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Yvonne Durant

Yvonne Durant

Posted: July 29, 2010 07:33 AM


"It's an explosion of luuuv!" Elyse yells from the kitchen as she admires the golden challah loaves that she and her daughter Sydnee have prepared for the evening's Shabbat.

This night will be like no other night I've experienced with a Jewish family. While I have been a guest for many years at my friend Maggie Klein's family Passovers (I come armed with containers to take home matzo ball soup and charoset, and Maggie's sister, Fran Fink, is happy to fill them up), where I addressed the late matriarch as "Mother Klein," I have never been the guest of a Modern Orthodox African-American family. Tonight I will be one of two Gentiles, the other being Elyse's sister, Arnette Haynes, and we'll be joined by two other couples -- six children in all, and two dogs.

Elyse has just an hour to pull it all together. "What's not done at a certain time won't be done," she says. On the kitchen table, there are plates of colorful foods. Two of the four challah are made with chocolate chips, a request from her husband Mark, who's just come in from work, with nine-year-old Isaiah bounding in behind him. Mark grabs his yarmulke and says to his son, "Come on, we have to go, we have six minutes."

The Andersons converted to Judaism four years ago via an interesting and poignant journey.

Mark was adopted. He began his search for his biological parents five years ago and learned that his mother was Judy Rosen, a white Jewish woman living in Florida. "Had I waited 30 more days to look for her, none of this would've happened because Louise Wyse, the adoption agency, closed." Both of Mark's adoptive parents died.

When Mark first contacted his biological mother, she was very apprehensive. "I wasn't ready," she explained by phone from her home in Boca Raton. "But after a few weeks I called him. I saw him for four years before I said anything to anyone else." Rosen had become pregnant by a black man in the 1960s: "It was all very hush, hush, and already a difficult time," she said. Her mother had just been diagnosed with cancer, and Rosen had been in a terrible car accident. In fact, it was a doctor at the hospital who announced to her unknowing parents, "She didn't lose the baby."

When Mark learned that his mother was Jewish, he called a friend and said, "Guess what? I'm Jewish." Most friends weren't surprised, because they always knew he was mixed with something. Mark's journey began by going to synagogue with his friends. His mother didn't have a clue that he and Elyse were exploring converting to Judaism. Elyse, a marketing consultant and freelance writer, chose to study at the Jewish Community Center in Tenafly. "I realized through my studies that I shared the views of an Orthodox person," she said. "I think that way and knew that's who I am." Before converting there was a moment when she had second thoughts, after Israel bombed Lebanon in 2006. She remembered seeing pictures of a bombed-out Beirut. "I don't believe in bombing," she said. "It took a few days for me to rationalize this. I spoke to my rabbi. I had to battle myself. In the end, I realized I was free to be a Jew. My faith is not my race and it's not my politics."

I know the Andersons through a tight group of African Americans, of whom most, if not all, are Christians. I wondered how their conversion was accepted. Elyse said, "For the most part, our friends were very supportive and came for Shabbat and really enjoyed themselves, and then there were those who couldn't understand." One member of her family still isn't convinced. Her sister Arnette, a Born-Again Christian, comes to Shabbat often and goes to shul, too. Elyse laughs when she imitates her late father, who wholly accepted her becoming Jewish. He'd come to Shabbat, and when his phone rang he'd answer in a loud whisper, "I can't talk, I'm at Shabbat!"

Elyse is no-nonsense when it comes to her religion. "As with any convert," she said, "the three things I have agreed to do is to continue to study and teach the Torah to my children, observe the Sabbath and go to the Mikvah once a month." In the beginning, she admits, it was hard to turn down invitations during the Sabbath. "But now I like stepping off the merry-go-round."

Her husband isn't a rule-follower. He'll pose questions to his rabbi such as, "Who says I can't ride my bike or drive to synagogue?" He explains that he has a bad ankle and the walk to shul can be uncomfortable. The rabbi relinquished and told Mark that he can drive his car part of the way. He told Mark, "I'd rather have you here than not."

Mark, a car dealer, sometimes has to work during Shabbat. Elyse would like him to be more observant, but Mark has to work and make money. "He tries as hard as he can," Rosen said. "But she is incredible, very spiritual."

