A personal taxonomy of jewishness
Months before my bar mitzvah I realized I was agnostic about god, and by the time I was 35 my jewishness was honed to Passover and tzedakah. Then some things happened, normal things, that brought jewishness to the front of my mind: moving in with my now-wife Leah who has kept a kosher kitchen, watching anti-semitism move into the White House, and planning (and then having, but really the planning) a Jewish wedding.
There is no answer to what it means to be a Jew — if you’re Jewish, you likely already know this. Yet there are also endless answers. It’s hard to keep them all straight, and I am new to this. This is my attempt to make sense of all of the ways of being Jewish, or at least what I’ve found so far, and as it applies to me, but maybe also to you. (Scroll down please…)
Race, ethnicity, and anti-Semitism
Belief in the theology of Judaism is not how Jews decide who is and isn’t a Jew. It’s not relevant to American Jews or to Jews in Israel. It’s especially not relevant in post-Soviet countries where religion was exterminated but Jewish identity remained strong, it was not a factor among Europe’s cosmopolitan Jews before that, and to my knowledge not in the thousand years of Jewish history before that. There are many famous atheist Jews.
Jews generally (maybe nearly universally) consider other people Jewish if they are biological children of Jewish women. With some effort, you can also become a Jew through conversion. Being Jewish is like being in a membership organization, tribe, or nation with a process for admission. There are no half-Jews or Jews in-name-only. Either you are a Jew by virtue of your Jewish mother or conversion, or you are not. But unlike membership organizations and nations, there is no single authority that makes these rules or who can verify anyone’s membership, so in practice anyone who embraces their Jewish identity is likely to be embraced as a Jew.
Because conversion is relatively rare and people often think of white, European, Ashkenazi Jews as the only Jews (10% of American Jews are people of color), Jews also appear to constitute a race. Continuity from the patriarch Abraham is important to the religion’s mythology, and biological heredity is the basis for a special role in the religion for two patrilineal lines, so this racial view of Judaism is built into the religion. But it is not required for being considered a Jew, so more accurately Jews form an ethnicity.
You can make a personal choice about your beliefs, but you can’t choose whether your mother or ancestors were Jewish when you were born. Being a Jew is therefore also something other people tell you you are based on rules they, not you, decide. Jews who follow Jewish law (more on that later) will have a strong opinion on whether or not you are a Jew regardless of your belief about it.
Nor can you choose whether racial or ethnic anti-Semitism exists in the world. Regardless of whether Jews objectively form a race (if race is even objective), Jews are targets of anti-Semitism because of their biological ancestry, stereotypical physical appearance, and ethnic identity and practices. Racial (not religious) anti-Semitism was of course a source of the horror of the Holocaust but also persecution in Soviet countries for most of the rest of the 20th Century. Pictures of family members killed in the Holocaust hang on walls in my parents’ house — they could have been at my parents’ wedding, maybe even my wedding, it isn’t ancient history. So it’s not up to me whether I am a Jew so long as others believe it and might target me. For this reason I have to consider the racial and ethnic aspect of jewishness in my identity and any other criteria that others might use against me. Hannah Arendt wrote of European persecution, “If one is attacked as a Jew, one must defend oneself as a Jew,” and, “A man attacked as a Jew cannot defend himself as an Englishman or a Frenchman.”
Given humanity’s poor track record with heredity, I’m inclined to not put too much significance into DNA when it comes to my own jewishness — especially as a white Ashkenazi Jew. But I don’t dismiss heredity as an important aspect of jewishness for others (in particular because I don’t know whether that would erase a real struggle Jews of color have faced in being recognized as Jewish).
And there are far more interesting aspects of Jewish identity —
A shared concept of the divine? Only in the negative.
The popular (but incorrect) American understanding of Judaism is that it is a world religion, rather than more accurately an ethnicity, and so whether a shared concept of god is what brings Jews together is something else to consider. Judaism has a canonical answer for what is God, which my rough understanding is: There is one, it and the Jews have an exclusive commitment to each other (the “covenant”), and it has not and will not manifest as a person on earth. This concept of God is central to Judaism as a religion and holds across (so-called) observant and god-believing Jews, but what does that mean for, e.g., the ~30% of Jews in America who don’t believe God exists?
