For one Israeli living in New York, there’s nothing like celebrating Rosh Hashanah with family back at home. (Illustration/JTA-Lior Zaltzman)
For one Israeli living in New York, there’s nothing like celebrating Rosh Hashanah with family back at home. (Illustration/JTA-Lior Zaltzman)

Last year, in a fit of desperation and loneliness, I booked tickets for a five-day trip to Israel for Rosh Hashanah. I didn’t tell my friends I was coming, as the sole purpose of my travel was to have a holiday dinner with my family.

Financially, logistically and even physically, it was an ill-advised decision, I know. But for my soul, it was the right thing to do.

I left Israel for New York in 2009. I feel at home in my lush Brooklyn neighborhood with its beautiful brownstones, in an apartment my husband and I have filled with paintings and books. I love that the city has so much to offer as far as diverse faces and stories and religions. I love how New Yorkers refuse to meet a stranger’s gaze, but if you drop your wallet or MetroCard on the sidewalk (as, um, I often do) they will come running after you to make sure you retrieve it.

But there are some days when I feel like moving to the U.S. was a huge mistake. These feelings are most acute on the Jewish holidays — especially on Rosh Hashanah.

Celebrating Rosh Hashanah with my family in Israel is the best. We’ve never gone to synagogue; we rarely even mention the fact that it’s the new year.

We stain our hands eating juicy pomegranates; we clear our sinuses by slathering horseradish on my grandmother’s homemade gefilte fish. For the main course we eat all kinds of treyf delicacies like seafood paella and blue crabs, the preparation of which my mom has long perfected, having become fast friends with the local fishermen.

We assure my grandmother and my mother that, yes, there is enough food, and yes, the dishes are just as good as they were last year. But most importantly, we are together, and that fills us all with giddy delight and a certain spiritual awe.

My husband, a nice American Jewish boy, has told me about his own family’s habits on the High Holy Days, particularly the long services at his Kansas City synagogue. He does not seem too gung-ho about celebrating the new year. Sure, he’ll fast on Yom Kippur, but he is happy to forgo any rituals when it comes to Rosh Hashanah.

Once, when we visited his parents on the holiday, I attended synagogue with his mother, just to see what it was like. While the service was warm and filled with music, it felt completely alien. It reminded me of a time a few years ago when I snuck into a Midnight Mass with a few other restless Jews. Certainly I could see the awe that came with such a ritual, but I felt very distinctly that this wasn’t for me.

Like about 40 percent of the Jews in Israel, my family is secular.

My grandfather, the descendant of more than one rabbi, famously (according to family folklore) held cookouts on Yom Kippur. I now live a short walk away from South Williamsburg’s Satmar community, who believe the Holocaust was divine punishment for a lack of religious piety. But to my grandfather, who lost most of his family to the Nazi regime, the only religious epiphany the Holocaust had in store was that no deity would have let such a horror happen. He decided there was no place for religion in his life.

Like about 40 percent of the Jews in Israel, my family is secular.

My family takes being secular very seriously. They scarf down bacon and cheeseburgers. They love going on road trips on Shabbat. For my grandmother’s 70th birthday, we all took a tour of Jerusalem’s many churches, and, encouraged by our tour guide, sang “Jerusalem of Gold” on a rooftop in a haredi Orthodox neighborhood, where the singing voices of women are explicitly forbidden.

What does it mean to be Jewish when you’ve lost your faith? Most secular Israelis consider themselves Israelis first and then Jewish, according to a recent Pew study.

To them, Judaism isn’t about religion — it is about culture, ancestry and history.

When you are an Israeli living in Israel, it is so easy to take your Judaism for granted. Judaism is in the language you speak every day; in a golden Star of David necklace; in the foods of myriad Jewish cultures that intermingled; in the Friday-afternoon rush to get your weekend groceries before the stores close for Shabbat.

But more than anything, it’s in family. And in my family, it means Shabbat dinners where candles don’t get lit and blessings don’t get recited, yet everyone is laughing and talking as roasted eggplant and matzah ball soup are passed around. After centuries of persecution, here we are sitting as a family, strongly anchored and aware of our history, but confident in our future together. Is there anything more Jewish than that?

When you’re an Israeli outside of Israel, it becomes increasingly hard to take Jewish secularism for granted. Certainly I am still Israeli — but I feel disconnected from my culture, my rituals. In America, doing Jewish things usually means making a religious choice, and with so many diverse and open synagogues, the choices do seem abundant.