"The marriage is definitely stronger," Mark said. "We had a Hebrew wedding on the tenth anniversary of our original wedding. My wife guides me and has done a great job." Mark says he's never seen a more supportive community than this one. "When my mother came up to see us for the first time, another family insisted on making a dinner for 30 people. They didn't want Elyse to do a thing."

"It was beautiful," Rosen recalls. "I told my husband it was like a Havurah." (Havurah is Hebrew for a group, usually consisting of a group families who do things together.)

Rosen has another son by her first husband, named Howard Mark. Howard was to be named after her grandfather Harry, but there weren't many names that they liked that began with an "H," but they liked Howard. Mark, his middle name, was her ex-husbands grandfather's name. "You want to hear something?" she asks. "Mark's middle name is Howard." She adds, "As you get older, life becomes smaller and smaller and more interesting."

Before dinner, and before Mark and Isaiah return from shul, Elyse elegantly drapes a scarf over her hair and around her neck and lights the candles with another female guest. When the third woman arrives, Elyse tells her that there are still candles. Sydnee lights, too, as she's become a Bat Mitzvah.

Mark returns. First, he blesses each of the children, and then he offers a blessing to his wife and the other married women at the table. "I like to acknowledge them, too," he says.

For me, seeing this handsome man of color as he blesses the wine in Hebrew ("I'm studying, but not enough," he admits) makes me want to break rules and pull out a camera to film this other face of Judaism, the traditions and the look on Elyse's pretty face as Mark pays homage to her. As children and parents sing Shabbat songs, I think to myself that this may be more fun than the other Sabbath tradition: goyim having Happy Hour drinks to celebrate the beginning of our Sabbath.

Sydnee proudly shows me the pictures of her Bat Mitzvah. "These are friends in my grade at school," she says. "These are my friends from Jack and Jill. That's one of the rabbis who stopped by. There were 200 people."

When she was first told that the family was no longer celebrating Christmas, Sydnee was sad. But her eyes light up as she points out that Chanukah is eight days long. "Multiple gifts and lots of candy," she says.

How sweet it is. Shabbat Shalom!

 

Follow Yvonne Durant on Twitter: www.twitter.com/twinmanners

"It's an explosion of luuuv!" Elyse yells from the kitchen as she admires the golden challah loaves that she and her daughter Sydnee have prepared for the evening's Shabbat. This night will ...
"It's an explosion of luuuv!" Elyse yells from the kitchen as she admires the golden challah loaves that she and her daughter Sydnee have prepared for the evening's Shabbat. This night will ...
 
 
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11:28 PM on 08/16/2010
Great story! So inspirational!
04:45 PM on 08/01/2010
I'm always amused by how outraged some people get over religion. Religion is like any other institution -- politics, theater, language, education -- it is a means through which people attempt to make sense of life and share their experiences. It can be used and abused. It can be manipulated to garner power and it can be the premise under which corrupt people perpetrate violence and exploitation. But it can also give comfort, pleasure, and enlightenment. It can inspire people to rise above their most base impulses and try to make life better for themselves and others.
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emmanuel goldstein
Have you had your two minutes today?
05:40 PM on 08/02/2010
The thing is that everyone who bashes religion clearly doesn't understand it. To assume that all religions are as that one religious sect they sort of listened to when they were 12 is to lead them into making very wrong assumptions.
11:37 AM on 08/01/2010
I believe we should welcome everyone who wants to join us. I also believe we should proselytize among the unchurched.
05:46 PM on 07/30/2010
Chocolate chip challah is my favorite thing about Shabbat.
02:25 AM on 07/30/2010
If you are born of a jewish mother, you are jewish. The jews know who the mother is but not the milk man father lol.
06:58 PM on 07/29/2010
The history of Judaism begins with 12 tribes. 11 disbanded some of those found in Ethopia. SEE: Operation Solomon
05:38 PM on 07/29/2010
This beautiful story stands on its own but is also part of a larger story of ethnically and racially diverse Jews in the United States and around the world. Judaism, like all other religions, is not limited by race or ethnicity. This evening there will be an artistic celebration of the global diversity in New York at the Gallery Bar, 120 Orchard St. and Jewish children of all colors are gathered for Camp Be’chol Lashon in California.

It is wonderful that Americans of all religious, ethnicities and racial backgrounds can celebrate the many possible expressions of common humanity.