It seems that more important than what Jews know God is is what we know God isn’t: multiple, uncommitted, or having been human already. This is a shoe-in for atheists. Not multiple? Not even one. Not having been human? Not having been anything. On the other hand, believing there is more than one god, or that God has already manifested as a person (e.g., Jesus), is considered disqualifying: This ‘anti-’concept is the hard line that adjacent religions like Messianic Judaism (which is truly a branch of Christianity, as well as the rest of Christianity) has crossed.
What happens if you have a Jewish mother but believe Jesus was God, are you a Jew? The religious or, worse, “faith”-based conception of being Jewish probably came about because of Christian people trying to fit Jews into Christian structures. Reject that starting point.
No one cares what I think in my head during religious services — showing up is considered important — and no one has ever asked me what I believe or don’t believe. “We’re a people of deed,” said Rabbi Michele Faudem, a friend of Leah’s family at Rosh Hashana 5785 services (perhaps harkening back to that “covenant” with God, a mutual commitment based on deed as much as belief). So within the lines of the anti-concept of God, there is space for flexible thinking about what the thing called God can be, if anything. When I go with Leah to synagogue these days, wherever I read or hear “God” I replace it in my head with “justice” and that works for me. Praise justice, let us hope for justice’s hand, and so on. It’s a strategy to make it through services without feeling alienated by theology. And whether I’m thinking about God or tikkun olam, it’s still perfectly Jewish, it turns out. Maybe justice is what the prayers were about all along anyway.
To be clear, I started with God and mothers not because I think they are defining aspects of jewishness — they are certainly not exclusively so— but because they are easy aspects to identify. I personally believe that neither a belief in God nor a Jewish parent is a required aspect of Jewish identity, and I think many Jews would agree. Below I’ve got five other aspects of jewishness that I’ve found which I think are at least as important as God and mothers.
Jewish practices and the meaning of tradition
My best man David explained to me many years ago that Jews are a tribe. I was familiar with the expression “in the tribe” (Jews use this indirect expression to talk about whether someone is a Jew), but I hadn’t really thought about what that meant —that there is something beyond religious belief that brings Jews together.
Tradition, including religious practices and religion-adjacent rituals, are a part of it, but Jews’ practices go well beyond that — many are ethnic and have no religious significance. There are culinary practices, shared languages (Yiddish and Judaeo-Spanish once, now more likely Hebrew), a sense of humor, and uniquely Jewish political movements and institutions (more on that later). They are of course not all universal, and many are unique to particular Jewish groups whose practices came out of adaptation to the local cultures that they were once living in the context of. I certainly don’t and not every Jew has practices in any or all of these categories— oy what a busy life that would be!
Here it’s worth noting that within certain Jewish bubbles there’s a lack of awareness of other Jewish traditions. One such bubble is that of Ashkenormativity, a portmanteau of Ashkenazi Jewish culture and normativity, in which the Ashkenazi way is assumed to be the only way or the only right way. I have very little familiarity with other traditions, and that can be a blind spot. But there are other normative forces which I’ll mention later.
As for the ritualized religious practices, some, like observing Shabbat (meaning, roughly, not performing work or using electricity on Saturdays), seem religious on the surface but ultimately may have meaning to people for non-religious reasons, like spending time with family — something my father-in-law has said gives it importance to him beyond the religious aspect — or, perhaps, disconnecting from telephones and computers. Leah observes Passover in a traditional manner in large part out of respect for her grandfather, who kept kosher for Passover after fleeing Nazi Germany while he emigrated across the United States by train to the West Coast eating only matzah and hard boiled eggs—no easy task. For Leah observing Passover is among many other Jewish practices that she continues not necessarily because God tells her to do so, but because it’s an unbroken tradition (she’s never missed a family seder). And she is connected through this tradition to many other Jews, who many have many other motivations for doing so.
