When Ricki moved into her new ground-floor apartment in New York City less than a year ago, she felt perfectly comfortable placing a mezuzah on the front door for all who passed through the lobby to see.
Today she feels less sanguine about that choice.
Ricki hasn’t removed the mezuzah, but she has asked the building’s management to put bars on her windows. And she’s still considering taking down the Jewish symbol.
“When I put it up I was really proud of it,” Ricki said, declining to use her last name due to privacy concerns. “I’m not embarrassed of being Jewish, I knew when I put it up that people would see it. But I really didn’t think twice about it.”
She’s not alone in having second thoughts now.
This week, Jews across the United States have been attacked because of the fighting in Israel and Gaza. In Los Angeles, pro-Palestinian attackers threw punches and bottles at diners at a sushi restaurant. In New York’s heavily Jewish Diamond District, protesters of Israel threw fireworks from a car amid a violent street altercation.
As footage of those attacks and others spreads online, American Jews say they are feeling a renewed anxiety around identifying themselves publicly as Jews. Some are taking off their kippas or Star of David necklaces. Others, like Ricki, are considering the removal of their mezuzahs. Some are mulling whether it’s safe to walk into synagogue.
This week, American Jews feared they could be targeted due to an association, real or imagined, with Israel and its actions regarding the Palestinians. For some American Jews, that fear is manifesting in decisions to tamp down their public displays of Jewishness as a way to protect themselves.
“On the one hand I want to be a proud Jew and express to the world that that’s something I’m passionate about,” said Drew Feldman, a theater director and writer who has taken to wearing a baseball cap more often in recent days rather than his kippa due to the tension he feels around the conflict in Israel. “On the other hand, the Torah says we have to put life above all else.”
Feldman, who spent the past several months living in Tennessee, first started wearing a kippa regularly in 2015 as he became more interested in his Judaism and more observant. He recently called his rabbi to discuss whether it would be appropriate to stop wearing it for a while.
1 comment:
What happen to, "Don't be Racist?" Those proclaiming to be against Jewish populace from the Gaza Strip, including so called Hamas, Jihadist Palestinians punks, are they not being ignorant Racist Criminals?
Geez, to most folks, not only are Hamas or other hater's showing how stupid they are, but it shows how much evil they possess in their souls; They must be miserable human-beings, doubt they even like themselves, IMO! When they do acts of violence they are mere Criminals needing Jail or whatever puts them out of their misery, pathetic souls! Oh, Israel does have the right to defend Israel, expect no less! Prayers for peace, for hearts of stone from evil people to soften, and for those hater's in America to find something constructive to do rather than act so stupid, and if violent then to be arrested!! The human race seems to be going backwards to cave days with acting like animals rather than rational folks with half a brain, IMO!
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