Attrition among Anusim descendants

 

I was asked today by journalist and author Andrée Aelion Brooks about the term “attrition” – a term she has coined to discuss persons of Crypto-Jewish ancestry who had identified with the Jewish community falling away from this identity, a phenomenon she found prevalent in Portugal, and one she reported was much-discussed at a recent conference in El Paso.

Even though I am not sure I would use the term, it reflects an important concern. (As are issues of continuity and disappearance through assimilation at many levels of the Jewish community). 

Various Jewish communities have worked hard with persons of converso background interested in a return to Judaism. Brooks reports a considerable phenomenon in Portugal that persons who had been interested in asserting a Jewish identity, and returning to Judaism, either no longer do so, or their family members either no longer support them, or their children have not use for this identity. I certainly have seen that there is something similar in the US although I have no way of assessing the prevalence of this phenomenon.

She asked me about ways to respond: It seems to me that a "birthright" style program might be particularly useful to counterqact this, especially for young adults. (Taglit-Birthright provides heritage trips to Israel for young Jews from around the world). Although Birthright has not been around long enough to assess its long-term effect, it appears to be very successful in promoting a sense of Jewish identity in a cohort in which this was a problem.

In general, individuals who have taken major steps to identify as Jewish, including asserting a strong identity with the Jewish community as it is, seem to me to have less “attrition.” This should hardly be surprising; I would say the same about any component in the Jewish community and for that matter, any population in any diversity group. But let me stress that this means that these individuals assert a complex and rich identity:they have moved, in some important ways, from having their most important identification within the community as “Anusim descendants returning to Judaism” --to identifying “Jews.”  

It seems to me that this reflects, at least in part, the coming of age of this phenomenon, and its broad acceptance both in Jewish and Iberian-heritage populations. While we can identify references to modern survivals of crypto-Judaism, and movements to among such persons to identify with the Jewish community going back to the 1930s, for example, in Portugal, and the 1970s and earlier in the United States, there was an explosion of interest in the 1980s and 1990s. Back then, the idea that some Spanish-heritage persons had Jewish ancestry was shocking to many. Twenty years later, the idea is highly acceptable to many—even welcomed as part of the heritage. There may be a controversy in some circles about whether Jewish practices were preserved, or whether the practices that are cited as “Jewish” actually are. But in my experience, the Iberian-heritage community is proud to assume that some of their ancestors were Jews or Moors, not only Spanish or Portuguese Catholics—and this is far different from what went before. There are some who assert a kind of classic limpieza de sangre "purity of blood" notion that Iberians were all Catholics; with Moors and Jews trampling in the Peninsula for some eight centuries but then all thrown out. But I encounter this approach a lot less today than two decades ago.

The greater acceptance of this heritage may mean that there is less driving a person of Spanish –Jewish heritage to identify as Jewish. The United States has provided a society in which Jews could fit in, and would not always be reminded by society of their difference. This has now happened for descendants of Anousim: having Jewish heritage is seen as necessitating a specifically Jewish or “Crypto-Jewish” identity by fewer people, and it is no longer necessary to identify as “Jewish” to find acceptance as a descendant of conversos.

I am not sure there is a backlash, so much as a “been there done that” approach. The approach, too, reflects the maturity of the movement: it’s been twenty years, and it is time to take stock.

It seems to me that the members of this group who will retain Jewish identity are those who fully identify and assimilate into the Jewish community—being active in the community or moving to Israel and being nearly indistinguishable from other persons in the Jewish community—and firm enough about their own identity as “Jews” (rather than “Anusim”).  This does not preclude also identifying as converso descendants, but it seems to me that if the converso identity is their sole mode of belonging to the Jewish community their identity is not as strong. Indeed, this is already the case, as many from traditional crypto-Jewish communities and other communities not part of the Jewish mainstream have largely either adapted mainstream Judaism--sometimes with a few unique nods to their heritage--or have rejected this, in favor of retaining their host culture (and weakening ties to Judaism, which is seen as the mainstream form of Judaism). This has inevitable negative impact on the preservation of the overall traditional lifestyle that may have brought them or their parents to identify as Jews: it is either rejected in favor of some part of mainstream Judaism, or the link with the mainstream Jewish community is downplayed; in the modern world, the forces leading to the globalization of culture mean that in the latter case, maintaining customs unique to a small number of villages or a single region is likely a losing battle  