Secularism, on the other hand, implies a fast track to assimilation — which isn’t my thing, either. You would think that in eight years in the U.S., I would have found some solution that works for me for the Jewish holidays. Yet I still feel just as helpless and lonely whenever September rolls around.

Most of my Israeli friends don’t seem to have solutions, either. Many of them just choose to ignore the Jewish holidays or find a certain comfort in hanging out with other Israelis eating shakshuka at an Israeli restaurant. Some institutions have tried to introduce Israelis to synagogue culture on their own terms.

None of these have felt right to me, nor has celebrating the new year at services, American-style.

So this year, my family is planning something really radical for Rosh Hashanah: Meeting up in Chicago. The gathering will include my parents and brothers, flying in from Israel.

For the holiday meal, we have reserved a large table at a seafood restaurant, replete with treyf delicacies (much to our delight). I suppose I have found a way to keep some traditions alive, after all.

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Lior Zaltzman is the social media editor at 70 Faces Media, a not-for-profit Jewish media organization that includes JTA, Kveller, Jewniverse and more.

5 replies on “I’m Israeli, and Rosh Hashanah in the U.S. just isn’t enough”

  1. Secular “Jews” bragging about their rejection of Judaism: if you were born to Jewish parents, but believe that Judaism is a “man-made superstition”, then you are inevitably on the road to assimilation. For modern day Jews, this is a gradual, but inevitable process. The first generation feels a bit guilty about abandoning Judaism, so they pretend that they are “still somewhat Jewish” by attending synagogue once a year on the High Holidays. The second generation has minimal exposure to Judaism, and marries a gentile, since marrying another Jew is “meaningless”, given that “all religions are basically the same”. The third generation grows up with a Chanuka Bush and a Christmas Tree in December, and soon disappears from Jewish history. From G-d’s viewpoint, this is all OK, since He has given free will to all men. In the end, He only requires “a few good Jews” to keep things going. It is sad, though, since modern science more and more supports Judaism: the “big bang” corresponds to creation from nothingness, and the evolution of the universe is also described in the Torah, but includes “guided evolution” and “intelligent design”, both of which form the most straightforward explanations of why we are here, but which are automatically rejected out of hand by the “enlightened, rational” atheists.

  2. I’ve been to Israel twice, both for extended summer stays in the summer. Which means I’ve never spent Jewish holidays there. But I have spent Shabbat there. And it’s not enough for me. When I am in Israel, I feel connected to the Jewish people in a way that is simply not possible in the United States. Being a country where language, time, and history (however fraught) are Jewish makes me feel at home. At the same time, as an egalitarian, liberal Jew for whom people is not enough, the inability to have my Jewish practice represented in a meaningful way is alienating.
    I find Israeli Judaism lacking: either–as with the author’s practice–there is some bizarre embrace of treyfe as Jewish practice (yeah, I know it’s a thing, but I don’t get it) or it’s haredi Judaism. There is a small, perhaps growing (but perhaps not) middle ground. In the meantime, I’ll stay here, in my American liberal community, where I’ll be chanting Torah and Haftarah, considering the meaning of those words, and fasting on Yom Kippur.

  3. This is one of the most depressing, disgusting articles I’ve read in the “J”; that’s quite an “accomplishment”, Ms Zaltzman. I don’t even know where to start. Someone who rejects Yiddishkeit so blatantly is in need of serious teshuvah. My wish for you this Rosh HaShannah is that your soul will be stirred in the right direction so that you can begin the journey back to your roots, your millenary traditions, and your real self. May Hashem assist you and all your family in this endeavor.

  4. I feel terribly saddened by this article. Aa a secular Jew who grew up in the USA, I was robbed of the beauty of our tradition and found it later in college and after. I returned to real Judaism and cherish Israel. Dont worry about assimilation….on the path you are on…you and your 3800 years of being Jewish is about to end. Its Israel or its death of Judaism. There is no Europe to protect the Jewish values in the shtetl. Israel is the only preservant of the Jewish people. Either come back or perish as a Jew. The Jews there keep a fraudulent version of Torah and they will all fail unless they come to Israel. What Israel offers for the Jew is life. What the exile offers is death. One day if you study Torah properly you will realize it. Israel is our only hope. Public school is a cesspool of assimilation and even yeshiva there is questionable. Nothing in the exile will ever replace Israel. Go back or you will fail in life.

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