Daily Podcasts Video Research

Why I Am Not a Jew of Color

JL;DR SUMMARY Exploring the complexities surrounding the term 'Jew of Color,' this article reflects on the author's personal journey of rejecting this label despite meeting its perceived criteria. A way out west there was a fella, fella I want to tell you about, fella by the name of Jeff Lebowski. At least, that was the handle his lovin' parents gave him, but he never had much use for it himself. This Lebowski, he called himself the Dude. Now, Dude, that's a name no one would self-apply where I come from. But then, there was a lot about the Dude that didn't make a whole lot of sense to me. And a lot about where he lived, likewise. But then again, maybe that's why I found the place s'durned innarestin'.

JL;DR members get full summaries of all articles in the archive, including this one. Donate & start reading »

Tags

IdentityJewish CommunityIntersectionalityDiscriminationInclusionDemographicsSystemic RacismImmigrantJew Of ColorRacialization

Places mentioned

Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
"My father, whose brown skin reflects his Argentinian and Syrian roots, turned pale."
Selma, Mississippi, United States
"A semi-recent and striking example of this was the omission of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel from the 2014 film Selma."
United States
"In 2019, the Jews of Color Field Building Initiative published the Counting Inconsistencies report, which delivered two key findings about Jews of color (loosely defined by the researchers as non-white Jews)."
California, United States
"The percentage seemed implausibly high to me, a scholar of Sephardic Jews in the United States."
New York, United States
"This perspective was one I heard frequently when, years ago, I conducted research interviews with black and Jewish civic leaders in New York."

Support this source

This item was indexed and curated by Cairo, JL;DR's web crawler.
Cairo Item ID 45717
Cairo Source ID 29
Retrieved 2025-03-04 05:32:07 UTC
Curated 2025-03-04 08:32:33 UTC