08-20-2008, 07:35 AM | #1 (permalink) |
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There is no Jewish race
As an atheist, I get slightly annoyed (not offended) when people say that I'm Jewish just because my mom is. Everyone who learns that my mom is Jewish has told me that I am Jewish because of this. My mom's not even real Jewish, you know? After raising me around Hanukkah and Yum Kippur and Passover, even she's an atheist now. My family is that Los Angeles brand of Jewish; you need SOME social circle to belong to, right? I'm not even circumcised.
The idea that you're Jewish because your parents are (specifically, your mother) is actually just a vile lie concocted by a French anti-semite over 100 years ago. I forgot his name, but its in my old college notes kept at my parents house. Can you believe I studied this? The idea was if you could define a Jew by their features and heritage, it would be easier to identify them and thus remove them from society. He drew up the rules of Jewish identification, starting with heritage and moving on to the shape and size of facial features. Obviously, this was done in a period where hating Jews was all the rage, so people actually listened and this big fiasco was assimilated into popular knowledge. Now, today, when it is now not so cool to hate Jews, this lie persists. People think it is elementary to just suggest that someone is a Jew because their mother is one, or because their nose is big with a crook it in. Well, I'm writing this to re-educate you. You're wrong. My grandparents might be Jewish, and when I was born, my mother might have identified with the Jewish faith, but I am not Jewish. Judaism is a religion; a personal choice. Please respect someone when they say they are not Jewish, because that probably means they AREN'T.
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08-20-2008, 07:53 AM | #2 (permalink) | |
People in masks cannot be trusted
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But seriously though you are actually very incorrect in your time line of this belief, considering that it is in Jewish Seforim and rabbinical commentary I can not say for sure the earliest, first one I can note (offhand) is from around 70 CE when the Mishnah originated which was the time of the first temple. But basic Jewish belief is if your mother is Jewish you are. If your father is Jewish your mother is not you are not considered Jewish (of course you can always convert). |
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08-20-2008, 07:57 AM | #4 (permalink) |
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I'm not prepared to argue against someone who contradicts my educational studies by citing common belief. Part of my goal when studying religious history, sociology and psychology is identifying when certain concepts throughout history entered into the public mind.
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08-20-2008, 08:01 AM | #5 (permalink) |
People in masks cannot be trusted
Location: NYC
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Educational studies? You cited some frenchman by no name from 100 years ago as the source of this belief. I am saying this religious belief comes from Jewish books from 70CE. There are passages in the Torah itself that elude that the child from a man may lead a stray but no comments from the mother. There is fact from the book of ruth about her heritage. But the place I can point out that says it straight forward is in the Mishnah that was done about 70ce (can not pin point exact date).
I believe you have an issue separating whether being Jewish is a religion or a nationality. I believe in it being both. |
08-20-2008, 08:04 AM | #6 (permalink) | ||
Junkie
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The problem is Jews are an ethnoreligious group. Meaning the group is defined by both ethnicity and religion. You have the ethnicity but not the religion so it is partially correct to call you jewish.
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08-20-2008, 08:05 AM | #7 (permalink) |
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I agree with your post, but not your thread title.
There *is* a Jewish Race. There was enough in-group breeding to solidify a set of ethnic characteristics unique from other human ethnic groups. You can be Jewish (religious) without being of the Jewish race. DNA and the Origins of the Jewish Ethnic Groups It wasn't just some "old french anti-semite." In the age of DNA, we can tell that there are very distinct racial characteristics of Jews-by-heritage, just like there are distinct racial characteristics of African Americans (black skin, perhaps?) http://www.khazaria.com/genetics/abstracts.html
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08-20-2008, 08:21 AM | #8 (permalink) | |
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If your mother is Jewish, you are Jewish. I'm an atheist too, and so is my mother. However, I am Jewish because my mother is who is Jewish because her mother is, etc. I don't know anything about this French anti-semite but the maternal descent comes from the Halacha laws.
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08-20-2008, 08:24 AM | #9 (permalink) |
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Forgive me for not having my notes ready. I want to shed some light on why people are so tuned into what makes a Jew, without even considering the religious side of it. Over the last century, this idea has grown into popular culture.
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08-20-2008, 08:43 AM | #11 (permalink) |
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That's my point exactly.
