I was recently invited to a luncheon hosted by a Jewish women's organization
called “Lions of Judah”. (Reminded
me a little of the Women’s Missionary Union in the Baptist Church):
"The Lion of Judah program has brought
together women of all ages and from many walks of life in order to play an
essential role in creating social justice, healing the sick, feeding the
hungry, preserving human dignity and building Jewish identity."
As I am hopelessly WASPy, being raised in the Episcopal Church, I felt a
little (okay, a lot) out of place.
I have to say, though, that in a previous life I must have been Jewish,
because Judaism has been a part of my life since I was a freshman in high
school.
My first best friend in Manila was Susan Roth. I spent a lot of time at her house in Parañaque, and by
process of osmosis, learned a lot about her family’s faith. It was never an issue to me; most TCKs
are accepting of others’ differences, and, indeed, curious about them.
So it wasn’t strange to me that one of the first boys to show an
interest in me in Manila was actually Israeli. He had a ridiculously cute accent and his English was filled
with mistakes that I thought were adorable. He had dark curly hair, and taught me how to say, “I love
you” in Hebrew. He talked about
the fact that he would probably be required to serve in the Israeli army
someday. It was a reflection of
our school’s “internationality” that the group he ran with included Arab and
Jewish kids alike. When his family
moved back to Israel, another Jewish family in Manila took him in so he could
finish high school. It was
remarkable to me how the Jewish community in Manila took care of its own. Later on in life I read about how many
Jews from Germany and other places in Europe sought refuge in Manila in the late
1930’s, only to find themselves in the clutches of the Japanese. The hardships that the Jews experienced
during the war were indescribable.
Deplorable, tragic, incomprehensible.
In the first frenetic, exciting days of college in San Antonio,Texas, I met a cute boy
who was from Staten Island, New York.
We had both ended up at a school that neither wanted to attend; he had
been wait-listed at Stanford, and I had desperately wanted to go to William and
Mary in Virginia. My parents were in
Singapore, his in New York. The
attraction was immediate and powerful.
And yes, you guessed it: he was Jewish. I fasted with him on Yom Kippur, and listened to his stories
about being Bar Mitvahed in Israel. We bonded over our common (gefilte) fish out water-ness.
We dated for nearly 2-1/2 years in college, then for another year after
we graduated. It seemed inevitable
that we would be together always, but he broke up with me so he could
concentrate on his medical career.
In a very long, anguished letter, single-spaced and double-sided, he
wrote that “It wouldn’t be fair to make you wait for 10 years while I finish my
training.” (I thought it was because I wasn't Jewish, but that wasn't the case). Heartbroken, we
continued our lives without each other, never forgetting our bond and our
connection. Today, due to
serendipity and fate, destiny, kismet, whatever you call it, we are married and
ridiculously awestruck at this fact.
His mother once joked about the “not making me wait 10 years”
comment. “It’s not fair that you
should make her wait ten years; but it’s okay to make her wait THIRTY years?”
After college, I moved back to Baton Rouge, where my parents had settled after their international days were over. One of my mom’s good friends, Beth, who was closer to my age, became my friend as
well. Beth came from a Jewish family in
New York; she was a self-proclaimed Jewish American Princess. Beth and Mom used to host the most amazing (and delicious) Passover Seders. Mom celebrated and respected Judaism as if she had been raised in the faith.
After my sister died, Mom had given up on God and religion: the whole matzo ball.
In her job as an editor at the Graduate School at LSU, Mom met a lot of
people. One of her clients was the
daughter of the Rabbi at Beth Shalom Synagogue, as she, the daughter, was
working on her Masters’ thesis.
One day, for whatever reason, the Rabbi himself appeared in her office,
and, they began to discuss faith.
Mom said, “Oh, Rabbi, I gave up on all that ‘god’ stuff a long time
ago.” The wise Rabbi replied, “Well,
you should come join us then!”
When I married my first husband in 1987, Beth was one of my
bridesmaids. I can only imagine
how she felt, standing in the huge Episcopal Church, surrounded by Christianity in all its glory. But she was my friend, and I wanted her to be there for my
big day.
Over the years I made several Jewish friends; we seemed to bond in a
mysterious way that I never understood, but which I celebrated.
It wasn’t until I attended the Lions of Judah luncheon the other day
that I got it.
The speaker at the luncheon was a lovely, dynamic woman named Susan who
is a convert to Judaism. She is
also an ordained interfaith minister.
I had heard about her from my in-laws and have long wanted to meet her. She talked about a 613th
commandment (and you thought there was only ten!): “And now,
write for yourselves this song, and teach it to the Children of Israel. Place
it into their mouths, in order that this song will be for Me as a witness for
the children of Israel.” (Deuteronomy 31:19). Susan elaborated that while many Jews see this as a literal writing of a Torah scroll (and many do have actual decorative scrolls written and illustrated), it
can also be a commandment to share your own gifts, to contribute to
your own community, to preserve the Jewish identity for the generations to come. Susan
asked each person to reflect and then share what our personal “gifts” are that
we can contribute to our community, to write our own figurative Torah. (Ugh, I thought, I’m only a guest
here! Does she really expect me to
talk in front of all these strangers?)
When it came my turn, (and thanks to a glass of champagne to calm the nerves) I said that I had grown up moving internationally often
and had never really had a true home; that I felt my gift was to reach out to
others who grew up like me, homeless, in a sense, to reassure them they are not
alone.
Then she said something amazing.
She said, “Like the Jews who wandered for 40 years in the desert,
without a home to speak of, you offer that sense of ‘home’ to others who have wandered like you. That is your
contribution to your community: by sharing your experiences, you share your
meaning of home. Your community is
your home.”
I would never in a million years pretend that being a TCK should in any
way, shape or form, be compared to the tribulations of the Jewish people over
the millennia. But going back in
history to those days when the Jews lived in the desert, wandering from pillar
to post, waiting for a new generation to evolve before returning to the
Promised Land, I can see a parallel.
It wasn’t the Jews’ choice to be in the desert. What sustained them all those long, dry
years was the sense of community, and the continuity of their People. Their community was their home, even if
their physical “home” was non-existent. Like the Jews, TCKs find their sense of
“home” in the community of others like them.
It all makes sense now.
1 comment:
great read, liz. yes, we're all kind of wandering jews i guess. thanx for posting.
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