T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
150.1 | Not yet Jack | NONODE::CHERSON | Imagination tires before nature | Tue Jun 24 1986 13:35 | 16 |
| There has never been a restriction on whether you had passed through
a Conservative or Reform conversion, this is at the crux of the
issue of "who is a Jew".
I am not a convert, but when I made Aliyah I was asked to produce
a document(a "mismach") that I was a Jew, and the generations of
my family were Jewish. The reason for this was solely in the mind
of the petty clerk at the office of the interior ministry in Afula.
In fact a girl from England accompanied me and also applied for
citizenship, she received it without having to prove her Jewishness.(a
strange term touse I admit).
Well my parents had to go to the Vaad Harabonim her in Boston, and
get this mismach. Needless to say it was a giant pain in the ass.
David
|
150.2 | Clarification of earlier report | CURIE::GOLD | Jack E. Gold, MRO3 | Wed Jun 25 1986 09:12 | 11 |
| I listened to Kol Yisrael agian. Apparently the Interior Minister
want s to put the word Convert on the identity cards of all converts
to Judaism. The cabinet is to debate this shortly.
What is the identity card used for? Is it like our drivers licenses;
used for indentification only, or is there some other use?
I don't know what the Interior Minister's motivation is, but he
sure will upset a lot of people with this ruling if it passes!
Jack
|
150.3 | What's you process ID? | TAV02::NITSAN | Nitsan Duvdevani, Digital Israel | Wed Jun 25 1986 09:54 | 6 |
| > What is the identity card used for? Is it like our drivers licenses;
> used for indentification only, or is there some other use?
It is used, for exmaple, when you wanna get married, or (le'havdil) get
burried --- see 103.24
|
150.4 | CONVERTS ANON | IOSG::LEVY | | Fri Jun 27 1986 05:27 | 12 |
| Hi,
I have no sources but I'm sure that I've been told that it is wrong
to refer to the fact that someone is a convert to Judaism.
Can anyone help fill me in please?
Malcolm IOSG::LEVY or LEVY@A1@THRINT
|
150.5 | How about "Jews by Choice?" | BAGELS::SREBNICK | David Srebnick, NCSS, LKG1-3/B19 | Fri Jun 27 1986 08:43 | 4 |
| I don't know what authority you cite. I do know that there is a move
to call those who have converted to Judaism "Jews By Choice." In the
view of those who use this term (specifically, the Rabbi at my shul in
Bridgeport, CT) it more accurately describes the nature of such people.
|
150.6 | Remember what the Germans used to do | NONODE::CHERSON | Imagination tires before nature | Fri Jun 27 1986 09:44 | 22 |
| I've been off-site for a few days, so I'm trying to catch up with
all this. If the interior ministry goes ahead and decides to include
the reference to conversion, then they should keep in mind a practice
used by the Nazis during the '30's.
According to my father-in-law, who left Germany then, the Nazis
altered every Jew's passport to include a "middle" name. This "middle"
name was either Isaac or Isidore, therefore the intent was to
definitely identify the person as a Jew.
Mr. Peretz (interior minister) should remember this practice before
endorsing the current proposal. One other fact that he should keep
in mind, is that American Jews, whether converts or not, are not
exactly beating down the door to make Aliyah. Intentionally making
problems for a convert who wishes to become a citizen is an act
that defies the very soul of Zionism.
When I lived in Israel I knew many Jewish converts who made Aliyah,
and to the best of my knowledge, they're still there and I'm back
here.
David
|
150.7 | Remember the yellow stars ! | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Fri Jun 27 1986 09:47 | 4 |
|
If you stab him, does not the Jew bleed ?
|
150.8 | Was Adam from another planet ? | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Fri Jun 27 1986 09:48 | 4 |
|
Really, this is kind of silly, isn't everyone a Jew ?
|
150.9 | loshon hora? | HYDRA::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Fri Jun 27 1986 11:19 | 31 |
| re: .4
> I have no sources but I'm sure that I've been told that it is wrong
> to refer to the fact that someone is a convert to Judaism.
>
> Can anyone help fill me in please?
