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For Young Europeans Discovering Their Roots, Jewishness Is About Cul

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  • For Young Europeans Discovering Their Roots, Jewishness Is About Cul

    FOR YOUNG EUROPEANS DISCOVERING THEIR ROOTS, JEWISHNESS IS ABOUT CULTURE

    Jewish Exponent
    Sept 3 2009

    Participants in Paideia's project-incubator meeting in Stockholm with
    Beto Maya (left), the project manager for the Jerusalem-based ROI,
    a program to foster Jewish innovation

    A lapsed Polish Catholic cites the "Jewish sparks in his soul"
    when explaining his affinity for klezmer and his desire to foster
    intercultural exchange through Jewish music.

    A 25-year-old Hungarian born to intermarried parents and working to
    create an Israeli cultural center in Budapest says he would not be
    crushed if his children decide not to engage in Jewish life.

    An Armenian Christian wants to start a Judaic-studies seminar at an
    Armenian university that would highlight shared elements of Armenian
    and Jewish history.

    A German Jewish journalist who became interested in Judaism through
    an ex-girlfriend aims to start an Internet show focusing on the weekly
    Torah portion and Israeli culture.

    Emerging From the Shadows

    Welcome to the emerging Jewish Europe, where Jewish consciousness
    is rising -- among Jews and gentiles alike -- amid some of the most
    secular societies in the world.

    At a time when religious identity in Europe is at historic lows --
    in Sweden, about 3 percent of citizens attend church regularly --
    once-assimilated Jews are emerging from the shadows and seeking to
    reassert their Jewish identities.

    The trend has been in evidence in Central and Eastern Europe since the
    fall of communism 20 years ago paved the way for many to rediscover
    Jewish roots. But even in Western Europe, the emergence of the European
    Union, coupled with the growing diversity of the region's population,
    has prompted a reassertion of national identities, including among
    Jews.

    "With that sort of multiculturalism, and I think with the united
    Europe, your roots become more important," said Gabriel Urwitz, a
    leader of the Stockholm Jewish community and the chairman of Paideia,
    an academic institute in Stockholm working to promote Jewish culture
    across Europe. "So even people that three generations ago were Jewish
    and knew about it, until quite recently, they never said a word about
    it. Now, all of a sudden, they feel they can somehow search that root,
    and to some extent promote it and find their own way into it."

    The reclaiming of European Jewish identity -- Barbara Spectre,
    Paideia's founding director, calls it "dis-assimilation" -- is on the
    march. But rather than taking on religious forms, dis-assimilation
    among young Europeans often has a distinctly secular quality.

    Many young Europeans embracing Jewish culture come from small
    communities where established Jewish institutions range from weak to
    nonexistent, opportunities for Jewish religious community are minimal,
    and the likelihood that they will marry within the faith is low.

    "They don't have those components, and yet they choose to be Jewish,"
    said Spectre. "The question is, of course, why would one do this? It's
    a tremendously important question. And I think that they can act as
    sort of informants to us, the rest of the Jewish world."

    Jews who fit this profile make up a majority of applicants to Paideia's
    flagship program, a one-year fellowship in Jewish texts that aims
    not only to immerse students in the literature of the Jewish people,
    but to prime them for activist roles in promoting Jewish life across
    Europe. The institute also runs a 10-day project incubator over the
    summer, supported by the European Jewish Fund and UJA-Federation
    of New York, which offers training and networking opportunities to
    social entrepreneurs with projects to invigorate Jewish culture.

    Paideia receives six times as many applicants for the fellowship
    as it accepts, most of them from individuals who were not raised as
    identified Jews. Some aren't Jewish at all, but are welcomed because
    they have demonstrated a commitment to advancing Jewish culture.

    Marcell Kenesei from Budapest completed both programs. A self-described
    secular Jew, Kenesei was born to a Jewish father who knew nothing
    about his heritage. Kenesei, whose mother is not Jewish, was sent
    to a Jewish high school to avoid the anti-Semitic harassment his
    older brother had endured in Hungarian public school. As a result,
    Kenesei grew interested in Judaism.

    As he developed his identity, Kenesei says that he found he had to
    overcome the sense that reclaiming Judaism was a "sickness" and the
    province of "losers" unable to find their place in post-Communist
    Hungary.

    Today, he is working to establish an Israeli cultural center in
    Budapest.

    "I felt this gap in the family that we have this Jewish thing, but
    nobody knows anything about it, so it was sort of a mission for me
    to discover this part of the family and bring things back," he said.

    Paideia, formed in 2001, is the product of a commission formed by the
    Swedish government in the 1990s to investigate the country's role
    during the Holocaust. Though the commission determined that Sweden
    bore little legal responsibility for the loss of Jewish property,
    the government opened discussions with the Stockholm Jewish community
    to find a way to make some sort of moral restitution.

    The result was Paideia, whose name comes from the Greek concept that
    culture can be transmitted through education rather than bloodline. It
    was a notion appealing to a Swedish government then at the forefront
    of efforts to transmute dozens of national identities into a single
    pan-European union.

    But it also has particular implications for Jews living in a place
    steeped in secularism; increasingly cosmopolitan and heterogeneous;
    and, after the tribulations of the last century, often unable to
    trace their origins along purely Jewish lines.

    Paideia believes that participants committed to Jewish culture can
    acquire a post-ethnic Jewish identity through study, rather than
    conversion. That's why the fellowship is open to non-Jews interested
    in Jewish life.

    Piotr Mirski, who completed the fellowship program this year, is a
    klezmer guitarist from Lublin, a Polish city whose population once was
    40 percent Jewish. Though not Jewish himself -- Mirski was raised as
    a Polish Catholic, but left the church -- the experience of separation
    from his homeland's dominant religious group offers some insight into
    the experience of Polish Jewry, he says.

    "I realized that I shared somehow the experience of Jewish people
    in Poland, and it drives me to make something against it, against
    exclusion," explained Mirski. "My main goal is to build bridges
    between people."

    His project, which he calls "Jazz Midrash: The Hebrew Songbook,"
    aims to produce two CDs, including one with original Polish-language
    songs based on Jewish stories. Mirski wants to promote the book and
    CDs with a series of street festivals in Polish towns that once were
    centers of Jewish life.

    While some are skeptical that Jewish culture absent any religious
    component is sufficient to sustain Jewish identity across the
    generations, Paideia participants insist it is.

    "Culture and history is much stickier glue in Europe than it is in the
    United States," said Shawn Landres, an American who staffed Paideia's
    recent incubator program, which recently ended.

    Still, Spectre acknowledges that sometimes she wonders whether cultural
    projects will be enough to sustain Jewish identity in the long run.

    "A nonethnic definition of Judaism changes the whole dynamic," she
    said."If you mean by culture the way a European would define it --
    being literate -- if we're talking about forming communities of
    learning, I would claim that's the sustainable element in Judaism."
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