The Jerusalem Post

Bay Area Jews shown as diverse, flexible – and more distant from institutio­ns and Israel

- • By BEN SALES (Courtesy)

Andrew Kleinerman says he and his wife Amy share a “West Coast brand of Judaism.” The Kleinerman­s live in San Francisco, attend services about once a month and have traveled to Israel. Andrew is Jewish, Amy is not. Amy, who is Chinese-American, is thinking about converting to Judaism. One of the congregati­ons where they’ve felt most welcome is The Kitchen, a Jewish group that calls itself a “religious start-up.”

Increasing­ly, families like the Kleinerman­s are the face of the Jewish community in the Bay Area, the fourth largest in the country. According to a major new study, a third of Bay Area Jews are between the ages of 18 to 34. The rate of interfaith marriage among the group is nearly two-thirds, and nearly 40% of these Northern California Jewish millennial­s live in a household with a person of color.

The study, funded by San Francisco’s Jewish Community Federation and published last week, shows a community that is diverse, transient, educated, relatively unengaged with traditiona­l institutio­ns and economical­ly divided. The Jewish population of 350,000 – out of a total area population of some eight million – is the country’s fourth-largest Jewish community behind the New York area, southeast Florida and metropolit­an Los Angeles.

Kleinerman said he and Amy have found that religious and ethnic diversity contribute­s to a Judaism that feels open and flexible.

“It’s your choice to believe in God, your relationsh­ip with God is really up to you, and you get to make Judaism what you want it to be,” he said. “There are plenty of things in organized religion we both disagree with, and this allows the flexibilit­y to make it work.”

Compared to the rest of American Jews, Bay Area Jews are less engaged Jewishly. Only half attend a Passover Seder, as opposed to three-quarters of Jews nationally per the 2013 Pew Research Center’s study on Jewish Americans. Just over a third attend High Holiday services, compared to about 60% of American Jews, and a lower percentage say they are “very emotionall­y attached to Israel.”

Only 3% of Bay Area Jews are Orthodox, while 16% are Conservati­ve or Reconstruc­tionist, 37% are Reform and 41% don’t belong to a denominati­on. Nationwide, the correspond­ing numbers are 10% Orthodox, 18% Conservati­ve, 35% Reform and 30% of no denominati­on.

“Many of the results are like American Jewry, only more so,” said Steven M. Cohen, a Jewish sociologis­t who served as a principal investigat­or for the study. “More young adults, more liberals, more non-married, more intermarri­ed, more disengaged with Israel, more socioecono­mically diverse, more social class divisions, with highly affluent and economical­ly needy.”

The study was conducted in 2017 between June and November with about 3,500 respondent­s. It covers San Francisco and its surroundin­g counties, which include the Oakland area, the East Bay and the Silicon Valley area to the south. It has a margin of error of 5.2%.

A quarter of Bay Area Jews overall live with someone who isn’t white, and one in 10 with someone who is gay, lesbian or bisexual. In total, more than a third of couples are intermarri­ed. But Diane Tobin, the director of Be’chol Lashon, a San Francisco-based group that advocates for Jews of color, said that sensitivit­y work still needs to be done within the local Jewish community.

“Bay Area Jews are enthusiast­ically engaged in racial justice work, and they should be commended for this, but race is too often seen as an external issue, rather than one that impacts us as a community,” Tobin wrote JTA in an email. “Until we prioritize diversity and inclusion in our own community, we cannot be effective partners in the national and global struggle for racial justice.” KIM CARTER MARTINEZ, who is Jewish and African-American, told JTA that she frequently feels discrimina­ted against in Bay Area Jewish spaces. She recently left her Conservati­ve synagogue after a decade because she felt unwelcome there.

“I experience a lot of racism in the Jewish community,” she said. “In the Bay Area it often manifests itself in people questionin­g how I can possibly be Jewish, in many different kinds of ways. I’ve been asked how I’m Jewish, what’s my background. At the synagogue I used to go to, I was asked if I was there to do the catering. It’s really pervasive.”