A number of models suggest to me that it might be crucial to retain and adapt one or two traditional practices as markers of this identity (for example, special candlesticks or developing a strictly kosher taco-based food item with a name recalling a crypto-Jewish past) to serve as ethnic Jewish food alongside the knish and felafel. This means that the "Anousim Identity" and most of the ways this group asserts a unique identity will become watered down--one of many choices that are clearly part of a mainstream Jewish identity. But it is probably inevitable for those who wish to identify as Jews, and finding a way to make Anusim descendants no more unusual than, say, Russian or Moroccan Jews within the Jewish community may be the only viable way to counteract attrition. But it will not in and of itself help such persons assert and retain a Jewish identity: ultimately, they will see this as a choice, and such things as the relative attractiveness of the Jewish and  overall cultures, the welcome offered by the community, and succeful acceptance into such communities will play important roles.   

Seth Ward 
Religious Studies
University of Wyoming

"GREEN" MOSQUES AND SYNAGOGUES

FW: Religion Today. The "Mosque" near Ground Zero: Thinking it Through

Response to an inquiry regarding Green Mosques and Synagogues:

 

Many synagogues are worried about the environment and similar issues, and many Jewish communities include environmental issues in their ritual calendar by discussing the divine imperative about not destroying trees (and by extension, wasting any resource), especialy when the relevant passage is read in the synagogue, and by an environmental approach incorporated in "seders" for 15th of Shevat (“Tu Bishevat”), a date about halfway between Winter Solstice and Spring equinox (late January, early February) that was used to mark the beginning of the year for certain types of agricultural purposes and temple offerings related to trees.

 

COEJL would be the place to look for Synagogues going Green

http://www.coejl.org/~coejlor/ebulletin/31.php

 

Here is an initiative from Baltimore:

http://www.bjen.org/greening.html

 

If you are interested in the spadework, you can probably get Google or another computer search enginge to search synagogue bulletins for more “greening” info, or contact these and similar organizations.

 

I’ve heard about a number of Muslim organizations that are green oriented. I had not heard about “Green Ramadan” before looking into this: it is mentioned in a news release from January of this year at http://www.islamonline.net/servlet/Satellite?c=Article_C&cid=1262372189305&pagename=Zone-English-News/NWELayout

This article delineates efforts in the Washington DC area and in Illinois.

 

The “Green Ramadan” idea ought to resonate well among those who are favorably disposed, seeing the role of green as an Islamic color. Of course those who are not favorably disposed could easily reject this as being unfavorable to Islam… Reading through the articles that come up from a Google Search, I found both Islamic groups that encourage it, and say Islam has taught it all along, and those who think it is counter to Islam or an attempt to impose Western ideals. It is true that to the extent that Google can mark what is most popular, the anti-environmentalist position came up at the top—in the context though of comments made by Syed Hussein Nasr, as reported in Cross Currents, that I would characterize on the whole as emphasizing human stewardship rather than dominance (to use religious terminology sometimes used in religious discussions that reflect Genesis).

http://www.crosscurrents.org/islamecology.htm

 

Shared work on environmental issues are among the goals of a movement to “twin” mosques and synagogues. I see a lot of reports about such cooperation, but have tried to determine the degree to which there is real cooperation or just talk of cooperation.

 

What I cannot do is estimate the relative importance of the Green movement in the context of all the other issues facing the various Jewish and Islamic communities of the US today, the extent to which environmental issues are actually being addressed within either community, or the actual extent of cooperation between Muslim and Jewish communities resulting from environmental issues.

 

I have written a paper about Tu Bishevat which talks a little about environmentalism. In the process of editing and reediting it, I suspect that I do not have a really good copy of any version of the paper to share with you but I would be happy to discuss my findings if you are interested.

