.

Meanwhile, because Jews are not among China’s 56 officially recognized ethnic groups and Judaism is not one of the five officially recognized religions, the Chinese government is suspicious of the Kaifeng community’s efforts to organize.

“The government is still worried about religion and its negative effects,” said Xu Xin, director of the Institute of Jewish Studies at Nanjing University. “They worry it will affect stability and encourage fundamentalism.”

Ultimately, the government sees organized religion as a challenge to its power and state-sponsored atheism.

Along with a newfound freedom of religion, the 14 Kaifeng Jews are looking forward to stretching their political wings.

“The first time I went to vote, it was raining hard and three of us went together,” Jin recalled. “I was so proud. For everyone else there it was just another election, but for us, it was the beginning of a new life.”

Haas is a news assistant in The Times’ Beijing bureau.

Originally published here.

Afro-Semitic Experience: Pray, Sway, Love

September 28, 2011
National Public Radio

“Adoshem, Adoshem, Part I” is not your zayde’s prayer.

A reinvention of this traditional High Holy Day appeal is featured on Further Definitions of the Days of Awe, on which the multicultural musicians of the Afro-Semitic Experience merge Jewish, African and African-American genres.

The words of the prayer say exactly what you’d expect a High Holy Day prayer to express. They address the “gracious and compassionate” deity who forgives sins and grants pardon. “Adoshem” is a term used by pious Jews in place of the unspeakable name of God, combining “Adonai” (Hebrew for “my Lord”) and “shem” (name).

The start of the song sounds like a rehearsal — there are voices, piano riffs and drum beats, but you can’t tell where the song is headed. Then, the musicians gather their strength and begin. At first, the song clings to its Jewish roots, courtesy of the warm-hearted, yearning cantorial voice of Jack Mendelsohn. Yet there’s a different feel to this “Adoshem.” The pianist’s fingers roam restlessly over the keyboard with arpeggios, strike jazz- and blues-inflected chords, and play the stuttering notes of a gospel hymn — a reminder, perhaps, that sinners are stuck in their ways and need to find ways to stop sputtering and push forward.

Then, the song does indeed push forward in ways that synagogue-goers have never heard. Percussionist Baba David Coleman, a Yoruba priest from Cuba, suggested the rhythm of a tango for “Adoshem.” With that seductive beat, underlined by an insistent drummer and the melancholy thrum of a cello, the Afro-Semitic Experience creates a Latin expression of the Jewish habit of swaying, or shuckling, to connect the physical self to a higher power. Is this going too far? “Music, especially sacred music, is not static,” bass player David Chevan says. “We don’t do this in an ironic manner, but rather out of respect and joy.”

As for the “Part I” in the title, that’s a wink to the old-school rhythm-and-blues practice of having two parts of a song — one on each side of a 45 record. The first part of “Adoshem” is a reflective Latin reverie.

Originally published here.

Ethiopian-Israeli children barred from school

“We don’t take in Ethiopian children. We don’t think you match our lifestyle and we’re not sure about your Jewishness either.” This is what five young girls of Ethiopian descent were told when they arrived with their parents at the “Or Chaya” school in Petah Tikva.

The girls were slated to begin the school year at the “Ner Etzion” school, which only had students of Ethiopian descent. The school was closed at the instruction of Education Minister Gideon Sa’ar, following the parents’ protest, and the five students were directed by the municipality to the “Or Chaya” school, which belongs to the Chabad movement.

The girls arrived at the institution accompanied by their parents, and were met by a person at the gate who took them aside and informed them that the school was not interested in taking in Ethiopian students.

The girls were forced to return shamefacedly to the municipality. The Education Department staff called the school and was surprised to receive the same answer: “You’re welcome to lead us to the gallows. This has never happened and will never happen,” a school official said.

The Petah Tikva Municipality filed a complaint with the Education Ministry against the school, and Minister Sa’ar instructed the ministry’s director-general to summon the school principal, Nechama Dina Deitch for a hearing.

“We won’t tolerate these behavior toward children of Ethiopian descent,” Petah Tikva Municipality spokesman Hezy Hakak said Wednesday.

In the meantime, a week after the start of the school year, the five students are still sitting at home. “They looked at her as if she were a monkey,” said Molko Wanda, the father of a girl who was slated to begin the second grade at the “Or Chaya” school. “Do you know what it means telling a seven-year-old girl that she’s not wanted for being black?”

Moshe Ashgara, the father of another girl, feels helpless too. “My daughter is a diligent student. Why won’t they take her?”

Sixty-six of the “Ner Etzion” students have yet to be absorbed in an alternative educational institution. The municipality promised that a place would be found for all children within the next few days, and that a school refusing to take in students of Ethiopian descent would be punished.

The principal of “Or Chaya” school was unavailable for comment.

Originally published here.