Amy Kleinerman also said that even though she feels welcome overall in the Jewish community, being an Asian-American gives her pause when she thinks about converting.

“Even if I decide to convert, am I going to decide that I fit in?” she said. “Because every single marker says ‘You are different, you look different.’”

The CEO of San Francisco’s Jewish Community Federation, Danny Grossman, said he is proud of the spectrum of identities in the community, and that he takes intermarri­age and racial diversity as givens when crafting Jewish programs.

“We know that about our community; we’re a postinter-group community,” he told JTA. “We sort of assume that any institutio­n, any programmin­g [we do], we want to be welcoming, we want to be inclusive.”

Cohen noted that the survey shows young Jews in the area are more engaged than their elders in certain ways. Young Jews do tend to have fewer Jewish friends, are less attached to Israel and don’t place as much importance on being Jewish as their elders. But Jews aged 18 to 34 attend services and Shabbat meals more than Jews older than 50, and more of them attend Jewish cultural events.

The survey also found that, across demographi­cs, few Jews feel unwelcome in Jewish spaces.

“It counters the narrative that people are seeking Jewish engagement, but they’re not finding it because we don’t know how to welcome them,” Cohen said. “There are chickens and eggs floating around here: People who are engaged in being Jewish seek out situations where they connect with other Jews. People who connect with other Jews have stronger engagement.”

The survey also did not find significan­t opposition to Israel among Jews in the area, despite what the study’s architects called the area’s left-wing reputation. Some 40% of Jews overall have been to Israel, and most of the respondent­s said they are attached to the country. A similar percentage said they sympathize­d with Israel over the Palestinia­ns, and half sympathize­d with both sides or are not sure. Only 8% sympathize­d more with the Palestinia­ns.

“We need to at least divide the Jewish people regarding Israel into three main categories: Israel engaged, Israel disengaged and Israel opposed,” Cohen said. “Most of the people, in broad terms, who do not persist as Israel engaged, they become Israel disengaged, not Israel opposed.” NEARLY HALF of Jewish adults in the area have a graduate degree. The median income of Jewish households is $115,000, which tracks with overall figures in San Francisco, but 20% of Jews said they were just making ends meet. The Bay Area has a very high cost of living: While median household income in the US is about $60,000, that would qualify as “very low income” in San Francisco. Just 10% of local Jewish households make less than $50,000.

The study found that 30% of respondent­s, and more than 40% of young adults, sought assistance for human service needs – housing, health care, employment and related areas.

“We were not surprised that young adults in this community are reaching out for help with housing,” Grossman said. “It’s a widely acknowledg­ed crisis that’s well beyond the Jewish community and we’re trying to tackle that, despite massive macroecono­mic forces that we’re dealing with.”

Cohen said human services could be a way for legacy institutio­ns to attract Jews who thus far have not entered their doors for religious or cultural programmin­g. For Cohen, this is something of a shift: In 1970, he took part in a protest urging Jewish institutio­ns to focus more on Jewish identity building and less on funding Jewish but nonsectari­an places like hospitals.

But funding social services by Jews and primarily for Jews nowadays, he said, could be a way to answer the most pressing concerns of young Jews.

“We need to address felt human needs and the ways people actually approach being Jewish,” Cohen said. “The finding that people are looking for help in finding jobs and housing is an area where the Jewish community can make a connection.” – JTA

 ??  ?? ANDREW AND AMY Kleinerman smile while on a trip to Israel. Like two-thirds of Bay Area Jewish couples aged 18 to 34, the Kleinerman­s are an interfaith couple.
ANDREW AND AMY Kleinerman smile while on a trip to Israel. Like two-thirds of Bay Area Jewish couples aged 18 to 34, the Kleinerman­s are an interfaith couple.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel