Return of the Judai

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attackoftheskydancers

MJL promoting a piece by a BHI

returnofthejudai

MyJewishLearning published yesterday an article written by a Black Hebrew Israelite (BHI for short) - for those who are not familiar with them, they are an evangelical Christian movement that promotes antisemitic ideas.

Feeling at Home Among 900 Black Jews at an Ethiopian-Israeli Wedding: As I look around the room, for the first time in my life I feel like I belong to the Jewish people.

The author claims to suffer with racism from within the Jewish community, but the article reads in a very weird way. So I decided to check (and I’ve seen that a few others on Facebook did as well), and found her page on a BHI website: Celeste Jackson; and her mom, Mother Anna “Levy”. Their “synagogue” is a BHI church in Saint Albans, NY.

There is racism in the community, and pieces like these (be it by Celeste Jackson or Nylah Burton, et al) make it harder to address that because they provoke a growth of scepticism toward those who actually face racism in the Jewish community. The reference others have often is non-Jews faking being Jewish for the sake of identity politics (Nylah), or whatever BHIs are doing (Celeste). Which makes easier for detractors to claim that when Jews facing such issues come forward with complaints, they are lying, just look at these *points to the LARPers*.  

It is doubtful if Tali (the Ethiopian Jewish friend) is aware that Celeste is a BHI. Both in Israel and abroad, Ethiopian Jews do not buy into BHI claims, and there is at least one video available on YouTube of such confrontations.

Please be careful with what you share, since Jewish publications clearly have missed the mark big time and keep ignoring Jews who come forward with complaints. I wrote an email to MJL (about racism, my experiences within the community, the effects - on Jews actually facing racism - of publishing an article by this con artist), and would encourage anyone interested in writing to them write as well, the email is community@myjewishlearning.com

attackoftheskydancers

Wait, this is the first I’ve heard of Nylah not actually being Jewish.

stupidjewishwhiteboy

It’s a thing I’ve seen a couple of times but that fact that it always comes up when people don’t want to listen to Nylah Burton makes me suspicious of its authenticity

attackoftheskydancers

OK, just did some reading - she’s patrilineal with a Christian mother, and she feels no need to convert to the Conservative or Orthodox movements.

I understand this is a touchy subject and halachically speaking she’s not actually Jewish by these communities’ standards, but that’s a far cry from being a total outsider to the Jewish community, sent to undermine us with false accusations.

returnofthejudai

She’s not patrilineal. Both of her parents are non-Jews, and she comes from a fundamentalist Christian background - there is a claim that maybe one of her great-grandparents was Jewish (dad’s side) but even that is a maybe. Once this was all uncovered (which you’d have known if you have contact with Jewish groups on Facebook, where plenty of this is available), she started claiming that she feels Jewish, she won’t convert, etc. She also requested for money for Jewish events (from gullible people like the ones claiming that somehow I am wrong for saying that a non-Jew is a non-Jew), which she never held and just seems to have put in her pocket. 

What people like her is just cheapening what it means to be a visibly non-white Jew (black, mixed race, among others) and to face racism in the Jewish community. And that I will not accept. I have gone through too much scrutiny due to my looks/colour and racism from other Jews to ever be okay with someone coopting my struggles for her personal gain. If you prefer to ignore black and brown Jews telling you that, that’s your problem and you are part of the problem. 

Miriam's posts evangelicals

MJL promoting a piece by a BHI

MyJewishLearning published yesterday an article written by a Black Hebrew Israelite (BHI for short) - for those who are not familiar with them, they are an evangelical Christian movement that promotes antisemitic ideas.

Feeling at Home Among 900 Black Jews at an Ethiopian-Israeli Wedding: As I look around the room, for the first time in my life I feel like I belong to the Jewish people.

The author claims to suffer with racism from within the Jewish community, but the article reads in a very weird way. So I decided to check (and I’ve seen that a few others on Facebook did as well), and found her page on a BHI website: Celeste Jackson; and her mom, Mother Anna “Levy”. Their “synagogue” is a BHI church in Saint Albans, NY.

There is racism in the community, and pieces like these (be it by Celeste Jackson or Nylah Burton, et al) make it harder to address that because they provoke a growth of scepticism toward those who actually face racism in the Jewish community. The reference others have often is non-Jews faking being Jewish for the sake of identity politics (Nylah), or whatever BHIs are doing (Celeste). Which makes easier for detractors to claim that when Jews facing such issues come forward with complaints, they are lying, just look at these *points to the LARPers*.  

It is doubtful if Tali (the Ethiopian Jewish friend) is aware that Celeste is a BHI. Both in Israel and abroad, Ethiopian Jews do not buy into BHI claims, and there is at least one video available on YouTube of such confrontations.