Throughout my life I haven’t found meaning in tradition for tradition’s sake— apologies to my ancestors. (I know something about why I don’t, but I’ll save the psychology.) And when there’s a conflict between tradition and progression, my inclination is to flee —a reaction I have to imagine that other Jews like me share. So while I respect both the purpose and the effort that goes into Leah’s personal commitments to her family’s traditions, tradition on its own isn’t something that resonates with me.
In the excellent book Here All Along, Sarah Hurwitz adeptly explains why one’s Jewish history should matter though: You can choose to practice any religion or culture, but why not start by considering the one whose story has you in it?
I’m not sure tradition will ever inform my Jewish practice, but there are endless practices to choose from from which one can assign a personal meaning. And only a fraction are religious.
(Hurwitz also makes a similar point about what I called the ‘anti-’concept of God: “One god or fewer,” she wrote, quoting a rabbi paraphrasing who was in turn paraphrasing a teacher of his.)
Commitment to a Jewish practice
In the lead-up to our wedding, Leah and I met with our rabbi —the amazing Rabbi Aaron Alexander at Adas Israel — several times, as one does. Rabbi Alexander asked us to consider different perspectives on what Judaism says about having a Jewish life and a Jewish married life. I couldn’t help but put Rabbi Alexander on the spot: What is the core principle of a Jewish life? If not god, for me, then what? Rabbi Alexander shared with us a rabbinical teaching of six key acts in life, among which giving one’s fellow the benefit of the doubt was raised to just about the same level as Torah study, at least according to this one old rabbinical teaching. Being Jewish isn’t only being religious.
I don’t want to put words into Rabbi Alexander’s mouth here because my understanding and recollection may both be off. But I remember his response to my question as this: To have a Jewish life is to have something among your Jewish practices that you choose to put absolutely above everything else — such as a practice of Shabbat (i.e. when the sun sets the rules begin, no exception). And the effort of putting that practice first — of confronting and knowing your choice to practice Judaism— is critical. The Rabbi’s point about commitment and choice stems, I assume, from the “covenant,” an exclusive, mutual, and voluntary commitment that is the heart of the Jewish concept of God.
For Leah, keeping kosher is the sort of commitment Rabbi Alexander was talking about— it’s hard keeping kosher and also living in the modern world and it is a constant reminder of her commitment to Judaism, Leah says. As a newcomer to keeping a kosher kitchen especially, it is hard and frustrating, and then I remember that maybe for us that’s the point.
It’s not hard to find an opportunity for commitment among Jewish practices. From the enumerated mitzvot, there are practices around washing hands before eating bread, lighting candles, tzedakah (giving to charity), fasting—some are more intrinsically religious than others. I can feel this blog post getting warmer: I’m getting closer to finding an answer that works for me. Maybe I can find a practice to commit to that fits me.
The codified practices
Judaism is a religion of law (back to that “deed” concept again). The body of Jewish law is called halacha, and it derives from the biblical rules of Judaism. Recorded debates between rabbis over the last few millennia about halacha is the defining aspect of post-biblical Judaism (by which I mean the modern Jewish religion). Toward the end of the Passover Seder is a line, roughly translated, “Passover is now completed according to the statutes.” (If you know me, you can see how I would love that.) Am I doing it right? is what most debates around Jewish law seem to be about.
Those statutes — the 613 mitzvot and other aspects of Jewish law — address rituals like how to keep kosher, beliefs like knowing God, and ethical practices including Commandment #5 “Honor thy father and mother.” Apparently celebrating Passover completes five mitzvahs. The ethical mitzvot and other Jewish teachings lead to principles such as that everyone is created in God’s image, each person a unique God-resembling universe, and so should be infinitely valued. And there’s overlap: the rules of kosher are ritualistic, religious, and also ethical (as it relates to the treatment of animals).
