Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
In addition, the cousins and their parents are not Orthodox. I don't think the family has had an Orthodox member in a century or more. Not even Conservadox or Modern Orthodox. The cousins and parents are largely Reform. The grandparents are Conservative. It would just be nice to see them offer the same support for her rites of passage as we have for theirs. Not even an apology or word of regret to soften her disappoinment. I can bet my life that we'd never hear the end of it if she skipped even one of their b'nai mitzvahs.
I was raised Reform, I am now Conservative (would you consider me Conservadox? I observe some degree of kashrut but I also believe in ordaining gay rabbis) and my brother has always been Reform. Once at a museum he was visibly uncomfortable with baroque paintings that had lots of images of bleeding jesus on the cross, so we quickly zipped over to abstract expressionists. I find this somewhat amusing. Do not assume people are assimilated because they are Reform.
Again I do not know why they did not send regrets - perhaps they did not how to express what they were feeling, and were embarassed, and thought it best to say nothing. Or maybe they have aspergers. Whatever.
Or maybe they are just rude and thoughtless.
thats possible, indeed. I am reluctant to assume they are, however, when I am getting only one side of the story, and that from someone who may not fully understand howt this feels from the minority viewpoint.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has been very difficult to raise culturally Jewish but religiously Christian children amidst Jewish cousins. The cousins don't see Christianity as equal or even valid. They act as though Christian beliefs and practices are a big joke. My younger DD has celebrated with all of her cousins when they reached b'nai mitzvah age, but not a single one attended her First Communion. She was very hurt.
This has been my experience too. We are expected to attend and celebrate bar mitzvahs, but no one from DH's family attended our kids' baptisms, First Communions, or Confirmations. It was and is indescribably hurtful and has forever marred my relationships with my ILs.
I understand that Jews have suffered centuries of persecution. I am not personally responsible for that, however, and from where I sit, the reality and importance of present-day family ties trump historically-based grievances. It is shocking to me that my ILs refuse to get that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has been very difficult to raise culturally Jewish but religiously Christian children amidst Jewish cousins. The cousins don't see Christianity as equal or even valid. They act as though Christian beliefs and practices are a big joke. My younger DD has celebrated with all of her cousins when they reached b'nai mitzvah age, but not a single one attended her First Communion. She was very hurt.
This has been my experience too. We are expected to attend and celebrate bar mitzvahs, but no one from DH's family attended our kids' baptisms, First Communions, or Confirmations. It was and is indescribably hurtful and has forever marred my relationships with my ILs.
I understand that Jews have suffered centuries of persecution. I am not personally responsible for that, however, and from where I sit, the reality and importance of present-day family ties trump historically-based grievances. It is shocking to me that my ILs refuse to get that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
In addition, the cousins and their parents are not Orthodox. I don't think the family has had an Orthodox member in a century or more. Not even Conservadox or Modern Orthodox. The cousins and parents are largely Reform. The grandparents are Conservative. It would just be nice to see them offer the same support for her rites of passage as we have for theirs. Not even an apology or word of regret to soften her disappoinment. I can bet my life that we'd never hear the end of it if she skipped even one of their b'nai mitzvahs.
I was raised Reform, I am now Conservative (would you consider me Conservadox? I observe some degree of kashrut but I also believe in ordaining gay rabbis) and my brother has always been Reform. Once at a museum he was visibly uncomfortable with baroque paintings that had lots of images of bleeding jesus on the cross, so we quickly zipped over to abstract expressionists. I find this somewhat amusing. Do not assume people are assimilated because they are Reform.
Again I do not know why they did not send regrets - perhaps they did not how to express what they were feeling, and were embarassed, and thought it best to say nothing. Or maybe they have aspergers. Whatever.
Or maybe they are just rude and thoughtless.
Anonymous wrote:It has been very difficult to raise culturally Jewish but religiously Christian children amidst Jewish cousins. The cousins don't see Christianity as equal or even valid. They act as though Christian beliefs and practices are a big joke. My younger DD has celebrated with all of her cousins when they reached b'nai mitzvah age, but not a single one attended her First Communion. She was very hurt.
Anonymous wrote:Judaism is meant for jews. OP is not jewish and the kids are not either. At most you might be tolerated. You will not be welcomed

Anonymous wrote:I am Jewish and have never heard of this prohibition on going into churches. Is that in the Torah?? I doubt it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - thanks for all of the replies. I'm now thinking that Sunday school is probably not a good bet for us (I didn't fully grasp how big of a commitment it is), but will definitely look into the other options discussed. Our kid hasn't been born yet, so we still have a few years to go before he/she is old enough to participate. We're probably not going to have DC baptized or mitzvahed but want him/her to feel comfortable in both traditions; if DC wants to commit to one or the other we'd definitely be supportive of that. Thanks again!
