Shavuot celebrates the revelation of Sinai and the giving of the Torah. It started as a harvest festival and has now morphed, as many holidays do, into something more cerebral and…of course…filled with glorious food.
This holiday is marked by a tribute to dairy. Why? Well, we’re not exactly sure. There’s mystical reasons, and historical reasons, but mainly it’s because the cultures of the time were producing cheese during this season, and so came the tradition of eating dairy on the holiday.
But Shavuot is more than just food. It’s a time when Jews engage in intense Torah debate all night long. Imagine tons of people, sitting around binge eating on cheesecake, drinking, reading and arguing. It’s rad.
The Book of Ruth is a big part of Shavuot as well. We read Ruth because Ruth’s coming to Israel took place around the time of Shavuot, and her conversion to Judaism is a great analogy for the Jewish people accepting the Torah. acceptance into the Jewish faith was analogous of the acceptance of the Jewish people of God’s Torah. It also helps that the Book of Ruth ends with the genealogy of David, and there’s a midrash (myth) that says that David died on Shavuot.
I hope you have an awesome Shavuot. I know I will!
What Is Shavuot?
Sex Changes and Jewish Conversion
I had a great realization the other day that transgendered people and Jews By Choice (JBC) are the ultimate allies.
Born In The Wrong Body
Ask most JBCs about their decision to convert to Judaism and you’ll get the reply, “I felt Jewish.” This sense “inside” that a person is Jewish is very close to the feeling that trans people feel when deciding to transition into their life as the opposite sex from which they were born. A trans person does not feel that they are “changing” so much as they feel they are living as who they really are. As with JBCs, there is a belief that the soul has finally realized its true destiny by living Jewishly.
Altering The Body
With trans people, there is a clear desire to alter the physical body to meet the needs of the person’s psychological gender. Sex changes, mastectomy, facial reconstruction, laser hair removal and simple things like makeup and clothing choices are a way that trans people resolve their gender needs.
In the same way, it is demanded of converts to Judaism that the process of immersing in water (mikvah) and for men, circumcision or the alternate ritual (hatafat dam brit) be taken to finalize the Jewish process.
Meeting Societal Needs
Both JBCs and trans people receive scrutiny from the larger society, attempting to gain acceptance in their “new” identity. Within their own communities, this process involves a Rabbinical Court (beit din) for Jews and for transgendered people, the Standards of Care, a psychological process developed by gender identity pioneer Dr. Harry Benjamin.
Even when someone finishes the physical transformation deemed necessary to become Jewish or change gender identities, particular elements of the community will continue to ostracize these people. Even though Judaism has a long standing tradition stemming from the Talmud that a convert should never be “pointed out” or made to feel less in the community, the reality is that converts to Judaism are never quite “in the secret club”. Too with trans people is there a natural “otherness” quality that society cannot shake from its collective need to see gender in one box or another. This leads to a bigger issue: breaking binary.
Breaking Binary
Gender identity, especially in the trans world, is complicated. What is a “tranny dyke” in relationship to a “mtf queer womyn”? What does a “drag king” not have in common with a “cross-dresser”? Included in this issue is the physical aspects of gender identity. If a FTM transsexual has his breasts removed, his face chiseled to be more masculine, grows facial hair, but continues to have a vagina, is this person “truly” male? The same with MTFs: does a penis destroy femininity?
While there are many who believe that the world is broken down into Jews vs. non-Jews, it’s clear that Jewish identity is more involved than that. Beyond labels like reform, conservative and orthodox, there are galaxies of Jewish identities; Baal Teshuva, Conservadox, “Just Jewish”, secular, unaffiliated, Jewish agnostic are a few. And like the physical aspects of transgender-ism, so too do converts to Judaism have similar issues. Does a convert to the Reform tradition who continues to eat bacon but went through the circumcision and mikvah have more “Jewish cred” than someone who joins the growing Humanist Jewish movement through an adoption ceremony instead of the bygone rituals? Does a Reconstructionist who holds a philosophical idea of G-d but rejects the hatafat dam brit have less of a place in the Jewish world than someone who prays (davens) at a Conservative synagogue but is really an atheist?