Halacha is viewed by some as commanded by God and binding, while many consider none of the rules binding, and among Jews who consider at least some of the rules binding, there’s disagreement about what the rules entail on a day-to-day basis. And so there are sects led (typically) by rabbinical authorities that decree answers to these questions. We tend to think of some sects as “more observant” and others as less so, an unnecessarily judgmental framing. As Hurwitz lamented in her book, many Jews (and non-Jews) “evaluate someone’s commitment to Judaism by their level of compliance with ritual mitzvot” — but rarely, she observed, the ethical mitzvot. No sect has a claim to the one rightful way to observe halacha (as much as they might wish otherwise). Peddling not-Jewish-enough epithets, based on one’s personal palette of rules and beliefs from the totality of rules and beliefs that could be considered Jewish, is too common (among Jews, but even worse when done by non-Jews).
There is a lot of halacha to draw from when creating a Jewish life. And there is plenty for non-religious Jews too, if you believe that halacha and God need not go together: for instance that every person should be valued infinitely, even if they are not literally created in God’s image. And even atheists could consider those parts of Jewish law binding, morally and/or spiritually. Picking and choosing the parts of halacha that are most convenient to observe at any given time might be problematic, depending on who you ask, but a pick one mitzvah and commit to it version of halacha seems like one workable starting point.
Jewish institutions and political movements
Beyond the personal practices that I wrote about earlier, there are also many Jewish institutions that one can participate in: endless charitable organizations, youth groups and service organizations, schools, for Zionists the civic institutions in and about Israel, and of course synagogues and everything you might call “organized religion.” As with other practices, practices related to these institutions may look religious on the surface (such as a Jewish education in school) but likely have a more personal meaning to those who participate beyond just connecting with God (synagogues are valued as a hub for communities). Taken together and with a historical perspective, these institutions form the Jewish civilization. These are in a sense civic Jewish practices.
Some Jewish civic organizations are about preservation of the civilization with a fear that without effort Jewish beliefs and practices may fade away. The Yiddish Book Center, a library preserving long-out-of-print books written in Yiddish, fills this role, besides more obvious examples like synagogues. Leah notes that some preservation-type organizations are about fostering the sort of interactions between Jews that eventually lead to Jewish marriages and then Jewish babies. And others of these are forward-looking political movements that aim to shape the nature of life for Jews and for Judaism itself.
There are no universally shared political beliefs among Jews (that’s despite a nominal code of ethics; Jews lean politically left in the United States). Nevertheless, there are political movements that are uniquely Jewish, including Zionism (i.e., Jews should have a homeland in the present), Disasporism (i.e., Jews should be safe to thrive anywhere they are, which might be considered an anti-Zionism), and Jewish socialist and labor movements (like kibbutzes and the mostly-exterminated Bundism). Post-Holocaust, Zionism has largely taken over and displaced the once-popular Diasporism, with Zionist Jews largely unwelcoming to Disasporism, in my experience (another normalizing force). (Zionism and anti-Zionism both have anti-Semitic counterpart movements— not those. Anti-Zionism, by the way, has supporters among both the progressive wing of Jews as well as the ultra-religious, but for completely different reasons.) It’s not a contradiction that Jewish political movements can be at odds. Disagreement is, anyway, yet another tradition among Jews.
Jewish writing
Jews have recently lost a large part of our written culture: books in Yiddish. In the early 1900s, Yiddish writing was on the rise. Something like tens of thousands of books were written. The writing was unique and subversive (according to the memoir of the founder of the Yiddish Book Center). But following the murder of most Yiddish speakers in the Holocaust and the violent destruction of Jewish cultural centers such as the 1994 bombing of a central Jewish library in Argentina, the desire by surviving European Jews to assimilate to cultures where they escaped to (e.g. America), and the role of late-20th Century Zionism in normalizing Jewish language around Modern Hebrew as opposed to Yiddish and Ashkenazi pronunciation of liturgical Hebrew, these books were largely forgotten and few Jews are left who can read them. (These are some more of the other normalizing forces I mentioned.)
Then there’s the religious writing. It’s one thing to have a cultural practice of debate over millennia, but it’s another thing for those debates to be a single continuous conversation about the same few original books (that is, the Torah, etc.). Jews and Words, by Amos Oz and Fania Oz-Salzberger, introduced me to this entirely distinct perspective of jewishness: That it is, essentially, a peer-reviewed field of study. “We were not a people because we thought so and so, but we were a people because we read so and so,” Oz and Oz-Salzberger wrote, paraphrasing another author (emphasis is in the original).