One (not the only) reason: One does not refer to the fact that
someone has converted to Judaism in a similar way that one
doesn't mention that so-and-so is a baal tshuvah, etc.
Why?
An illustrative example: "Oh, I remember so-and-so before he became
religious. He and I used to go out and eat clams and oysters
and chase women on Friday nights."
That could be a totally true statement. However, that sort of statement
is called "speaking loshon hora", i. e., categorically saying something
about someone else which IS true but not necessarily complementary,
so to speak (or worse...). You can see the implications.
(This doesn't have to be nearly as extreme as the case
I made up above. And I'm not implying that saying something about
someone else which is NOT true is "ok". That's another subject...)
There are a fair amount of halacha on this subject. There are
a number of good books in English on it as well.
/don feinberg
|
150.10 | | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Fri Jun 27 1986 12:08 | 3 |
| Re. 6.
The passports (or other identification papers) of women, were altered
to specify SARAH as a middle name.
|
150.11 | Identification | ELWOOD::SIMON | | Mon Jun 30 1986 12:33 | 6 |
| Re: .6
It was really sofistication. My passport in the USSR just simply
and modestly said right below my name: "Jewish". And no guessing.
Leo
|
150.12 | Israel is many nations... | TAV02::NITSAN | Nitsan Duvdevani, Digital Israel | Tue Jul 01 1986 01:46 | 6 |
| > . . . My passport in the USSR just simply
> and modestly said right below my name: "Jewish". And no guessing.
Here in Israel, in my ID card, right below my name, I have "Jewish" as well.
Others may have "Arab" for example. One of my friends has "Holland" (Dutch)
under his name.
|
150.13 | Discrimination? | ELWOOD::SIMON | | Tue Jul 01 1986 21:56 | 11 |
| Is there a difference in treatment of those who are "Jewish" and
"Arab" in their ID's? I am talking about official attitude, from
the authorities, since I understand that the public in general may
have their likes, dislikes and just outright prejudices. Are there
laws agains racial or national discrimination? And if yes, how
effective they are? In the USSR all people are equal, somehow
Jews always have problems within the system.
I am not planning Aliah, but do I want to visit Israel!
Leo
|
150.14 | If x=y and y=z then x=z | TAV02::NITSAN | Nitsan Duvdevani, Digital Israel | Wed Jul 02 1986 01:56 | 30 |
| Let me try to explain (facts not opinions):
o There are no (and never intended to be) "official discriminations".
*Basically* we are all equal (I'm not refering just to Jews vs. Arabs,
but to the subject in general).
o There ARE differences in treatment of those who are "xxxx" and those
who are "yyyy", mostly when xxxx=Jewish. The differences are in two
main categories:
- Security. Some jobs (involving national security etc.) are offered
to "xxxx" much more than to "yyyy", if any. Another side of this
subject is the service in the army.
- Laws handled by the religous authorities (i.e., marriage etc.) may
be handled by different OFFICIAL authorities for different "xxxx"
or may cause a lot of difficulties when conflicting with that ID
data field.
o Laws agains racial or national discrimination, ahmmm, this is a very
sensitive subject these days in our "Knesset". They haven't been able
to pass such law for months now, mainly because of the rejection by the
religious parties.
> I am not planning Aliah, but do I want to visit Israel!
Hope you can make it. Note that everything said here was not intended
to criticize, just to explain.
Nitsan
|
150.15 | back to the previous subject of this note... | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Jul 08 1986 13:34 | 11 |
| (Back to the subject of several replies ago...) I don't know if
it is officially considered incorrect or not, but I think it is
UNFAIR to someone to constantly point out that so-and-so is a convert
(Jew-by-choice, or whatever); it labels the person as being
"different". I remember having one woman pointed out to me several
times at the schul my husband used to belong to when he lived in
Conencticut) as the "only successful convert" the rabbi there claimed
to have converted (he was a little old man in those days; this was
an orthodox synagogue, of course). Poor lady! I would rather have
had her introduced to me as "Mrs. So-and-so" rather than simply
labelled, as if she had any choice over who her mother was.
|