In another thread while helping bmolsson correct some confused thinking the question of Jewish status came up. The question basically became: what is a Jew? Now this is an old and seemingly complex question. One traditional answer is: a Jew is any who is born to a Jewish mother. This of course begs the question: not explaining why the mother is Jewish save to repeat the stated refrain. Many have seen being a Jew as a racial question. The difficulty here, aside from race itself being problematic, is there are so many 'racial' groups that identify as Jewish. There are White European Jews, Brown Arab Jews, Black Ethiopian Jews, Yellow Asian Jews etc. Some label Jewishness as cultural. This again faces the difficulty of there being multiple "Jew" cultures: Ashkenazi, Sephardi, Mizrahi, Temani are some of the standard divisions though there are other more exotic varieties. Many of the stated views assume the label Jew is a fixed position: once a Jew always a Jew, regardless of the person's joining or aligning with any other category. I believe this is a flawed notion.
It is certainly the case that many discriminated minorities often begin to identify with the rhetoric of their oppressors. I think this is one of the reasons some of the above ideas have parlance even within the self labeled Jewish community. So, what is a Jew? I believe a Jew is someone who identifies with Judaism. It is therefore a religious category. Should a fellow decide to convert to Judaism they are then a Jew. Should a Jew decide to join another faith, say Catholicism the person is then a Catholic and no longer a Jew. From this perspective there is no such thing as a atheist-Jew, or Christian-Jew or Muslim-Jew any more then there could be a Christian-Muslim.
I am interested in others' thoughts.
Bookmarks