The Jerusalem Post

The Jews of Color Initiative

Research is the next frontier

- • By ILANA KAUFMAN The writer is CEO of the Jews of Color Initiative.

Over the past five years – and since the October 7 attacks on Israel – the Jews of Color (JoCI) Initiative has witnessed progress toward our vision of a racially equal and diverse Jewish community and the centering the mission of Jews of Color (JoC).

Now in our seventh year, we are beyond the start-up phase of an organizati­on, those first few years of organizati­onal infancy when a few easy wins are often to be had. We are increasing­ly aware that supporting serious research is strategica­lly vital for advancemen­t and growth in our field.

Our 2021 major research study, “Beyond the Count: Perspectiv­es and Lived Experience of Jews of Color,” documented how Jews of Color view Jewish identity and how they have experience­d systemic racism in Jewish spaces. Of course, it was profoundly painful to discover that 80% of study participan­ts have faced discrimina­tion in Jewish settings, particular­ly in spiritual or congregati­onal environmen­ts, and almost 50% have altered how they speak, dress, or present themselves to conform to predominan­tly white Jewish spaces.

The report’s impact was reflected in the direct feedback it garnered reporting data and insights that were lacking.

We were told that the Jews of Color Initiative had both an opportunit­y and responsibi­lity to not only elevate more JoC voices through academic research, but to take that research further. Therefore, in January 2022, the Jews of Color Initiative announced a

request for proposals to fund research projects focused on Jews of Color, led by Jewish scholars of Color.

Our RFP [request for proposal] aimed to do this, and we awarded research grants to projects exploring black Jewish women’s birth outcomes; education in Latinx-Jewish families; experience­s of Asian adoptees; and the perspectiv­es of aging Jews of Color.

By spring 2023, the projects were complete. The topics covered by these studies reflect the complex issues our community must grapple with.

Some key takeaways:

• We learned about pregnancy, birth, and postpartum Jewish rituals; that there is enormous power and wisdom that emerges from JoC intersecti­onal identities; and that there

is profound value in documentin­g these rituals as they support spiritual resiliency.

• We learned about the connection between birth outcomes and the benefits of health provider-patient shared identity, especially as related to anti-blackness and antisemiti­sm focused on Black Jewish women.

• To address perception­s of gender, gendered spaces, settler colonialis­m, and Hawaiian historical topics, we learned about the relationsh­ips between the Kanaka Maoli

(“indigenous Hawaiian”) and Lukaio

(“Jewish”) communitie­s, and the

role aha (“conference” or “dialogue”) and building haverim (“friendship between the Jewish and Kanaka Maoli communitie­s”) can have on transforma­tive community relationsh­ips.

• We learned about Latinx-Jewish families and how being multicultu­ral, multilingu­al, and racially diverse informs educationa­l and programmin­g choices for their children.

• We were taught the history

of Asian adoption among Jewish Americans and of adoptees’ understand­ings of their Asian-Jewish identities – and how systemic structures and changing social circumstan­ces and personal preference­s led to the decision of many Jewish families to adopt children from Asia.

• We were given insights into

how aging Jews of Color are affected by national and global violence and to what extent those events amplify historical trauma and oppression given their histories of being marginaliz­ed because of intersecti­ng identities of faith, gender, race, and ethnicity.

THAT WAS just a taste of the new knowledge that now powerfully informs our understand­ing of ritual, women’s health, identity, and education of youth and families. There is much to unpack.

Beyond its specific studies, the research invited us to deeply consider what it means to be, who self-identifies as, and what we mean, when we say, “Jews of Color”; to examine when a shared understand­ing and identity is useful, and when it is not; how demographi­cs intersect with racism and colorism; and how the term “Jew of Color” gives too much deference to whiteness.

Further studies should delve into the difference­s among Jews of Color and how their lived experience­s may differ based on intersecti­onal identities. Understand­ing these nuances will help guide conversati­ons and interventi­ons for the important work of fighting racism.

We were also left pondering:

• What does it mean to be Jewish

in the United States? Which narratives are encompasse­d in the word “Jewish”?

• How do lineal and chosen family

background­s inform one’s relationsh­ip to being Jewish?

• How do race and racism inform

who is, and who is perceived as Jewish?

• What do we need to know about

the diversity of how US-based Judaism is expressed? How do those expression­s inform more than the dominant US narrative about Judaism?

Who gets to create and express those narratives?

• And how do these ideas inform who defines, conducts, and shares Jewish research?

THIS ENABLES new, data-driven insights for investigat­ion by researcher­s and practition­ers of maternal health, family and elder engagement, and Jewish identity and education, which provide powerful perspectiv­es for the Jewish community and

Just seven years ago our community was still wondering whether Jews of Color were a real population or just “unicorns.” Now we are wondering how to ensure future funded research opportunit­ies centering on Jews of color and all of our intersecti­onal identities.

All of us in the American Jewish community continue to adjust to life post-October 7, 2023. Antisemiti­sm is now in every bit of the air we breathe. And raw trauma is now part of everyday life. The Jews of Color Initiative knows that especially in the most difficult of times, it’s very important to focus on efforts that are inclusive, supportive, and promote our ability to thrive. Celebratin­g research and data about Jewish rituals, our health, our educationa­l experience­s, our adoption journeys, and our elders honors the most intimate pathways and connection­s to Jewish life and legacy. This research and data not only expands what we know about Jews of Color but fortifies the Jewish community, strengthen­s Jewish identity, and reinforces our Jewish future.

 ?? (JoCI) ?? JEWS OF Color Initiative leaders convene.
(JoCI) JEWS OF Color Initiative leaders convene.

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