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Theatre

Could I ever really be happy if I marry out?

The author and star of a play about the love affair between a Jewish girl and a Muslim man asks…

January 15, 2015 14:00
Daniella Isaacs

By

Daniella Isaacs,

Daniella Isaacs

5 min read

To reach the ripe old age of 102 years is no mean feat. But to reach it without a partner at your side must be even more of a challenge. Around a year ago, I asked my wonderfully eccentric great aunt if she had any regrets as she entered her second century. With a melancholic smile, she uttered: "I wish I had a family".

Curiosity beat sensitivity and I probed whether Nancy ever had the chance. She spoke of a few men who had tried to entice her along the way, but the relationship that interested me most occurred when she was my age. During the interwar years, she fell in love with a non-Jewish man who proposed to her. She shortly claimed that memory failed her and she couldn't remember much of the relationship. Even so, I recognised a sadness within her that didn't manifest with any of the other relationships she spoke of. She explained that "back then, if you were with a 'non-Jewish', the whole town knew about it." Fearing the way her friends, family and community would react, she politely rejected the proposal. How different things might have been if she had just said yes.

Feeling sad, disappointed and almost angry at my aunt for not following her heart and wedding this lovely man, I wondered if my reaction would be any different.

Having been brought up in a loving, tight-knit North-London family, having spent summers in the National Youth Theatre surrounded by other actors from a wide variety of backgrounds, having attended Bristol University where I was one of two Jewish girls in a predominantly privately educated set, surely I'd feel no reservations about going out with a non-Jewish boy?