Rabbi Ruth Abusch-Magder
Rabbi-in-Residence
bechollashon.org
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Ryan Delnick
05:04 PM on 07/29/2010
I was born into a jewish household and couldn't wait to get out.
05:33 PM on 07/30/2010
Sorry you had such an experience. There will always be a place for you at the Shabbat table, if you ever get lonely out there. No need to call in advance. Just come.
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Ryan Delnick
12:26 AM on 07/31/2010
I'm not.
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11:14 AM on 07/31/2010
not a big meat eater but no honey baked ham in the winter...?

a little bacon on a BLT....

does a rational God really care about such things ?
Of course we know the points from the total skeptics, but if we believe then we at least
have to ask if "our" God is rational, consistent....or if not then does any of that religion make sense ? I have to ask, and maybe someone can enlighten me, why the Jewish God seems fine with so much violence, stoning, etc. in our Old Testament....even attacking non-Jewish villages and killing Everyone, even Children...???

With all due respect, sounds like the same God of many religions that "naturally" root mainly for their side in a sort of Super-Ego manner....everyone else is second-class at best....
04:32 PM on 07/29/2010
He had to drag his kids into it. Can't let them decide for themselves, nope they have to believe whatever mommy and daddy do.
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dawacu
Jesus loves you
04:42 PM on 07/29/2010
When they grow up, they could decide to leave. Lots of young adults do leave the faiths of their childhood. The alternative is raising a kid in a belief system is to "drag them" into secularism or atheism, which is just another way of life albeit with fewer traditions and shared history.
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nlightenup
Retired psychologist, responds to open minds.
08:05 PM on 07/29/2010
Very true. When I was growing up my "second family," the people I stayed with when my parents were out of town, were Jewish. I was regularly present for Shabbat, Chanukah, Seder, went to Temple, and so on. As an adult, many of my friends who grew up in non-observant Jewish homes have told me they're jealous of my experience of Jewish family life.

I think it's probably better to grow up with religious and/or cultural traditions one may later choose to drop, than to grow up with few to none.
08:21 PM on 07/29/2010
That is what raising children is. It is your responsibility to teach them what you think is the best, and than they decide later if they agree with you. Sometimes you have to drag them to do what you think is important.
How would a five or eight year old decide what to believe and how to live their life?
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emmanuel goldstein
Have you had your two minutes today?
05:56 PM on 08/02/2010
"Where did everything come from Daddy"?
"Well Johnny, I'm glad you asked. You see, this is one of the most difficult to understand things in life. You will probably never find a more difficult question to answer. Some people think Allah, some think Yahweh, some God, others the Big Bang...what do you think?".

No one ever asks kids what they think, all they do is tell them "how it is". Therein lies one of societies biggest problems.
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harpo73
04:27 PM on 07/29/2010
This is cool.

They can join Seinfeld, the Three Stooges, and other greats of history now.
oh, BTW, Jesus, Einstein,.....
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bklynsparrow
creating reality from unreal things
09:42 PM on 07/29/2010
Jesus, Einstein- yeah. Those are the 2 biggies. :)

Ben Kingsley, Kirk Douglas, Lise Meitner, J. Robert Oppenheimer,Franz Boas, Neil Bohr, Sabin , Salk, Carl Sagan, Richard Feynman, Judith Resnik- who died on the Challenger-, Marc chagall, Leonard Bernstein-I mean the list is just huge.
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uansari1
12:48 PM on 07/30/2010
Noam Chomsky, Norman Finkelstein...
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danny saunders
ma nishtana?
03:42 PM on 07/29/2010
Sweeeeet.
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bklynsparrow
creating reality from unreal things
03:15 PM on 07/29/2010
Love this story. Great family- and any man who has choclate chips in the challah is a man after my own heart.
05:39 PM on 07/30/2010
As a kid, I was often the guest at a rabbi's house for the Shabbat afternoon meal. I loved the challah, and one day asked the wife where she bought it so that I could have my mother buy the same. She beamed and told me that she baked them herself, every week - and sent me home with two more.
07:39 PM on 08/01/2010
Ugggh... when I was working in Wales I was challah-deprived. Those four months passed and I tried to make my own but failed. No other bread could compared to the delicious challah that my mother would make whenever we celebrated the shabbas. Finally, one weekend I went to London and stumbled into Harrod's (a huge department store). To my joyous surprise, they had freshly-baked challah. I nearly died right then and there!
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jesushammer
Anon flmthrower
01:41 PM on 07/29/2010
Hey , I am a free agent now. I am ready to make my journey to Judaism for a good job on Wall street. I have good credentials.
Offers applicable to Catholics too.
Sorry muslims, 72 virgins is not a perk.
07:00 PM on 07/29/2010
Ask Pope Urban about your last line
12:15 PM on 07/29/2010
I am glad this African American family decided to get out of Christianity and take up J udaism.