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08-20-2008, 08:46 AM | #12 (permalink) | ||
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Not to sound ignorant or go to far off topic, but I wonder if similar points could be found with other religious groups. For example, Catholics with the way they tend to view mixed religion and marriage being frowned upon. Not to attack Catholics either but I know many Catholic churches will not perform a wedding ceremony unless the non-catholic partner converts. I think the same could be said of Muslims, though I do not know much about it personally. At least where I live, there is no question that Muslims have an extremely tight community and tend not to mix much from those outside of it. Thoughts to ponder... |
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08-20-2008, 08:48 AM | #13 (permalink) | ||
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08-20-2008, 08:52 AM | #16 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: The Danforth
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what about the term race versus ethnicity? Jinn states that there is a Jewish race. I'm not up on my racial definitions (and I'd hate to do a diservice by using Wikipedia) but I was under the impression that there were historically 3 different races, of which Jewish people - at least the Semitic ones - belong to the Caucasian group.
Now, I've heard that the historical division of races into the three groupings was facile, and categorization has now switched to blood groupings rather than surface physical features. So in this light it may indeed be possible to narrow the 'racial' definition of a like group of people to an ethnicity. I must do some reading on the current state of this. |
08-20-2008, 09:09 AM | #17 (permalink) | |
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08-20-2008, 09:11 AM | #18 (permalink) |
Junkie
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Ever notice that sometimes the word jew is proceeded by either ethnic or religious?
ie ethnic jews or religious jews. The problem is an ambiguity in the word. The word jew has 2 distinct meanings. However, since lots of ethnic jews are also religious jews people tend to believe there is only 1 meaning for the word jew and that is where Halx's annoyance is stemming from. |
08-20-2008, 09:28 AM | #19 (permalink) |
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To Jinn and everyone else in a hubbub about race: biologically, a race is a subspecies. There are no known subspecies of humans, because geographic and sexual isolation is a requirement for defining a true genetic race. The amount of variation within a race must be smaller than the amount of variation within the parent species, something that is impossible to achieve within the constraints of cultural definitions of race.
So, there is no Jewish race, as Hal said. There IS a religion, and there IS an ethnic association with such religion.
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08-20-2008, 09:37 AM | #21 (permalink) | |
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08-20-2008, 09:46 AM | #22 (permalink) | |
Soaring
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The cultural definition is better served by the term ethnicity, which has already been discussed in the thread (along with ethnoreligious).
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"Without passion man is a mere latent force and possibility, like the flint which awaits the shock of the iron before it can give forth its spark." — Henri-Frédéric Amiel Last edited by PonyPotato; 08-20-2008 at 09:51 AM.. |
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08-20-2008, 10:09 AM | #23 (permalink) | |
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08-20-2008, 10:12 AM | #24 (permalink) |
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Hal: Do you get just as annoyed when people ask if you are Portuguese, based on your last name? It's also an ethnicity, though granted not one tied up with religiousity (though you might count Catholicism in there).
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08-20-2008, 10:20 AM | #25 (permalink) |
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I get annoyed when people ask if I'm Spanish or Mexican or South American based on my last name just because they don't know what they're saying. I'm actually pleasantly surprised when people recognize it as Portuguese. This IS an ethnicity question though, not a race question. As far as I'm concerned though, I have no culture. I'm a suburban atheist mutt. I don't celebrate your holidays. I don't worship your god. I don't respect my family for anything more than the love they give me.
To suggest that I am Jewish is an insult to Jews.
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08-20-2008, 10:21 AM | #26 (permalink) |
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I only have limited personal experience with this issue, but based on that I think it's not uncommon for some people of Jewish heritage to support the idea that one is/can be Jewish even if you have no belief or participation in Judism. My belief (casual, unsubstantiated by any research) is that this idea might be propogated by the "communal persecution" felt by Jewish people since most of us know the magnitude of suffering that has been directed toward Jews. I suppose this must be a powerful wound that binds people together in spite of other major differences...stick together to survive.
My wife and her extended family are of Jewish heritage but have always been religiously/philosophically atheistic; my brother-in-law was not even bar mitzvah'd. I was raised and educated Roman Catholic though since early college days I don't participate or believe in many of Catholic religious tenents...so I don't consider myself Catholic at all. But when my kids, who have not been raised with any association whatsoever to Judism (or Catholicism), ask their mom "what are we?" she says "...you're Jewish because I am". To bring my confusion even closer to home, I was circumcised when I was 9 years old since my Catholic parents became convinced that it was a good medical decision. No wonder I'm so screwed up .... j/k I'm as normal as the next wacko. |
08-20-2008, 10:26 AM | #27 (permalink) | |
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And btw, I beg to differ that you have no culture. Live overseas for an extended period of time and see if you still think you have no culture. No human can completely escape the trappings of the environment in which they were raised.