The problem, OP, is that Judaism is not a "tradition." It is a religion. It's more than spinning a dreidel or eating latkes. If that's want you want your kids to know, that's just fine. But if you want them to go to Sunday School or are actually thinking of a Bar Mitzvah, really OP, approaching it as a "tradition" is insulting. It's a faith to us. It's not something you get to decide one year you want your kids to "participate" in.
And the notion that your child can experience both "traditions" and then commit to one? You are basically saying to the child, Christ is the Messiah. No wait, no Messiah. You choose, kid. Is that something you do for your child is any other sphere of life? Tell them two opposing viewpoints in conflict and tell them to commit when they are ready?
What is a "faith" to you can be a "tradition" to others just as a hamburger can be a special treat to one person, an everyday meal to another or a piece of unappetizing ground up dead animal flesh to another.
There is not one right way to view religions or to practice them.
That's not the point. Yes, there is no one "Right" way to be religious. But you can't up and decide one day to have a Bar Mitzvah. It's just not like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here - thanks for all of the replies. I'm now thinking that Sunday school is probably not a good bet for us (I didn't fully grasp how big of a commitment it is), but will definitely look into the other options discussed. Our kid hasn't been born yet, so we still have a few years to go before he/she is old enough to participate. We're probably not going to have DC baptized or mitzvahed but want him/her to feel comfortable in both traditions; if DC wants to commit to one or the other we'd definitely be supportive of that. Thanks again!
The problem, OP, is that Judaism is not a "tradition." It is a religion. It's more than spinning a dreidel or eating latkes. If that's want you want your kids to know, that's just fine. But if you want them to go to Sunday School or are actually thinking of a Bar Mitzvah, really OP, approaching it as a "tradition" is insulting. It's a faith to us. It's not something you get to decide one year you want your kids to "participate" in.
And the notion that your child can experience both "traditions" and then commit to one? You are basically saying to the child, Christ is the Messiah. No wait, no Messiah. You choose, kid. Is that something you do for your child is any other sphere of life? Tell them two opposing viewpoints in conflict and tell them to commit when they are ready?
What is a "faith" to you can be a "tradition" to others just as a hamburger can be a special treat to one person, an everyday meal to another or a piece of unappetizing ground up dead animal flesh to another.
There is not one right way to view religions or to practice them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
In addition, the cousins and their parents are not Orthodox. I don't think the family has had an Orthodox member in a century or more. Not even Conservadox or Modern Orthodox. The cousins and parents are largely Reform. The grandparents are Conservative. It would just be nice to see them offer the same support for her rites of passage as we have for theirs. Not even an apology or word of regret to soften her disappoinment. I can bet my life that we'd never hear the end of it if she skipped even one of their b'nai mitzvahs.
I was raised Reform, I am now Conservative (would you consider me Conservadox? I observe some degree of kashrut but I also believe in ordaining gay rabbis) and my brother has always been Reform. Once at a museum he was visibly uncomfortable with baroque paintings that had lots of images of bleeding jesus on the cross, so we quickly zipped over to abstract expressionists. I find this somewhat amusing. Do not assume people are assimilated because they are Reform.
Again I do not know why they did not send regrets - perhaps they did not how to express what they were feeling, and were embarassed, and thought it best to say nothing. Or maybe they have aspergers. Whatever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It has been very difficult to raise culturally Jewish but religiously Christian children amidst Jewish cousins. The cousins don't see Christianity as equal or even valid. They act as though Christian beliefs and practices are a big joke. My younger DD has celebrated with all of her cousins when they reached b'nai mitzvah age, but not a single one attended her First Communion. She was very hurt.
In Jewish law as held by the Orthodox (at least many) its actually a sin to enter a church. C Judaism modifies this for the sake of peace between communities, but be aware that Christianity is historically the dominant faith of Western Civilization, it pervades traditional art and literature, it is connected for many Jews with memories of past persecutin (sometimes quite directly - Easter pogroms, his blood is on our head, that sort of thing) and we are still proselytized in this day and age.
Judaism may be quaint to Christians, or even a way to connect with Jesus, but Christianity is not like that to most Jews.
I can understand respecting that some Jews will not/can not enter a church, but arguing that they her family is not participating in her child's Christian events because of years of persecution is stretching it. PP said the cousins see her child's faith as a joke, not a as a scary reminder of oppression.
Anonymous wrote:You missed the point. I'm offensively irreverent at times, but I wouldn't dismiss my niece's First Communion as insignificant and unworthy of my time and attention. But mostly, that would be out of respect to the kid.
Agreed though, that you can't raise a culturally Jewish kid as a Christian. But I think OP has the message, so let's not beat up on her.