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Our love turned to hate

Michael Levi is Jewish. His partner was not. They didn't think it would matter. But they were wrong

November 16, 2017 14:35
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5 min read

Growing up in Britain with an atheist Israeli father, I never thought that my Jewish identity would be a problem when it came to dating. However, towards the end of a five-year relationship with my non-Jewish girlfriend, I realised that it most certainly did.

Whilst studying in London I met Ashley, a wonderful woman with whom I quickly fell in love. She was smart, she was beautiful, and she was everything I thought I wanted. She was from Dorset in the south of England and her father managed a farm. Culturally, she was from a different world, but that didn’t matter because we were young and we were in love.

Once things got serious we met each other’s families and she came to Israel with me to meet my grandparents. My grandmother made efforts to conceal her disapproval. However, she still slipped in the occasional, “Michael, perhaps you’d be better off dating a Jewish woman”. Each time she’d say this I’d simply laugh off her concern. We were in love after all, surely her background didn’t matter?

After university, we both got jobs near Oxford and we moved into a small apartment together. We never really encountered any problems in our relationship until she told me about her plans for us to wed at a beautiful ceremony in her family’s local church in Dorset. The thought of dragging my Jewish grandmother from Israel to a Christian wedding ceremony in Dorset was absurd. It would never happen. I had always assumed we would have a secular wedding, if we chose to have one at all. She clearly had other plans.