|
Ask
Auntie Pinko
August
21, 2003
Dear
Auntie Pinko,
I am curious about what makes a Jewish person a Jew. To
me, it seems like more of a question of religion than one
of race. Can an atheist still belong to the Jewish "race?"
And if it really is just about religion, then how did the
Holocaust happen, and what is going on in Israel?
Margaret,
Tulsa, OK
Dear Margaret,
A complicated question, especially for someone like Auntie
Pinko, who is not Jewish!
However, I have many dear friends who are Jewish, and your
question formed the basis for some wonderful discussions.
I hope I am remembering and reporting them accurately - if
not, please attribute any distortions or inaccuracies to Auntie's
aging memory circuits, and not to bad source information or
malice. The word "Jewish" covers a wide territory indeed,
including religious faith, cultural heritage, and ancestry
(which is not the same as race.) Let's deal with the "race"
issue first, because that is the slipperiest, most difficult
area to understand.
It's difficult partly because the very term "race" is so
imprecise, except as a shorthand to describe groups of other
characteristics. With the unlocking of the human genome, it
has become clear that in the scientific sense, there are either
thousands of human "races," or only one, depending on how
you slice it. We can now use DNA analysis to determine with
surprising accuracy the geographic areas from which our ancestors
hailed, and the tribes, groups, clans, and nations to which
they may have belonged.
But are ancestral geographic origins, tribes, etc., a "race?"
And if so, how much of what kind of ancestry determines a
person's "race?"
In thinking about the concept of "race" and Jewish identity,
we have to take into account the Diaspora of the Jewish people
that has been going on for thousands of years. Although they
originally coalesced as a people with a distinct religion,
national identity, and cultural heritage in the region of
the Middle East we now know as Israel, even in ancient times
they wandered widely (voluntarily and involuntarily) throughout
the region. The Roman conquest and the partitioning and ultimate
dissolution of the Jewish states of Judea and Samaria initiated
a much wider Diaspora that ultimately sent Jews to almost
every part of the world.
Over hundreds of years, Jewish people living in every part
of the world mingled with their neighbors and absorbed the
genetic heritage of their adopted regions. Jewish families
who located on the North African coast in the seventh and
eighth centuries have a different DNA profile than Jewish
families who settled in Russia and Poland in the ninth and
tenth centuries. But they are all still Jewish.
The question of religion is almost as slippery. There are
a variety of religious practice traditions among Jews, and
a wide variety of choices among Jewish people about just how
closely they might wish to observe those traditions. Someone
born in a Jewish family might choose to reject religion altogether
and embrace atheism, yet most Jewish people would still identify
that person as a "non-observant Jew."
So is it possible to "become" Jewish? Or do you have to
be born into a Jewish family to be Jewish? I was surprised
to hear different nuances in the answers from my Jewish friends.
They all agreed that it was possible for a Gentile to convert
to the Jewish religion, and they agreed that while there is
no imperative among Jewish people to proselytize or convert
others to their faith, they welcome those who choose to share
their beliefs and observances.
But I heard some interesting differences of opinion about
whether conversion alone is sufficient to make someone "Jewish."
Some of the more strictly observant Jews indicated that Jewish
identity is passed through family heritage, and that while
it is possible that if a convert married into a Jewish family,
their children might be indisputably "Jewish," the convert
themselves would remain essentially a converted Gentile. Gender
plays a role in this for some Jewish people, as well, since
some aspects of Jewish family identity are passed through
the mother.
By this time, as you can imagine, Auntie Pinko was quite
intrigued about the whole notion of "Jewish." I think one
friend said it best "Judaism is a religion, Jewish is a family/cultural
heritage, Israeli is a nationality. You can be all three or
any one or any combination."
As to how the Holocaust happened, Margaret, there is unfortunately
no mystery about it. Sadly, human beings appear to have a
certain affinity for turning ignorance and fear into hatred
and violence. When this affinity is exploited by evil individuals
with political ambitions, it can produce monstrous results.
The Holocaust was a particularly widespread, large-scale,
thorough, and cruel manifestation of this exploitation, made
possible by centuries of European anti-Semitism and the economic
and geopolitical realities of the time.
What is going on in Israel/Palestine is yet more tragic
examples of ignorance and fear turning into hatred and violence,
often being exploited by evil individuals with political ambitions,
and sometimes made worse by well-intentioned individuals with
preconceived notions and/or incomplete information. Unfortunately
no one is immune - not even those who have been victimized
by this cycle in the past.
I hope I've been helpful to you Margaret, and thanks for
asking Auntie Pinko!
View
Auntie's Archive
Do you have a question for Auntie Pinko?
Do political discusions discombobulate you? Are you a liberal
at a loss for words when those darned dittoheads babble their
talking points at you? Or a conservative, who just can't understand
those pesky liberals and their silliness? Auntie Pinko has
an answer for everything.
Just send e-mail to: mail@democraticunderground.com,
and make sure it says "A question for Auntie Pinko"
in the subject line. Please include your name and hometown.
|