Call & Times

‘It was a calling of the soul’

Why Christians in Colombia are converting to Judaism

- By HEIDI PASTER HARF

When I moved to Cali, Colombia, in 2003, to follow my businessma­n boyfriend, it was one of the most violent cities in Latin America, besieged by drug cartels. I felt lost, unnerved and out of place. Having grown up in a conservati­ve Jewish family in New York, I sought out Cali’s Jewish community, which welcomed me. Jews are a tiny minority in Colombia; just 4,000 are estimated to live in a country of 50 million, whose religious majority is Catholic, with a growing contingent of evangelica­l Christians.

More recently, I was surprised to find a growing community in Cali of so-called emergentes – “emerging Jews,” mainly evangelica­ls who have shed their previous religious doctrines to practice strict Orthodox Judaism. Even though none of them were born Jewish, many had been exposed to Judaism as part of their Christian faith, through the life of Jesus, who was Jewish. They came to see Judaism as the one true religion, many told me. My photograph­y project focused on hundreds who have establishe­d their own communitie­s of converts apart from the traditiona­l Jewish communitie­s.

There are seven known emerging synagogues in Cali, whereas the traditiona­l Jewish community has only three. It is hard not to notice the emergentes as they embrace the outward signifiers of Orthodoxy. I first happened upon this several years ago when I spotted a taxi driver with a yarmulke and the traditiona­l tallit (prayer shawl) that Orthodox Jews wear. Over the years I have photograph­ed many emerging Jews who have embraced the religion and its culture – for example, ritual baths and head coverings for women.

These new adherents talk of being unsatisfie­d with their previous faiths. “I wanted to find the truth,” Rivka Espinosa (formerly Loida Espinosa), who converted from evangelica­lism, told me. “I began to study, more and more, and ask myself deep questions: What was my mission in this world? Why was I here? And what did I need to do?” She said her father was the pastor of an evangelica­l church where she was a member. He also converted.

“It was a calling of the soul,” Devorah Guilah Koren, who converted from Catholicis­m with her husband and two children, told me. “More than a religion, (Orthodox Judaism) was a way of thinking and conduct that satisfied all of our needs.”

But despite such strong beliefs, are their conversion­s valid? Judaism is organizati­onally decentrali­zed, with different bodies overseeing their own conversion­s. And who recognizes what conversion­s is a complicate­d matter. Various groups and rabbis are carrying out the conversion­s in Colombia.

The emerging Jews are not associated with any traditiona­l organizati­on in Colombia or in the United States, according to Alfredo Goldschmid­t, Colombia’s chief rabbi. But he does counsel and advise them: “The emerging communitie­s consult with me regarding everything,” he told me. “They are a parallel community.”

Many emerging rabbis have been trained in Israel, I learned, and the emerging communitie­s have formed their own independen­t organizati­on. “We are Orthodox because (we) follow the same laws like in other Orthodox communitie­s in the world,” explains Meyer Sanchez, assistant to a rabbi in Medellín.

During my project I gained intimate daily access to those who have adopted this way of life. My work forced me to confront my own views on identity. I began to see Colombia’s emerging Jews as an example of the increasing freedom we all have to choose how we label ourselves – from gender to sexual orientatio­n to religion.

What is identity? Is it something we are born into? Is it something we are free to create? What does it mean to be welcomed and accepted without judgment regardless of genetics, history or background? These are the questions I wanted to raise and the story I wanted to tell through my pictures.

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 ?? Photo by Heidi Paster Harf ?? A marriage ceremony after a group conversion to Judaism; many participan­ts later discovered their conversion would not be recognized for the purpose of immigratin­g to Israel.
Photo by Heidi Paster Harf A marriage ceremony after a group conversion to Judaism; many participan­ts later discovered their conversion would not be recognized for the purpose of immigratin­g to Israel.
 ?? Photo by Heidi Paster Harf ?? Wearing a head covering, Devorah Guilah Koren puts on makeup in her car with her children.
Photo by Heidi Paster Harf Wearing a head covering, Devorah Guilah Koren puts on makeup in her car with her children.
 ?? Photo by Heidi Paster Harf ?? Ilan Castillo Pineda dresses for Shabbat.
Photo by Heidi Paster Harf Ilan Castillo Pineda dresses for Shabbat.

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