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Ellie Hyman

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Ellie Hyman,

Ellie Hyman

Opinion

How I burst the Jewish bubble

September 16, 2016 08:45
3 min read

Jewish teenagers often live in a bubble, according to the Chief Rabbi. I certainly was, this time last year. But, while all my friends went off to perhaps the ultimate "Jewniversity", all to be living in the same halls and some even in the same apartment together, I moved to a city in which the Jewish population was minuscule.

This was something I'd considered when applying to university and in fact I chose Durham partly because of, rather than in spite of the lack of Jews. Having grown up, first in Israel and then at a Jewish school, everybody and everything I knew was within the Jewish community; yes, the Jewish bubble. And I was so ready to burst out of it.

I knew there was so much more to life than barmitzvahs and Jewish princesses and Friday- night dinners and I wanted, so desperately, to experience for myself what was out there. Judaism wasn't a big part of my life, so why should I have been at all afraid to lose it?

The first week was plain sailing; in between excessive drinking and obscene hangovers, there was little time for contemplative thought. After a single visit to the JSoc to please my parents, I didn't think much more of it.