Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It does a disservice to the religion to have people who worship Jesus and take Holy Communion to claim they are Jewish.
I agree for many reasons, and they of course are two completely different religions that should not be mixed. While I was raised Christian, I don't belong to a church or attend services. Also, I have never worshiped in a synagogue or plan to. I don't claim Judaism as my religion or culture (to keep it simple, I just state my countries of origin). Only when I am asked about my mother's unique background do I explain further.
I would never enter a synagogue and claim to be Jewish or misrepresent myself to others. I'm aware there is more to Judaism than the genetic component. I just enjoy learning about the rabbis and Jewish artist in my mother's family line. I collect books, etc. on the artist's paintings. This is the extent of my Jewishness and that's enough for me.
The artist is not just Jewish, his paintings, etc. are depictions of Jewish life (if that matters).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If my parents lived had lived in Israel for 20 years before my birth, that would obviously be part of who I am, but doesn't make me Israeli.
Likewise, if I discovered that my great-grandparents were born Christian but converted to Judaism, that wouldn't make me Christian.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It does a disservice to the religion to have people who worship Jesus and take Holy Communion to claim they are Jewish.
I agree for many reasons, and they of course are two completely different religions that should not be mixed. While I was raised Christian, I don't belong to a church or attend services. Also, I have never worshiped in a synagogue or plan to. I don't claim Judaism as my religion or culture (to keep it simple, I just state my countries of origin). Only when I am asked about my mother's unique background do I explain further.
I would never enter a synagogue and claim to be Jewish or misrepresent myself to others. I'm aware there is more to Judaism than the genetic component. I just enjoy learning about the rabbis and Jewish artist in my mother's family line. I collect books, etc. on the artist's paintings. This is the extent of my Jewishness and that's enough for me.
Anonymous wrote:It does a disservice to the religion to have people who worship Jesus and take Holy Communion to claim they are Jewish.
Anonymous wrote:If my parents lived had lived in Israel for 20 years before my birth, that would obviously be part of who I am, but doesn't make me Israeli.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH was raised Christian (his Jewish grandparents converted) but is 49% Ashkenazi. The grandma who converted escaped the Holocaust and the rest of her family remained Jewish. It’s a big part of his family's identity and history. So for him it would be yes to the race part but no to the religion part.
This would be me, except great-grandparents. In my grandparents and great-grandparents era no one intermarried including their country of origin. While we don't practice Judaism, we have a significant and unique Jewish history in our family. I accept I was raised Christian and I am not representing myself as Jewish, but I will never deny my mother's origins because it's part of who I am.
Right. And while you are, of course, able to represent yourself however you want, you are Jewish from an ancestral standpoint, even though you don't practice the religion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH was raised Christian (his Jewish grandparents converted) but is 49% Ashkenazi. The grandma who converted escaped the Holocaust and the rest of her family remained Jewish. It’s a big part of his family's identity and history. So for him it would be yes to the race part but no to the religion part.
This would be me, except great-grandparents. In my grandparents and great-grandparents era no one intermarried including their country of origin. While we don't practice Judaism, we have a significant and unique Jewish history in our family. I accept I was raised Christian and I am not representing myself as Jewish, but I will never deny my mother's origins because it's part of who I am.
Anonymous wrote:It does a disservice to the religion to have people who worship Jesus and take Holy Communion to claim they are Jewish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH was raised Christian (his Jewish grandparents converted) but is 49% Ashkenazi. The grandma who converted escaped the Holocaust and the rest of her family remained Jewish. It’s a big part of his family's identity and history. So for him it would be yes to the race part but no to the religion part.
This would be me, except great-grandparents. In my grandparents and great-grandparents era no one intermarried including their country of origin. While we don't practice Judaism, we have a significant and unique Jewish history in our family. I accept I was raised Christian and I am not representing myself as Jewish, but I will never deny my mother's origins because it's part of who I am.
Right. And while you are, of course, able to represent yourself however you want, you are Jewish from an ancestral standpoint, even though you don't practice the religion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH was raised Christian (his Jewish grandparents converted) but is 49% Ashkenazi. The grandma who converted escaped the Holocaust and the rest of her family remained Jewish. It’s a big part of his family's identity and history. So for him it would be yes to the race part but no to the religion part.
This would be me, except great-grandparents. In my grandparents and great-grandparents era no one intermarried including their country of origin. While we don't practice Judaism, we have a significant and unique Jewish history in our family. I accept I was raised Christian and I am not representing myself as Jewish, but I will never deny my mother's origins because it's part of who I am.
Anonymous wrote:My DH was raised Christian (his Jewish grandparents converted) but is 49% Ashkenazi. The grandma who converted escaped the Holocaust and the rest of her family remained Jewish. It’s a big part of his family's identity and history. So for him it would be yes to the race part but no to the religion part.