I am shocked why not many Afrcian Americans are not throwing away Christianity. The religion that had enslaved them, Iynched them, and segregated them and been cruel to them. Even after liviung together for 300 years as christians, the white christian caste and black christian caste hardly marry. I also witnessed how the clack christian caste were treated during Katrina.

Please give up your Islamic and Christian faith and take up one of the wonder non evangelical faith. Do not be part of the predatory religions of the world.
12:43 PM on 07/29/2010
The primary reason why African Americans haven't given up Christianity is the same primary reason why you haven't given up the religion you were raised with: familiarity and sentimentality.
01:09 PM on 07/29/2010
We, African Americans and Black people around the world need to re-read our Bibles and then we will realize that the Bible is our very history. We will see the true heritage of our L-rd Yeshua (Jesus) and understand our personal connection to Him. Key words tell us the real truth!
11:43 AM on 07/29/2010
This should not be a surprise. All Black people should be making this journey because it's our Blood Heritage that we are Jews. Our mistake is when we think we have to leave our King, Yeshua (Jesus) when we discover ourselves! Shalom
12:19 PM on 07/29/2010
So if your blood line is Jewish, that means you should follow the Jewish faith? So is it a race, a nationality, a religion...what is it. And didn't Jesus establish christianity as the faith for all who recognize him as King.
I really am trying to understand this, and I don't. Somebody help me out. I think that you can not be a follower of Jesus and practice the jewish faith at the same time.
01:00 PM on 07/29/2010
My bloodline is Jewish because I am a blood descendant of the original 12 Israelite/Jewish tribes...Jacob's boys. Most if not all Black people around the world are as well. Jesus too was born through the same bloodline, being a descendant of Jacob's 4th son Judah. He specifically came to earth to redeem and restore His Israelite/Jewish people. That is why He was then and now is called King of the Jews. Because of G-d's greater plan, Salvation has been offered to all people through Jesus by His dying on the Cross. Because He died for all mankind, now, anyone who believes in Him and accepts Him as their Savior is an heir to the same promises of His people, the Hebrews/Israelites/Jews ( all synonymous) which give them also the right to call Him King. I hope this helps you understand!
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KaAp
01:00 PM on 07/29/2010
It is a bit more complex than that. If, your mom is Jewish you are Jewish it is passed down through the mother. Jews do not recognize Jesus as king. Are we a "nation," perhaps, but, not in terms of borders. A race? No, we are comprised of many races. Are we a religion, yes, but not in the same sense as Christianity or Islam ... I am Jewish but am also an atheist and there is no incongruity ... Judiasm is more of a critical sort of tradition rather than a dogmatic one ... it is interpretive. Which is why the study of the torah is important to us.
Judaism has many different traditions: some more religious, some more cultural ... Is it an identity ---yes! And, is it an identity I am proud of? Completely. Can I be a Jew and a Christian at the same time? NO. Is Judaism evangelical: no. So, you just cannot convert to become a Jew. It is a long drawn out process. We do not seek members.
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PMJ79
03:53 PM on 07/30/2010
Slyvia, wouldn't the blood heritage of all balck people be the indigenous religions of Africa?

No offense intended.
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09:56 AM on 07/31/2010
Not all black people originate from Africa! And Judaism is only one of many
religions where you'll find people of colour. Go back to school, learn
anthropology, history, religion, for starters. Sheeeesh!
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11:32 AM on 07/31/2010
actually as Prof. Gates of the Boston cop scandal did an excellent series on race and DNA.....and many if not most American Blacks are roughly 50% white and European, far lighter than those in Africa......the VIP black prof teaching Black History, etc. at a Ivy League college turned out to be about 66% white....