 

Please do not hesitate to contact me for any further info.

 

Seth Ward 

 

 

 

 


From: Paul V.M. Flesher
Sent: Monday, July 12, 2010 5:33 PM
To: Seth Ward
Subject: FW: Religion Today. The "Mosque" near Ground Zero: Thinking it Through

Dear Seth,
Do you know of any synagogues or mosques that are “going green”?
Paul

ON "CHILD BRIDES" POSTING

Just after the Israeli interception of the so-called humanitarian flotilla bound for Gaza, I received a web-forward about a supposed wedding celebration in Gaza with photographs of young girls dressed in white, and a headline about 450 child brides.

It’s unlikely there were actual child brides here. The source for the report is rabidly-anti Islamic; although the “450 child brides” story had wide internet circulation last year, the website from which this report comes quotes what I often call the “sword verse” of the New Testament and is a Christian, militantly anti-Islamic site.

It is true that Muslims recite reports about Muhammad having child wives, which justify marriages involving very young girls. In fact these do occur in the Islamic world, although probably not as much in Gaza and West Bank as in other places.

But Hamas has set up a number of these celebrations, with brides who are not young girls.

Hamas deserves to be opposed for terror and for their tight control of Gazan economy and society, and for the  verifiable human rights abuses inflicted on women (and men) by their regime. Add to this “honor killings,” staged photos indicting Israel for people killed by their own operatives, and much much more. But it’s not clear to me that circulating “urban myths” types of websites help.

Although I am dubious about the “450 Child Brides” headline, the news item certainly shows how Hamas uses the typical political trick of crafting publicity stunts like this to give people a sense of owing gratitude to the Party rather than detest the Party for its political stance which has led to boycott, death and destruction for Gaza.

The news item is about a year old and as far as I can tell the earliest reports about the wedding party (including Western news agencies) do not mention the young age of the brides. It seems to me unlikely in the extreme that religious Muslim groups (such as Hams) would sponsor a public ceremony with actual adult women brides doing the kinds of things the little girls did, nor that Hamas sponsored brides would wear Western style wedding dresses. I could not find a photo of the actual brides in the “450 Brides” story, so a “226 Brides” story in the West Bank (not Gaza) may illustrate how the brides are more likely to have been dressed: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4727291.stm

However, this story does illustrate an important point, as I suggested: Muslim Brotherhood groups such as Hamas (like many political parties, religious cults and totalitarian regimes) stage events like this for political reasons. Moreover, try to calculate the total expense for a single event: $500 to each couple, the clothing, cars, food and so forth. Determine what this party and the others like it meant to the Gazan economy, or what it says about the availability of cash, nice clothing and cars in Gaza, at least to Hamas.

Gazans have indeed suffered from the Israeli / Egyptian  blockade (that is the point), but clearly Hamas can muster up the cash and supplies for such events.

Seth Ward

Untitled

 

SETH WARD – Summer 2010.

Israel cellphone from US: 011-972-50-580-1265.

I’ll also have my US cellphone 303 981 7561 and will check occasionally.

Skype: drsethward

Summary:  flights

Date

Itin

Dep—Arr

Flight

Fr May 7

DEN-JFK

12.50a—6:30p

jetBlue B6 98

Su May 9

JFK-IST

04.45p—9:25a

Turkish TK 2

Mo May 10

IST-TLV

12.10p—2:15p

Turkish TK 786

Mo May 31

TLV-IST

05:00a—7:15a

Turkish TK 793

Th Ju 3

IST-JFK

11:00a—2:45 p.

Turkish TK 1

Fr Jun 4

LGA-DEN

10:00a—12:41p

United UA 0405

Itinerary/lodging: May 9-24: http://www.uwyo.edu/sward/summer2010/programitin.htm

May 31-June 3 Vardar Palace Hotel. +212  252 2888  Fax +212  252 1527 info@vardarhotel.com

Itinerary/lodging: May 9-24: http://www.uwyo.edu/sward/summer2010/programitin.htm

lodging only:http://www.uwyo.edu/sward/summer2010/HotelItinerary.htm