When I was a child, I wanted religion. Everyone else it seemed had it. At least, they went to CCD. I didn’t.
“What’s that?” I asked one kid in my class.
“The Central City Dump.”
He told me. He said it with such
great loathing, that I thought he might be telling me the truth.
“Why don’t I go to CCD?” I asked my mother.
“Because you’re Jewish,” she told me. Being Jewish seemed to entail little more
than going to my grandmother’s on Passover and speed reading through the
Hagaddah as my father grumbled, “when are we going to have dinner?”
I tried to absorb religion through my relationships with
more pious friends.
I liked going to mass with Emily. The service was so carefully
choreographed. Stand up, sit down. May god be with you. And also with you. Everyone seemed to know their part. I learned “Hail Mary” and “Our Father.” But I didn’t actually say it out loud because
it felt wrong.
When my friend Alizabeth had a Bat Mitzvah, I took home the
program, which had a little prayer in it.
I read it under the blankets at night with a flashlight. I kept hoping it would make me feel closer to
something. Something bigger than me.
I wanted God. But
God didn’t seem to know my address. It
made me feel lonely.
Once I went to a church dance with Emily. “What if somebody asks me what my religion
is?” I worried.
“No one is going to ask you that,” Emily reassured me.
At the dance, we were approached by a nun. “Hello dear,” she said, “are you new to our
parish.
“No.”
“Oh. You don’t belong
to our parish?”
“No, I’m here with Emily.”
“What parish do you belong to?”
“I don’t belong to a parish.” I said in a small voice. “I’m Jewish,” I said in an even smaller
voice.
“Oh! Well then what
synagogue do you belong to?” My face went hot.
I KNEW this was going to happen.
I stared at the gym floor.
“I don’t belong to a synagogue. My parents don’t believe in organized
religion.” She didn’t audibly gasp. But she might as well have.
I never did get religion.
It always seemed like a team sport to me—something people had played for
most of their lives, I couldn’t possibly pick it up now. I’d keep dropping the ball. Or throw it to the opposing team. I wouldn’t know which way to run.
I sit on the sidelines of religion. Every now and then peeking in. Wishing I had that sense of solidarity with
others. Something less superficial then
knowing a handful of words in Yiddish and how to make kugel.
How is it that my grandmother was born to Orthodox
Jews? That my father went to
Yeshiva? My blood is diluted.
What do I have to pass on?
When Kevin and I got pregnant we made a deal. His last name, my religion. Now that Sophia is here, I feel the weight of
responsibility. How do I begin to teach
her something I know so little about?
I don’t want her to be left with the spiritual void I
wrestled with.
At first, I fantasized that, perhaps, we could learn
together. It would be a shared
journey. We could be bat mitzvahed
together, taking turns reading our Torah portions. I could be a real Jew.
But as I started looking into temples, I couldn’t find
anything that felt close to what I’d envisioned—something that could
accommodate decades of disbelief that had settled into a peaceful
agnosticism. Light on rules, heavy on
stories. And love so luminous it pours
in like light through the windows.
So I sit in limbo, with Sophie beside me, teaching her the
things I do know. Empathy. Gratitude.
Reverence. Awe. All the things I feel to be holy.
This post is inspired by I AM FORBIDDEN by Anouk Markovits. Though not sisters by blood but through their Hasidic faith, Mila and Atara views the rules and structure of their culture differently. Mila seeks comfort in the Torah while Atara searches for answers in secular literature she is forbidden to read. Ultimately each must make an irrevocable decision that will change their lives forever. Join From Left to Write on May 8 as we discuss I AM FORBIDDEN. As a member, I received a copy of the book for review purposes.
6 comments:
That was so poignant. And as a practicing Jew I'm heavy on the agnosticism, too - but the stories, the love, that's where I feel home. I hope you find what you're seeking.
Many of my friends grew up in the Unitarian church. They're all atheists now, or at least utterly non-practicing, but they talk about those days in a way that leads me to think they had that sense of belonging and community there. I'm surprised I've never asked if they take their kids, now that they're having kids.
If it's any consolation, I grew up going to synagogue, and though the prayers and general "ways" are familiar and somewhat comforting to me, I never actually felt that I fit in there, like there was something very important that I didn't quite get. To go with your analogy, it's like I grew up playing Little League, but had missed all the days they explained the basis of the game. Every time I was up at bat, I felt like I was faking it.
I love this post!
Wonderful. Honest. Your longing is tangible and yet, I have a feeling you will find what you're looking for in a very unusual place.
Good luck.
One of the ways I share the religions of the world with my children is through children's books.
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=sr_nr_n_0?rh=n%3A283155%2Ck%3Areligious+stories%2Cn%3A%211000%2Cn%3A4%2Cn%3A3101&bbn=4&keywords=religious+stories&ie=UTF8&qid=1336516941&rnid=4#/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=node%3D3101&field-keywords=&rh=n%3A283155%2Cn%3A%211000%2Cn%3A4%2Cn%3A3101
It's a link to a plethora of religious children's books (:
how can empathy and gratitude be wrong?
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