This, above all others, is what Jews By Choice and trans people challenge: the sense that there is only one right way: in order to be Jewish, you have to perform XYZ ritual and get a consensus among the learned. And once you are “approved” for your new life, you must live it in only a certain way. The same if you are “becoming” a man or a woman.
My only hope is that JBCs and trans people will continue to challenge authority and to stake their claim in both worlds, not just for their sake and the sake of other people in their position, but also to change their worlds around them.
Israel's conversion law could face a serious setback…Need your voice heard!
We saw this today and wanted to share it with all of you. Remember, “Judaism is not theirs alone.” We need to stand up and defend ourselves. Sending an email will only take literally five seconds. I sent three in that time. We can make our voices heard!
-Patrick and Michael
Dear Friends of IRAC,
We write to you today because of a very serious situation that developed here in Israel last night.
We have learned that the Knesset may vote during the coming week on legislation that would make important changes to conversion authorities in Israel and to the Law of Return.
This new law would roll back the clock on all the achievements we have made for Reform and Conservative conversion rights in Israel: not only losing recognition for Reform and Conservative conversions in Israel, but even completely redefining who is a Jew. From now on the power to perform conversions would rest solely with the Chief Rabbinate – which only recognizes Orthodox conversions.
At your next Jewish gathering, take a look at the people around you: chances are good that you are sitting next to someone who would no longer be considered a Jew in Israel.
This decision, which impacts the very definition of who is a Jew for all of Klal Yisrael, is being made by a few politicians who happen to be in power during the 18th Knesset. They are not at all in conversation with world Jewry, on whom this decision will have a major impact.
There are millions of Jews in the Diaspora, and the current Israeli leadership needs to hear from all of you – and right away – if we are going to stop this.
The various arms of our Movement are asking you to send urgent messages of protest to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and your local ambassador.
IRAC is working intensively on lobbying efforts with Members of Knesset, but we need the strength of your numbers to remind those who promote this bill that Israel and Judaism is not theirs alone.
Please send the attached letter right now to the Prime Minister and your ambassador, and forward this urgent call to your friends and family.
For more information on the conversion bill, click here
Please click here for the Union of Reform Judaism’s press release.
Prime Minister Netanyahu: Prime.Minister’sOffice@it.
U.S. Ambassador Michael Oren’s office: info@washington.mfa.gov.il
Sincerely,
Anat Hoffman, Executive Director, Israel Religious Action Center
Rabbi Gilad Kariv, Executive Director, Israel Movement for Progressive Judaism
Note: This will only take like two seconds, to send this email. Do it!
The Honorable Benjamin Netanyahu
Prime Minister of Israel
Office of the Prime Minister
Jerusalem, Israel
Dear Prime Minister Netanyahu,
We write to request your immediate intervention to prevent passage of the legislation being brought forward by MK David Rotem.
We are deeply concerned about the intention to grant the Chief Rabbinate sole control over conversion in Israel. Such legislation would be an open attack on the legitimacy of non-Orthodox Jewry, which composes the majority of world Jewry. In addition, passage of this bill would have the effect of altering the Law of Return, or, at the very least, cause undue hardship to anyone in Israel who come from Diaspora communities and seek to convert in Israel.
While we are supportive of efforts to create greater accessibility to conversion courts in Israel, the overall impact of the Rotem Bill will set back these efforts. Should this bill be enacted, it will exacerbate a widening gap between Diaspora and Israel communities, which we are working very hard to avoid.
Therefore, we believe it is imperative that you, as leader of Israel, and as one who cares deeply about the well-being of Klal Yisrael, intervene and urge immediate withdrawal of this bill.







