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Be'chol Lashon in June 2009 held its first weeklong summer camp for Jews of
diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds at Walker Creek Ranch, just north of San Francisco. (Photo by Diane Tobin/Be'chol Lashon)
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Jews of color come together to explore identity
By Sue Fishkoff
JTA
Published: October 13, 2009
PETALUMA,
Calif.—Dafna Wu, a 48-year-old San Francisco nurse, resembles
her Chinese father more than her Jewish mother. She’s been Jewish her
whole life, but she’s used to walking into synagogues and having people
ask who she’s with, as if she didn’t belong there of her own accord.
Her oldest daughter, Ruby, 24, looks like the Jewish man who fathered her, “like someone from a Vishniac photo,” Wu says.
When Ruby was a baby, Wu says, “people thought I was her nanny.”
But Wu’s youngest child, 9-year-old Amalia, has a Chinese father and
looks Asian. The Hebrew school she attends is filled with mixed-race
children, but the parents in the congregation are all white. Amalia is
in the minority, which concerns her mother.
“All my life I’ve had to defend being Jewish,” Wu says. “I don’t
want her to have to explain her Judaism or be exoticized for it. I just
want her to be a kid, not ‘that special, multi-racial kid.’ ”
That’s why Wu brings Amalia to Be’chol Lashon’s retreats and holiday celebrations.
At Be’chol Lashon, a San Francisco-based organization for ethnically
and racially diverse Jews and their families, Amalia plays with other
Jewish children who are black, Hispanic and Asian, as well as a
sprinkling of white children from non-conventional families. They study
Hebrew, celebrate the holidays, read Bible stories and learn about
Israel, but they also talk openly with their counselors about what it
means to be Jews of color, to juggle an identity people can’t see with
the one proclaimed by their skin.
About 5.4 percent of America’s Jews are non-white or Hispanic,
according to the 2000-2001 National Jewish Population Survey. A 2004
study by the Institute for Jewish and Community Research, Be’chol
Lashon’s parent organization, puts the figure at about 10 percent.
Nevertheless, say activists in the field, the prevailing assumption
is that Jews in the United States are white, and that Jews of other
racial or ethnic backgrounds are adoptees or converts. Sometimes they
are, but increasingly they are not, as the children of mixed-race
couples grow to adulthood and begin raising their own Jewish children.
As their numbers grow, mixed-race Jewish families are facing the
same question often put to interfaith families: Is there a need for
separate programming?
The answer, judging by the growth in the field, seems to be yes.
After 12 years of holiday programming in San Francisco and six years
of annual fall retreats, Be’chol Lashon ran its first summer camp in
June, when a critical mass of its families’ children reached the
8-to-12 age group. An East Coast organization with similar goals, the
Jewish Multiracial Network, founded by white Ashkenazi parents of
African-American children, this summer formally passed leadership on to
the next generation and is now run by and for Jews of color.
Both organizations have greatly expanded their activities this year.
Be’chol Lashon, which used to limit programming to the San Francisco
Bay Area, now has representatives in Los Angeles, New York and Chicago,
as well as a rabbi in Oklahoma City who works with anusim, Hispanics of
Jewish ancestry. And the Jewish Multiracial Network, which sponsors an
annual retreat and an active listserve, since September has held
potluck gatherings and town hall meetings in Boston, New York and
Philadelphia, and is planning one for Los Angeles.
“This is a population that is growing, that deserves our
sensitivity, and is not getting it,” says Paul Golin, associate
director of the Jewish Outreach Institute.
Golin has participated in Jewish Multiracial Network events. His
wife is Japanese, and he expects their future children to face the same
questions she experiences in Jewish settings.
“I’ve learned a tremendous amount of what it means to have white
privilege,” he says. “I was fairly oblivious to it before. There’s
white privilege in America, and Ashkenazi privilege in the Jewish
world.”
But Be’chol Lashon founder and director Diane Tobin says she notices
a “marked increase of interest” in reaching out to non-white Jews
within the greater Jewish community.
“Diversity has become a very popular issue, especially with the election of Barack Obama,” she says.
At the most recent Be’chol Lashon fall retreat, held Oct. 2-4 at
Walker Creek Ranch just north of San Francisco, parents interviewed
said they don’t want to segregate their children from the larger
community. Most, but not all, send their children to mainstream
religious schools and belong to synagogues. They look at the Be’chol
Lashon activities as supplementary, giving them space to explore their
connection to Judaism without having to explain who they are.
Tobin created Be’chol Lashon with her husband, the late Gary Tobin,
12 years ago when they adopted Jonah, who is African American. The
Tobins’ daughter, Sarah Spencer, who was 21 at the time, was in on the
decision.
“We thought it was important to have a community where Jonah and
kids like him would not have to choose between their identities, where
they didn’t have to be black sometimes and Jewish sometimes,” Spencer
says.
Spencer, who has a 2-year-old son with her husband, a black
Jamaican, says at first she wasn’t sure there was a need for the new
summer camp.
“But every parent I’ve talked to in the program says they’ve been looking for this,” she says. “So it seems there was a void.”
And it’s not just the parents. Children who attended the camp this summer say they feel the difference.
“I have more friends that understand me here,” says 10-year-old Aviva Davis, whose mother is the camp director.
At both Jewish Multiracial Network and Be’chol Lashon, mixed-race or
non-white children who grew up in the organizations are taking over
from their parents’ generation.
The biggest upheaval took place within the Jewish Multiracial
Network in June when Tanya Bowers, 36, of Washington was elected the
group’s first African-American president.
“The shift is happening now,” she says.
The group was started by Ashkenazim who adopted multi-racially, and
for the past several years Bowers says there has been “some tension
between these well-intentioned Jewish parents and the people of color
in the organization, a lot of control issues.” By this summer the
parents were ready to let go, and Bower stepped forward.
“We still want the parents involved,” she says. But the agenda is
being set by the new generation. The summer retreat was the first to
boast a separate track for Jews of color, along with the previous
tracks set up by the group’s founders.
Within Be’chol Lashon, young non-white faces are more prevalent in the group’s leadership.
Kenny Kahn, 27, the son of a white Jewish mother and black
non-Jewish father, is a veteran of Hebrew school, Jewish summer camps
and an Israel program, and has been coming to Be’chol Lashon for 12
years. He now serves as head counselor at the retreats and summer camp.
Kahn grew up in Richmond, a heavily African-American city north of
Berkeley, and attended Temple Beth El, a Reform congregation in
Berkeley.
“I had my Richmond friends and my Beth El friends," he says. "Being
able to mediate between those two worlds has become a theme in my life.”
A big, friendly guy who looks more African American than white, Kahn
says he never experienced anti-Semitism in the black community or
raised eyebrows in the Jewish community. But he relishes the space
Be’chol Lashon provides him and his peers to explore their Judaism at
leisure with others who share their backgrounds and concerns.
“In California we’re blessed with tolerance,” he says. “But
tolerance is just the first step to acceptance, and that’s what we need
more of in the Jewish community.”
Originally published here: http://jta.org/news/article/2009/10/13/1008467/jews-of-color-choose-come-together-to-exlore-identity
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