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08-20-2008, 10:31 AM | #28 (permalink) |
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Both are incorrect. I've had to deal with people ALWAYS spelling my name incorrectly, so its actually a relief when people spell it right the first time and I can appreciate that they know where it originated from. The Jewish thing is downright annoying the same way people can't spell my name right.
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08-20-2008, 10:38 AM | #29 (permalink) | ||
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08-20-2008, 10:53 AM | #31 (permalink) |
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He is visibly an ethnic African American, despite his partial Puerto Rican heritage and Jewish religion.
Ethnicity is nothing more than phenotype. I don't really want to get into the "race" vs "ethnicity" debate, because it's a sociological circle jerk about two words which have the same colloquial meaning.
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"I'm typing on a computer of science, which is being sent by science wires to a little science server where you can access it. I'm not typing on a computer of philosophy or religion or whatever other thing you think can be used to understand the universe because they're a poor substitute in the role of understanding the universe which exists independent from ourselves." - Willravel |
08-20-2008, 10:59 AM | #33 (permalink) |
peekaboo
Location: on the back, bitch
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Sure ya can...the men wear yarmulkes and the women wear long skirts and wigs or scarves.
If they're Hasidic, they commonly have beards and peyes(the long curls on their faces) in addition to their distinctive way of dressing. |
08-20-2008, 11:04 AM | #34 (permalink) | |
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The terms need to be defined to be argued. And they do not have the same colloquial meaning. |
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08-20-2008, 11:52 AM | #35 (permalink) |
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Technically, Hal, you're right: Judaism is not a race. Biologically, a race is as merleniau defined it. and there are no subspecies of human. Semantically, we in the U.S. use the word "race" to refer to characteristics defined by someone's physical appearance, primarily skin color. Neither applies to Jews.
However, Judaism is more than a religion. It is an ethnoreligious culture, meaning that it is a religion, an ethnicity, and a culture, all inextricably fused and intertwined. There have been a number of attempts during modern Jewish history to separate one element of Judaism from another, and all have more or less failed notably. We call Jews an ethnic group in part because they often share characteristic genetic markers, such as in the case of kohanim (the priestly tribe), nearly 90% of whom share similar markers in Y-chromosomal haplogroup J1 (markers only shared by about 80% of non-kohen Jews, and very few non-Jews at all), or in the case of Ashkenazi Jews, of whom well over 60% are genetically more prone to develop Tay-Sachs disease than other people. In part, we call Jews an ethnic group because they are traditionally endogamous, and all Jews have always agreed that membership in the Jewish people is transmissible by birth. Although it might blur the line with culture, some have also said that the sharing of a common language and a common religion can also be defining characteristics of an ethnic group. Perhaps the most important cultural aspect of Judaism is that, generally speaking, we say that cultures establish their own membership rules. And although in the case of Judaism, this blurs the boundaries between culture and religion, it is quite clear that from the First Century CE to the Twentieth Century, more or less all Jews agreed that having a Jewish mother meant that the child of that mother was Jewish. Today, the Reform movement of Judaism says that having either parent be Jewish is enough to call the child of those parents Jewish, although this is not accepted by the other movements of Judaism, as there is no traditional basis for such a statement. But even in the case of Reform Judaism, they do not dispute the idea that Judaism is an identity transmissible by birth. Moreover, Jews have always agreed-- at least from the First Century onward-- that once a Jew, always a Jew: whether by birth or by conversion, a Jew is considered Jewish forever by Jewish law and Jewish tradition, regardless of the person's behavior or claims of identity. Even if they reject Jewish beliefs, and go through the rituals of converting to another religion, Judaism still calls such people Jewish-- just non-practicing or non-identifying or (from the religious perspective) sinning Jews. In the past, it is true, such individuals were commonly put in herem, a status not unlike excommunication, or shunning, but such a status is inherently temporary, requiring only the individual's public recantation of his or her former ways (and some also say a trip to the mikveh, or ritual bath) to rejoin normative Jewish society. I believe when you cite the phenomenon of Judaism being incorrectly called a "race," and originate it with some Frenchman a hundred years ago, you might be confusing two issues: the nature of Judaism as an ethnoreligious culture-- a phenomenon noted frequently long before a hundred years ago-- and the development of anti-Semitic racialist theories by racist scientists of the late Nineteenth Century-- these are the same people who brought us the concepts of craniometry, phrenology, and eugenics for controlled racial hygiene. These latter, it is true, mislabeled the Jews a "race," for the purposes of further anti-Semitism, but their canards ought not to be mistaken for the genesis of the legitimate phenomenon of Judaism as an ethnoreligious culture. Discussions of Jews and Jewish cultural and religious phenomena are extant in literature as far back as Roman times, including