9-Vshervington-chava-avatar Opinion For black Orthodox Jews, constant racism is exhausting Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | August 7, 2015 Sign up for Weekday J and get the latest on what's happening in the Jewish Bay Area. When I was 24, an Orthodox matchmaker tried to set me up on a date with a man older than my parents. When I objected, she told me, “Stop being so picky. Not many guys are willing to consider a black girl.” As an African American Orthodox Jew, this was hardly my first encounter with the questionable treatment that I and my fellow Jews of color endure. “Why is the goy here?” one black Jewish parent overheard when taking her child to a Jewish children’s event. At one yeshiva in Brooklyn, the mother of a biracial student was asked to stay away from the school because it made the other parents uncomfortable. An African American acquaintance told me he overheard a worshipper at morning minyan talk about how he didn’t want to daven with a “shvartze,” which he said just as my acquaintance was putting on his tefillin. Orthodox society is a beautiful community dedicated to charity, Torah learning and growth through observance of mitzvahs. I believe we’re better than this racism suggests. As a member of a racial minority, it’s possible to be integrated into the Orthodox community, find your spouse and successfully educate your children in yeshivas, but it requires an abundance of self-confidence, tact and tenacity. It takes confidence to keep going to synagogues when every time you show up to a new minyan you’re not sure if they’ll count you for the required quorum. It takes tact to politely rebuff yet another inquiry about your “journey to Judaism” or “why you read Hebrew so well.” It takes tenacity to keep going to kosher restaurants and Orthodox-run stores when all eyes gravitate toward you the moment you walk through the door. Orthodox Jews of color constantly have to demonstrate our authenticity and belonging. It’s frustrating, exhausting and, frankly, heartbreaking. While we may not be used to seeing African American, Latino or Asian Jews in our midst, we must treat them as we do other Jews, and create a community that is welcoming and inclusive. It’s time to reassess our self-image. The presence of African Americans and other racial and ethnic minorities in the Orthodox community, whether they are born Jewish or they converted, is growing rapidly. We need to start paying attention. The Jewish community is hardly alone when it comes to the problem of racism, nor are racist attitudes limited to the Orthodox. But as an African American Orthodox Jew, I feel a special obligation to confront racist behavior in my own community. There are many causes for the racism that exists among Orthodox Jews. Because of the Orthodox community’s insulation to some extent from secular society, the culture of political correctness that has permeated the general culture hasn’t achieved the same level inside the Orthodox world. Many Orthodox Jews live in neighborhoods where relations with African Americans are tense, and their experiences have cemented negative stereotypes. Even good people don’t understand how their behavior may offend minorities because they have so little contact and interaction with African Americans. It’s time for change. The Rabbinical Council of America noted in a recent report on conversion reform that rabbis should advise potential minority converts that they likely will have to overcome racism in the community if they are to successfully integrate as Orthodox Jews. I applaud the RCA for recognizing the problem and seeking to support minority converts. Ignoring racism in our community runs contrary to the Torah values we hold dear. The prohibition against malicious gossip, or lashon hara, should make us sensitive about using ethnic and racial slurs. Parents of color should not have to worry if their children will be accepted into yeshivas or if they will be mistreated once they are enrolled. Reminding Jews about their life prior to being observant or converting is a violation of Jewish law, so asking every African American Jew “how they came to Judaism” is totally inappropriate. Marrying and creating a Jewish family is central to Jewish life, yet matchmakers routinely refuse to set up African American Jews on dates. While strong and supportive in many ways, the Orthodox community is also pretty homogeneous, and dealing with difference is not one of its strengths. The organization I lead, the Jewish Multiracial Network, strives to make Jewish ethnic and racial diversity fully embraced in American Jewish life across the denominational spectrum. Here are a few simple steps the Orthodox community can take: • Create welcoming environments by using inclusive language and ceasing derogatory speech and the use of racial and ethnic slurs in our schools and shuls. Torah observance must result in kindness and sensitivity toward others, especially other Jews, regardless of race, or else we are perpetuating baseless hatred. • Change the way we educate our children. Rather than denigrating outsiders as a way to elevate ourselves, we need to focus more on how everyone is created in the image of God. • Refrain from quizzing Jews of color about their conversion status or biography. This is simple common courtesy, or derech eretz. Orthodox Jews of color do not need a special welcome mat — just acceptance and consideration. Chava Shervington is president of the New York-based Jewish Multiracial Network. J. Correspondent Also On J. Israel US Jews 'Need to Talk' with Israelis. But why? Berkeley exhibition reveals many faces of Orthodox Jews at work U.S. ‘I think it’s Israel’: How Orthodox Jews became Republicans Opinion The shrinking Jewish middle and how to expand it Subscribe to our Newsletter I would like to receive the following newsletters: Weekday J From Our Sponsors (helps fund our journalism) Your Sunday J Holiday Bytes