“The Intermarriage Artist” — full text
Because all of the archive links at the Jewish Week are broken or messed up, some of you have asked me to see this piece that’s causing all the discussion, both on this blog, and over at Facebook. So here you are. May our conversations be respectful and productive.
The Intermarriage Artist
By Esther D. Kustanowitz
I recently came back from a West Coast tour of sorts, which included participation at an L.A.-based conference for Jewish leaders in their 20s and 30s. The Professional Leaders Project (PLP) called participants “talent,†in perhaps an intentional evocation of “the industry.†But our talents were celebrated and cultivated in a very un-Hollywood-like way: through intensive peer leadership, networking and professional mentoring. No casting couch required.
An entrepreneurial nonprofit founded with the mission of turning Jewish leadership over to the next generation, PLP gave “talent†the chance to live up to the name, as “session artists†or “thought leaders.†One so-designated “thought leader†remarked that this sounded extremely Orwellian, although perhaps in a good way. Apparently not yet a thought leader, I had an opportunity that a writer-yet-without-a-book doesn’t often have: to read aloud something I’d written and observe the response. I had been designated as the artist for “Intermarriage and Interdating: Still the Third Rail?â€
Burying the Kafkaesque implications of what being an “intermarriage artist†might entail, I read a piece from my book-in-perpetual-progress, a chapter considering whether it would matter if I intermarried: if my babies would always be Jewish, maybe it paid to expand the dating pool and be more open-minded. (To ruin the ending, I decided intermarriage wasn’t for me, and to this day restrict my dating pool to Jews who are interested in living a traditionally Jewish life.)
In all modesty, I thought the piece was a sensitive, personal consideration of all of the issues involved and hoped it also brought some humor to the table. OK, maybe that wasn’t all that modest. Still, I was pretty sure it was balanced. But even with all the writing and reading I’ve done on the subject, I underestimated just how personally everyone in the room would react. While people were polite, challenging me respectfully and non-confrontationally, afterwards I became aware that some offense had been taken. Some people—themselves intermarried or children of intermarriages—had heard my personal exploration as a condemnation of their (or their parents’) choices. Maybe it was that I said that I found it slightly sad when a Jewish man “marries outâ€â€”not for national reasons, like those who believe intermarriage dooms the Jewish people to extinction, but for utterly selfish ones: it means that there’s one less Jewish man in my dating pool.
I want to marry a Jew. Not because I hate non-Jewish people or think they have nothing to offer me in terms of love, personality, humor, advice or life experience, God forbid. But because having a Jewish life is important to me—it’s a lifestyle and perspective that I find personally resonant and think is worth having in the world. Nearly all of my friends are engaged in Jewish work, or are—either formally or informally—affiliated with the Jewish community. Almost every paycheck I receive is from an organization or publication with the word “Jewish†in its name. I pepper my daily speech with Hebrew (which my two-year-old nephew is also learning to speak) and email Israel constantly. How could I commit to a life with someone who didn’t find all of those things compelling and meaningful? And would that person ever feel like he was part of my intensely Jewish world?
As some of my single sisters approach fertility’s danger zone, they consider their own talent: their children will be Jewish, and maybe that’s enough, if not ideal. Some religious authorities advise that these women just marry, even without love for the Jewish bachelor-in-question; they’ll be happier once they have Jewish children. A few, even some of the more affiliated ones, are beginning to drift toward other options.
You may not find intermarriage personally acceptable or nationally responsible. But that doesn’t erase the issue. We no longer live in Anatevka, where running off with non-Jewish Fyedka or (perhaps even worse!) secular liberal activist Perchik results in our parents cutting us off. We all deal with non-Jews, most of whom aren’t Cossacks. And so, intermarriage happens; we need to figure out how to deal with it, artfully and more artistically than I was apparently able to.
But in concentrating energies on re-engaging the intermarried, we also should keep in mind those who haven’t taken that road and are still hoping to find someone of the faith. In five or ten or fifteen years, the theoretically still single thirty- or forty-something may adopt a more inclusive dating policy. And who could blame them? While that question should be rhetorical, we all know that somewhere, someone will.
Esther D. Kustanowitz takes her status as an artist seriously, and now edits in red, green and purple pen. You can email her at jdatersanonymous@gmail.com.
[…] the answers to these and other questions, or more accurately, more questions, check out “The Intermarriage Artist,” my newest Jewish Week […]
It boils down (to me at least) to this: Would I rather be single/childless or marry a non-jew? Unfortunately, it’s just not possible for every Jewish girl to have a Jewish boy – numbers aren’t anywhere close to equal.
Esther,
You’ve stated that you meant no offense with your piece and as I wasn’t a participant at PLP I have no idea what was actually said, but given that your postings here are frequently rife with small but palpable judgments regarding intermarriage, it seems likely that your audience may have picked up on your tone. One example that instantly sprang to my mind as a loyal reader was your relatively recent post, “Flaws Overwhelm as Jewish Singles Flounder.” You mention friends who have “lowered their standards” by interdating. How is that phrasing not indicative of condemnation? Perhaps your friends simply re-evaluated their priorities, but the implication is that they “settled” for the first goy they could get their hands on so that they would hopefully have time to pop out a few Jewish babies.
Ultimately, it’s a sore subject for those who interdate/intermarry because they have simply made a personal choice and want to be rid of the cultural baggage that the omnipresent “Jewish Singles/Population Crisis” foists on them. No one accuses Jews who date within the faith of contributing to the demise of Judaism, and the interdating crowd justs wants to be accorded the same respect. I find this blanket condemnation of intermarriage particularly offensive when it comes from Jews within more liberal strains of Judaism. Within the Orthodox world, halacha is halacha and though I may not agree with their position, I understand their perspective. But why is it inherently better for a Jew to date another Jew, regardless of their level of affiliation, than a non-Jew willingly to raise their children Jewish? If Conservative and Reform Jews can reinterpret much of halacha within a modern context, why not intermarriage too? How is saying that two people are more suited for each because they’re both halachly Jewish (i.e. because of their blood), irrespective of belief or practice, not a bigoted stance?
Danielle, first of all, thanks for commenting, because I do value the differing opinions of loyal readers who really want to discuss this in a rational tone, with the goal of achieving shalom bayit (peace in the house) among singles.
While I’m open to the fact that I do have a personal preference for intrafaith dating, I hope that I’ve also been able to convey my distaste for the way that the Jewish community, in general, has handled both “the singles crisis” and the rising intermarriage rates.
That post that you’re talking about, with singles “floundering,” was meant as a response to an advice piece in the Jewish Press that I felt particularly strongly about, which advised the woman to settle for someone Jewish that she didn’t love so that she could fulfill her destiny or goal of being a Jewish mother before it was too old. You are probably right that my talk of “lowering standards” likely rubbed some people the wrong way, and I’m sorry for that. I should have set the phrase in quotations, like I did just now, to indicate that “lowering your standards” is relative and sometimes not the value judgment it’s become known as. (The post in question was a reaction to the endless “listing” that singles have of things that they “require” in a mate, which may be true requirements, preferences, or not important in the slightest.)
And as for your questions, they are among the questions that I regularly ask, of myself and others, and again, I believe that everyone should have the right to make their own choices, free and clear of the imposition of community will or preference. And because I hope that people will respect the choices I make for myself, I aim to respect the choices that other people make for themselves. And if my posts have indicated anything other than that, I apologize.