mentions in Suetonius, Socrates of Constantinople, and Procopius, as well as later in commentaries on the Theodosian Code. A number of ancient and medieval writers, especially among the Church Fathers, made comments concerning the Jews, their society and culture, and the difficulty of getting Jews to convert to Christianity, since in doing so they gave up not only their religion but their entire sociocultural experience (my phrasing, not theirs). Needless to say, Jewish literature is itself very clear on the subject. There are, as Xazy already pointed out, oblique references to ethnic and cultural integrity in the Torah. Certainly, Rabbinic literature (the materials composed during and around the authoring of the Talmud, in the first five centuries of the Common Era) makes frequent mention of Judaism as a "people," and discusses at length the factors and qualities of Jewish identity. Indeed, the term "the Jewish People" has become common parlance over the past 2,000 years-- a terminology not applied to adherents of other Western religions, and for clear reasons. The idea of Judaism as an ethnoreligious culture is not entirely unique. Many Native American nations would qualify for such a definition, and some of the Hindu religions are inextricably interlinked with membership in certain tribes or clans, from certain areas. A number of sub-Saharan African religions are also peculiar to specific tribal groups from a specific locale. Among the Western religions, it is true that Judaism is the strictest definition of an ethnoreligious culture, but many scholars have proposed that Islam may also be an ethnoreligious culture, since it is also passed on by birth, and shares several other key characteristics with Judaism; although if it is an ethnoreligious culture, its social boundaries are much more permeable than those of Judaism. As a fellow Jew, I'm sorry to hear that your Jewish identity displeases you, Hal. But by the definitions of the Jewish people, which are commonly held and respected by non-Jews also, you're a Jew, whether you're atheist or not. And hell, being an atheist certainly hasn't stopped lots of Jews from embracing certain aspects of their Jewish identity: most of the founding Zionists who began the State of Israel were atheists, who were none the less proud of their Jewish identities. Regardless, the point is, according to all the traditional definitions of the Jewish people, you are a Jew. What you do with your life is, of course, your own business: nobody will come around and try to force you to interact with Jewish society, or try to make you practice Jewish religion, or to take any pride in your Jewish identity at all. But it's important that you make a distinction between the issue of Jewish identity as a whole and how that is constructed by the Jewish people and understood by the rest of the world in history, and your own feelings about your identity and your choice to reject it. The latter is entirely your business, and no one should ever say otherwise. The former is something that affects all of the rest of us; and there is enough controversy in the Jewish community right now with identity, given the shenanigans of the Reform movement, and the crisis of assimilation in modern society, that more vituperation-- to say nothing of misinformation-- is deeply counterproductive for the rest of us. I really hope you don't take offense at this: I like your posts very much, and you seem like an awesome person. And I don't want to be the guy who gets in your face over religion and cultural identity, I really don't. But, as someone who is a professional student of Judaism, I feel like it's really important for me to say these things.
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08-20-2008, 12:05 PM | #36 (permalink) |
Eponymous
Location: Central Central Florida
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When asked, I say that both my parents were Jewish and I have a great deal of pride in my heritage.
Period. It used to irk me when someone would ask me if I was "Spanish" or "Jewish". I don't view it as a race, but it's obvious that depending where you sit, it's going to look different. If someone wants to know if I'm a practicing Jew, I'll tell them what they want to know. If they want to choose a label for me, there are plenty of others that fit me quite well.
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08-20-2008, 12:11 PM | #37 (permalink) | |||
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08-20-2008, 12:13 PM | #38 (permalink) |
Currently sour but formerly Dlishs
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i couldnt agree more. i havent felt more australian than i do since i moved to another country
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08-20-2008, 12:17 PM | #39 (permalink) |
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Location: People's Republic of KKKalifornia
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There is no such thing as race.
There are ethnicities and cultures. Jews are semitic I suppose but quite diverse. Very much so in fact. My time in Israel tells me it is near impossible to pick out "jews" by their phenotypical features. From pasty white Ashkenazis (the ones I'm familiar with having grown up in the northeast), to Ethiopians, to Asians, and the lovely bronze Mediterranean beauties, Israelis or "jews" run the gamut in terms of phenotype and "race". When it comes to religion, Jews are also varied in their belief. Whether Hasidic, Orthodox, liberal, reform or secular, even Jews themselves have a difficult time coming together. Besides the Arab/Muslim threat, this is one of the biggest issues facing Israel today. Hal, what's wrong with people asking you if you're Spanish or Mexican based on your last name? It's a fair and innocent question yes? And why are you offended by Jewish stereotypes but not other stereotypes?
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08-20-2008, 12:23 PM | #40 (permalink) | |
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