There are a handful of key books in Judaism, some of the most famous of which are the Torah, the Passover Haggadah, and the Megillah read on Purim (but, I recently learned, there’s also the rest of the Tanakh and the whole Talmud). For millennia, Jewish rabbis and their students, and parents and their children, have studied these books. Over and over. With interpretations taking hold only because others accepted them. And still finding new meaning today.
If you add in books like those by Hurwitz, Oz and Oz-Salzberger, Arendt, primers for learning the Hebrew language, and the recently renewed interest in the study of Yiddish and Yiddish books, and on, you get a field of study not just of Jewish religious texts but of the Jewish civilization.
Final thoughts
I love fields of study, and while I may not be interested in a study of God’s original intent, the texts are interesting in their own right (and in 2024 I began learning Yiddish and Hebrew). I’m passionate about observing Passover and found a new interest in the history of the Haggadah at last year’s Passover (see my blog post on creating a minimalist Haggadah).
I’ve also enjoyed learning about Shabbat rules and thinking about how they can be understood through the language of information theory— but I haven’t studied enough to write that blog post yet. Will my tinkering with Shabbat concepts guide my so-far-non-existent Shabbat practices? I don’t know.
I’m cautious about saying that debate over these texts for the sake of debate may be Jewish enough. Maybe that’s too easy — maybe debate for its own sake doesn’t require the sort of effort that Rabbi Alexander told us is important for keeping one’s jewishness in mind. To embrace an identity, a tradition, words, or a history means there are some obligations too. There are wrong answers to these questions. An entire civilization has existed around these questions but I think I can figure it out from a book?
But it wouldn’t be very Jewish either if debate were limited to those who have committed their life to Torah study. A halacha-compliant Passover requires all of us to debate the meaning of the Torah. Oz and Oz-Salzberger argue that lay debate itself is a crucial component of the continuity of the Jewish civilization. It’s a meta-practice, in a sense: a practice to preserve other practices and keep the tribe alive (there are endless Jewish activities that fall in this category). Giving everyone the responsibility for preservation means there has to be room for some error.
Do I need to say at this point that all these thoughts may not be correct? Is that a problem? My work in civic technology has continually faced a similar tension between empowering people through knowledge and the risk that incomplete knowledge can lead to harmful outcomes. People leave GovTrack.us with still only an incomplete understanding of the law, but they will go on to advocate for policies they may not understand. I’m not a lawyer, but I educate people about the law! I do it because there are few other on-ramps for people to become wiser about their own government, and America has sadly tried but thankfully rejected the notion that participation should be limited to those with expertise. One person’s expertise is another person’s captivity. Everyone trying and sometimes being wrong is as good as government gets.
And, here, I’m telling you about what it means to be a Jew understanding about as much of Judaism as my website’s users understand about their government. So long as my interest continues, I am going to hope for better on-ramps to expertise in the Jewish civilization, of which there seem to be few. It does seem that the Jewish people figured out much earlier than America did that it’s better that I try and get some things wrong than to not have a voice at all.
So I may have gotten something wrong — and if so I’ll add a correction. But it may be that being wrong but committed to the success of the debate is yet another way I can be Jewish — if I choose.
(A final note: I used “Judaism” in this post to refer to the religion, the God-parts of jewishness, but whether the term includes cultural aspects of Jewish life is up for debate. “Secular Jew” is similarly not well defined, which I why I didn’t use that term either. And I kept “jewishness” lowercase to reflect the lack of an answer about what it means.)
I thank my wife Leah Schloss for teaching me many of the Jewish concepts in this piece that makes my jewishness make more sense, her willingness to have some of her personal practices shared here, and her edits. I also thank Rabbi Alexander for our pre-wedding chats and his amazing work as our officiant; Leah’s family, in particular my father-in-law Neil, who have welcomed me in their Jewish practices; and my parents and my family for decades of memories of our Jewish experiences.
This post is a living document. I have been adding to it and editing it as I learn more over the years since I first posted it.