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My
Turn
A
Mixed Marriage - Deborah
Zaslow
My
husband, the famous Rabbi of Havurah Shir Hadash, does not think
I am Jewish. This is not because I don't attend Friday night services
regularly, or that I steal crumbs of bread during Pesach, or that
I regularly buy things at retail. It is because I do not come from
New York. Worse yet, I actually come from Los Angeles, a city famous
mainly for stealing the Brooklyn Dodgers from their true home, and
where you cannot get anything resembling a real bagel, and just
forget about getting a bialy. People in Los Angeles don't even know
what a bialy is. I tried to elevate my status once by identifying
a bialy, but apparently it was a knish.
I explained
to David that I grew up as a card-carrying Jew, belonging to Temple
Beth Hillel in North Hollywood. David shook his head sadly. "Reformed,"
was all he said. It might as well have been Protestant. In Sea Gate,
the community in Coney Island where he grew up, the only synagogues
were Orthodox. Never mind that his family ate bacon sandwiches and
shrimp cocktail and never went to any of these shuls. The synagogues
were there, complete with pious, long-locked men whose davvening
rang out morning and afternoon, lending an aura of authentic Judaism
to the very air that David breathed.
You
would think, then that it was he who kindly brought me into the
fold of real Judaism, but that is not the true story. When we began
dating twenty four years ago, David was a teacher of poetry in the
public schools and the owner of a Jazz club. Charismatic yes, religious
no. Although it makes sense now that all his experiences and skills
would eventually lead him to the Rabbinate, if you had told me then
that I would one day be a Rabbi's wife, I would have laughed my
head off. In fact I did laugh my head off when he showed me his
Bar Mitzvah picture where he stood in front of the Torah, looking
chubby and solemn. He told me how he had embarrassed his secular
family on that day by vowing to put on his Tallis and lay Tefillin
every day for the rest of his life. Ha Ha. Not my boyfriend.
In
our first year together we were both so estranged from Judaism that
we exchanged "Christmas" presents in December. Although
neither of us would ever think of having a Christmas tree in our
home, it did not occur to us to light the menorahs in either of
our respective closets.
When
Rachel was born a year after our wedding. we lit our first Chanukah
candles together, holding our infant daughter close to the light.
We knew we were holding someone important enough to pass something
on to, and this was our first step to reclaiming a piece of our
heritage.
Inspired
by those Chanukah lights perhaps, we joined the Rogue Valley Jewish
Community, and David was soon on the board of directors. It was
I, the future Rebbitzin, however who actually went to services,
and don't let him tell you differently. This is the emmes: David
might recognize a true bagel, but in 1985 I was the one praying
on Yom Kippur, while he was home working at his computer and eating
bacon sandwiches.
When
David had a religious awakening and dove into studying and practicing
Judaism in 1988, I was as bewildered and jealous as if he had a
new woman in his life, one who he spent more time with, and was
more passionate about than me. It also brought up my own negative
feelings about religious Jews. I remember my father saying, "All
religious people are rigid, especially Orthodox Jews." I suspect
he was referring to the stringent Rabbis at the Cheder he was forced
to attend after school when he wanted to play football. He had no
idea that his rejection of that Orthodoxy and later becoming "Reformed"
would someday hinder my status as a Jew married to a true New-Yorker.
I was
embarrassed when David started wearing a Yarmulke regularly, in
sophisticated, liberal Ashland. This religious husband with a scraggly
beard had replaced the hip, handsome, businessman that I married,
and didn't seem to mesh with the secular, groovy lifestyle I thought
we had. When I wasn't busy teaching, storytelling, and taking care
of our children, I was exploring my inner child with my women's
group. As far as I was concerned, psychology was the way to personal
growth, not religious fervor.
I began
to see some changes in David, though, besides his yarmulke and love
of the Torah. I saw his eyes fill with tears for the first time
in years as he prayed. I felt him softening in a way that I hadn't
seen since we had first met. I did some changing, too. When we went
to Israel together in 1990, I sensed my own connection to the land
and the people. I got inspired to explore Jewish storytelling, and
found that these ancient stories called to me in a voice that was
much more resonant than the other folktales I had been telling.
I remember
very clearly the day that I told David, "I was afraid you and
I were walking on very different roads, headed in opposite directions.
But now I see that although we are on separate paths, yours a spiritual
one, mine a more emotional one, we are headed in exactly the same
direction. We're just getting there in our own ways."
This
has more than proved to be true over the years. Jewish Renewal has
opened up the "inner child" in David, while still allowing
him plenty of room to be the Wild Man that he is. In his work, I
see him developing more compassion every day. And I have found my
place in the world of Judaism, too. Telling Jewish stories, creating
Jewish plays with the Sunday school kids, leading women's ceremonies
with the Rosh Hodesh group-all of these have deepened my life. When
people ask me if I like being the Rebbitzin, I say "No, but
I love the Rabbi." Actually, I do like being the Rebbitzen;
I just don't like to admit it. And I do love David. He says that
he loves me too, even if I did steal the Dodgers from him, and I
still can't tell a bialy from a knish.
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