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Emma Shevah

ByEmma Shevah, Emma Shevah

Opinion

Conversion: time to end the stigma

There is still much secrecy around being a convert if you are Orthodox, says Emma Shevah

May 26, 2017 09:48
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3 min read

Last month, I did something I never thought I’d do — not publicly, anyway. Until recently, I wouldn’t have entertained the idea. But in April, I wrote in the JC about Pesach in the Himalayas, and revealed a secret I’d been harbouring for 18 years. Which is that I’m a convert.

That might not sound very radical, but voicing it was a huge thing. In the realms of Orthodoxy, converts tend to keep themselves very deliberately under the radar. Close friends of mine knew, and everyone else was on a need-to-know basis. I don’t think my rabbi knows even now because it hasn’t been necessary to tell him yet. Two friends only divulged they’d converted after learning I had, then asked me to keep it quiet.

This concealment is less common in progressive strands of Judaism: I know very public Masorti converts, and their so-what attitude is refreshing. But in progressive circles, mindsets are more open generally. In Orthodoxy, where the law is the law and boundaries are strictly demarcated, it matters who you are, what you’re doing and how you’re doing it. But sadly, even if you’re doing it right, there’s still a stigma surrounding conversion.

The question is why. According to Rabbi Eliezer, the Torah warns of wrongdoing against the ger (the Hebrew word for stranger but also for convert) 36 times; others say 46. The prohibition of mixing meat and milk is hinted at only once. The Torah goes even further, commanding us to “love” the stranger, so you’d think converts would be embraced. Especially as they face a double-whammy of difficulty: converts’ families are often angry, hurt and insulted. A good friend told me when her husband’s father converted, his father refused to speak to him again. When one convert married, her new mother-in-law — a US member — made her promise never to tell anyone. If the situation was reversed and we learned a mother-in-law made a Jewish girl promise never to tell anyone she was Jewish, we’d find it disgraceful.