A Radical
Perspective
Shattering An Interfaith Taboo
Should
Jewishly-committed single women be encouraged to marry supportive non-Jewish
men?
By Yosef I.
Abramowitz
The
following article original appeared in Moment magazine. It is reprinted with permission of the author.
My wife and I have several
Jewish female friends in their mid‑30s who are still single. Our Shabbat
talk inevitably always turns to the people they are dating and how difficult it
is to find a nice, Jewish guy with which to start a Jewish family and raise
Jewish children. One unpartnered friend, a rabbi, flew to Israel for in vitro
fertilization and is now pregnant. "I wish I was married by now. But since
I’m getting older and haven’t found a soul‑mate yet, I’m going to start
my own family," she says.
These Jewishly‑committed
single women have other options, but these are not sanctioned by the Jewish
community. It is time to remove the stigma prohibiting them from dating and
marrying non‑Jewish men. The word "intermarriage" has been the
convenient scapegoat for many of the ills in American Jewish life. Countless
sermons have been wasted on this topic and its specter has launched numerous
fundraising campaigns for institutions that usually have little clue about how
to creatively adaptto a changing
community. So many of our Jewish leaders and even major philanthropists are
finding that their grandchildren are not necessarily being raised Jewishly.
But not every interfaith
marriage is a threat to Jewish continuity. My wife, who is a rabbi, generally
does not officiate at interfaith weddings. But when a widowed, elderly
Holocaust survivor and close family friend wanted to marry another close
friend, a non‑Jewish woman, she gladly agreed to participate in the
ceremony. Which value is more Jewish? Holding the Jewish community’s line on
not performing interfaith marriages or the happiness of this couple? If my wife
were a member of the Conservative Rabbinical Assembly, even attending this
wedding would be grounds for expulsion. The rabbinate, like life, is filled with
gray areas. The Jewish community is very good at dealing with black and white
issues like anti‑semitism, but in this case lacks the skills, courage or
tradition of dialogue to deal with gray areas.
One way of adapting would be
to sanction, even encourage, Jewish women in their 30s to date and marry non‑Jews.
I am not suggesting that it is preferable for Jewish women to marry non‑Jewish
men, although I have seen a fair share of religiously unenthusiastic Jewish men
hold back their wives' spiritual quests. I do believe, however, that it is
clearly preferable for single Jewish women in their mid‑30s to marry non‑Jewish
men who are supportive of their spiritual journeys and who will raise
halachically‑recognized Jewish children, instead of these women remaining
single. Rejecting this idea suggests that the community is not concerned about
the happiness and self‑fulfillment of many of its most committed members.
To denounce this idea also fails to recognize an important yet largely
unstudied area in Jewish life: that women, more so than men, bear the future of
Jewish spiritual life.
According
to Sylvia Barack Fishman of Brandeis University, the percentage of bar to bat
mitzvahs has recently tipped, for the first time, to more girls affirming their
commitment to the Jewish people than boys. This is a remarkable development
given that the bat mitzvah is a 20th century innovation. Check out nearly every
Jewish teen program and there is a gender mismatch: 60 percent girls to 40
percent boys, sometimes even higher, like in Brandeis University’s Genesis
Program [for teens], which attracted 40 girls and 20 boys this past summer. The
imbalance applies to Israel programs, camps, youth movements and non‑Orthodox
day schools, and has tremendous implications for the future of Jewish life.
Even the Maccabia sports games attract more girls than boys.
The
implications of the gender gap in Judaism are great and extend far beyond the
teen years. Synagogue membership and attendance are higher for women.
Interfaith marriage is about 20 percent lower for Jewish women than Jewish men.
Personal religiosity, home rituals, participation in adult education, and other
indicators of commitment to Jewish life tend to be higher for women than men. A
comprehensive 1997 survey by the American Jewish Committee found that the
feeling of being Jewish is "very important" in the lives of more
women (60 percent) than men (41 percent).
Empowering
and embracing Jewish women as spiritual ambassadors of the Jewish people to
potential non‑Jewish mates is a mitzvah on many levels. First, they will
be better able to participate in the commandment to "be fruitful and
multiply," either by childbirth or adoption. Second, it allows our
community to grow in strength and numbers, thus creating a critical mass of people
to sustain our institutions, traditions and values. Third, the impact of this
kind of sanctioned intermarriage on the Jewish gene pool is positive, thus
lowering the chances for couples to face impossibly painful decisions about
abortion of fetuses that would be born with Tay-Sachs or other debilitating
genetic diseases. Fourth, it sends an inclusive message about Jewish living to
unaffiliated Jews who once wrote off the community as being out‑of‑touch,
parochial or racist. I would rather dance at the interfaith wedding of my
Jewish female friends who will raise Jewish children than continue to cling to
an outdated communal expectation that perpetuates loneliness, lacks compassion
and is bad Jewish public policy.
Yosef
Abramowitz is a co-author of the parenting guide, Jewish Family
and Life: Traditions, Holidays, and Values for Today’s Parents and Children.