Please be careful with what you share, since Jewish publications clearly have missed the mark big time and keep ignoring Jews who come forward with complaints. I wrote an email to MJL (about racism, my experiences within the community, the effects - on Jews actually facing racism - of publishing an article by this con artist), and would encourage anyone interested in writing to them write as well, the email is community@myjewishlearning.com

Miriam's posts My Jewish Learning BHI Black Hebrew Israelites evangelicals

Anonymous asked:

My family has a Jewish background on my dad's side, and my great-grandparents were all Jewish. Should I get tested to see if I am a carrier for Tay-Sachs if I am not immediately related to any Jewish family members?

I’d say it’s advisable to get screened. From JScreen FAQ:

Should I be screened if I’m not Jewish or if I have converted to Judaism?

Yes. JScreen’s panel includes more than 200 genetic diseases that are commonly found in both the Jewish and general populations. Therefore, the JScreen panel is applicable for those with Jewish and non-Jewish ancestry.

Only one of my parents is Jewish. Is this program right for me?

Yes. Having even one Jewish grandparent puts you at increased risk for carrying one or more of the Jewish disease genes.

I’m taking it from this particular group’s website because I knew the answers were right there, I’m not paid by them to advertise their work or anything :)

Miriam's posts JScreen genetics Tay-Sachs genetic disorders genetic testing

Anonymous asked:

My grandma has always been-literally-the black sheep of the family. What photos we've found of her family all show the same dark curly hair and swarthy complexion, & as children, my uncles were taunted for "looking Jewish". We initially suspected North African or even Aborigine Australian heritage but recently we stumbled across headstones of her family buried in Jewish cemeteries! Her family all had distinctly Polish/German/Ashkenazic-sounding surnames, which was our first clue, (part 1)

(part 2) coupled with very strong Hebrew given names. Then we found the immigration records from Germany. In England they lived in what was then the Jewish ghetto and her parents converted to Protestantism as adults, hence the lack of Church records prior. We’re in America now so we can’t search the physical synagogue records & when we raise the matter with her she clams up. I don’t believe she was aware that her parents were converts and she’s now a very devout Christian, so I think the (contd)

(pt 3) topic makes her uncomfortable. She and her sisters mostly weren’t raised by their parents so I’m not sure what she would know anyway. We suspect her parents converted out of fear of antisemitism-if they were Jewish at all, that is. The records only go as far back as their arrival in Leeds from Germany in the 1880s. Do you have any advice on tracing my family tree? How can I be definite if they were Jewish? I’m not looking to make aliyah or anything, I just want the truth about my family.

Would anyone be able to help anon?

I heard that FamilySearch (a Mormon website) has a lot of information on tons of people, but I’m not sure how they choose their targets in order to put them on record, but maybe it’s a possibility to check out if they’d have information on anyone in your family tree and go from there? I’m really bad at this, hope other people can be of better help than me. 

Edit: blunderpuff said: 

There’s a Facebook group called “Tracing The Tribe” that has a bunch of smart genealogy-minded people. Sometimes people on that group have hit dead-ends on their own families (thanks, Russian Empire 1890!), so they might jump at the chance to help go through yours, especially since it sounds like you’ve got some decent information already.

Miriam's posts genealogy blunderpuff Jewish genealogy

Anonymous asked:

So my mom decided to change our Passover tradition of using a feminist Haggadah, and is using a Harry Potter Haggadah. I just wanted your thoughts. I don't think it's a good idea. I think commercializing this time is gross. Idk, I could be wrong, and I would love to hear your thoughts.

Is it the one by Rabbi Moshe Rosenberg? I haven’t seen the haggadah itself, but heard about it. If it’s a kosher haggadah - and I’m inclined to think it is -, I don’t see the issue. 

If it’s not to your taste, just skip on the haggadah and pick up one you like. At my “family” (more like late “adoption,” we have no biological relation but they’re like family to me), most of us use a different haggadah from the next person, some follow in English and others in French, and we all enjoy the holiday together.

Miriam's posts haggadah Pessah Pessach

Anonymous asked:

The tumblr womeninarthistory has been posting the works of Jewish artists as a show of support and Idk, it's a little random but it was nice to see.

When I said it was random, I meant me telling you about it, not them posting about Jewish artists.

No worries, thanks for the heads up. Posting this in case others want to check it out (I haven’t yet but I will).

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Anonymous asked:

I don't know if this is something of discourse, and pardon me if it is, but if my maternal grandmother's maternal grandmother was Jewish, would that make me ethnically Jewish? I know that there is a lot more to Jewish culture than that, and I would never claim to be fully Jewish because of it (the rest of my family is Irish), but I was curious.

If you can prove an unbroken maternal lineage, you’d still be considered Jewish. Jewish status does not expire. I’ve heard about in the USA Rabbis only accepting proof up to grandmother, sometimes great-grandmother, and at the same time there’s someone (also in the USA) who released a book after she was able to prove an unbroken chain of grandmothers going back to Spain several centuries ago and then getting recognised as a born Jew based on that. If you can do that, I do not know an Orthodox Rabbi who would not recognise you as a Jew.

Miriam's posts Jewish status