Beyond Intermarriage: Interfaith Families
Recent research on
the formation of religious identity in interfaith families.
By Debra Nussbaum Cohen
Intermarriage has long
been a focus of those concerned with continuity in the Jewish community. But
what about the next generation(s)? The children and grandchildren of the
intermarried? Do they practice Judaism? And, if so, what form does their
practice take? Interfaith families were the focus of two 2001 surveys on the
formation of religious identity; the following article outlines the results. It
is reprinted with permission from The Jewish Week.
Two new surveys are shedding light on the religious lives of
interfaith families and their children, but what kind of light depends on which
side of the intermarriage debate you're on.
Dueling Surveys
An American Jewish Committee-sponsored survey found that
the great majority of mixed‑married households that identify as Jewish
incorporate substantial Christian celebrations into their family lives,
compared to only a tiny proportion of inmarried families.
A Jewish Outreach Institute informal, self‑selecting
poll of college students who are the products of interfaith marriages found
that 64 percent of respondents were raised Jewish (23 percent Christian); that
81 percent now identify as Jewish (3 percent Christian); and that 69 percent
attend Jewish religious services on campus, while 6 percent attend Christian
services. The poll was conducted in partnership with the student group Lights
in Action.
The AJCommittee champions the "inreach" approach,
which promotes inmarriage, while the JOI supports the all‑inclusive
"outreach" philosophy.
The surveys--the first in nearly two decades--expand on the
last look at religious identity formation in mixed‑married homes, which
found that 25 percent of children from interfaith homes had an exclusively
Jewish identity. That study was carried out for the AJCommittee by Egon Mayer,
now the director of research for the JOI.
The 1990 National Jewish Population Survey showed that one‑third
of children in mixed‑married households were being brought up as Jews. In
the last decade, however, outreach programs run by the Jewish community have
been a growth industry.
The new surveys reveal that
a majority of children from interfaith homes identify as Jewish by the time
they reach college, but that what that Judaism looks like may be different from
anything ever seen.
The AJCommittee's Department
of Contemporary Jewish Life, headed by Steve Bayme, and the JOI are engaged in
a quiet battle over which approach will hold sway at communal organizations and
among philanthropists. The leaders of both groups believe that theirs is the
only approach that will assure Jewish continuity.
Not surprisingly
perhaps, the surveys by the two organizations reached divergent conclusions
about the ability of interfaith marriages to produce children with strong
Jewish identities.
The AJCommittee study of
religious identity formation in interfaith families was conducted by social
scientist Sylvia Barack Fishman of Brandeis University and included interviews
with 254 people in mixed married, inmarried and conversionary households. The
study, conducted between the spring and fall of 2000, also included four focus
groups of teenagers growing up in interfaith families in northern New Jersey
and in
Denver, Colo.
The upshot of the
AJCommittee study, according to Barack Fishman, is that "we really don't
know what the impact of this proportion of kids being clearly given dual
religious identities will be on the larger American Jewish community."
Despite "all of our
previous hope and speculation that there was a significant proportion of
children in mixed‑married households with an exclusively Jewish identity,
this research demonstrates that this is not the case," she said.
Findings
Some key findings of the
AJCommittee study:
· 63 percent of children in mixed‑married homes are being raised
Jewish; 4 percent are being raised as Christian; 19 percent in two religions; 9
percent divide the children, raising some as Jews and others as Christians; 5
percent raise children in neither parents' religion.
· Mixed‑married
households that initially try to create exclusively Jewish observances often
drift increasingly into Christian activities and can end up with a kind of
syncretistic blend.
· Jewish mothers, in
general, create much more Jewishly identified mixed‑married households
than do Jewish fathers. Seventy‑two percent of children being raised as
Jewish have a Jewish mother.
· Many Jewish partners in
mixed marriages report feelings of personal conflict between their desire to
raise Jewish children and their desire to be fair to their spouses.
·Non‑Jewish spouses
raising Jewish children often later found themselves resenting the fact that
they had given up Christmas and other Christian celebrations.
· Both Jews and non‑Jews
in mixed marriages tend to describe Jewish activities as "different"
or "religious" while they call Christian activities "just
cultural" and "fun."
· The religion of the
current spouse is related to the friends one chose in college.
· Parental messages count.
Most of the Jews who married other Jews had parents who communicated an
expectation that their dates be Jewish. Most of those in the study who
intermarried received little or no guidance from their parents. Few respondents
reported any backlash of resentment against parents who encouraged dating and
marrying only Jews.
"Pressure has a demonstrated positive effect," Barack
Fishman told The Jewish Week in an
interview from Jerusalem, where she was on sabbatical.
Many parents are reluctant
to raise this issue with their teen and adult children, she said. "They do
talk to their kids about things that they have unambivalent feelings about,
about choosing colleges and careers, about drugs and about sex. But a lot of
parents have internalized this notion that there's something wrong with
encouraging their children to exclusively date Jews and marry Jews,"
Barack Fishman said.
"You
see the parental confusion playing itself out in messages which are given, and
not given, to the kids. What they say makes a big difference."
"The
Jewish community really needs to start getting this message across, that
parents need to think it's important enough to talk about, and to feel
unambivalent about, to talk to their kids at various ages, just as they talk to
their kids about sex at various ages," she said.
Young Adults
The Web
poll of children of interfaith marriages run by Lights in Action for the J0I
received 205 responses from college students after being advertised last year
in campus newspapers at New York University, Cornell and the universities of
California at Berkley, Maryland, Michigan and Penn.
These
young adults reported that:
· 58
percent had a bar or bat mitzvah, and 17 percent were baptized.
· 63
percent have participated in or currently are participating in Jewish youth
groups, while 26 percent have participated in or now are participating in
Christian youth groups.
·
Almost all of the respondents--95 percent--said the religious differences in
their upbringing contributed to their feeling uncomfortable in synagogues.
· 31
percent wish they had been given more Jewish education.
· 20
percent wish they had been brought up in only one faith, while 15percent wish
they had been brought up in both faiths of their parents.
These findings
"recognize the challenges that are implicit in nurturing Jewish identity
within the context of interfaith marriage," said Kerry Olitzky, executive
director of JOI. "It means that the community may have to work harder, but
that it's also possible" to accomplish raising children with strong Jewish
identities in interfaith households.
The
AJCommittee's focus‑group research with roughly this same age
group—teenagers--found that many teens from mixed‑married families
described fluid religious boundaries in their homes, with their families
celebrating the major religious festivals of both Judaism and Christianity.
The
message there is that "religion is a matter of choice, and a choice that
can be made and changed as frequently as one desires," said Barack Fishman
in her report. "Children are often sent a clear message that religious
choices are not too serious or momentous."
Yet "children sometimes find religious
expression powerful and meaningful despite the casualness of the religious
environments that surround them," she wrote. "Ironically, Jewishness
is perceived by some teenagers as preferable to Christianity and also
preferable to secularism or atheism precisely because it is different."
Barack Fishman said
that while the majority of the children of mixed married families may find
Judaism less appealing because of its marginality, for some teens it is
Judaism's distinctiveness that makes them lean toward committing to a Jewish
identity.
"We need to
take seriously the imperative to try and enhance the possibility that people
will marry Jews and establish Jewish households," she said.
Debra Nussbaum Cohen
is a staff writer at The Jewish
Week.