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Is Intermarriage Good for the Jews?


Question:

I have always felt an affinity to Queen Esther from the Purim story. Just like me, she married a non-Jew. And because of it she saved the Jewish people. Isn't the message that intermarriage can be good for the Jews?

Answer:

Esther is a tragic hero. Unlike many people's misconception, she was not happy to be queen. She was dragged away from her family and people, against her will, and forced to marry a grotesque and uncouth tyrant, the king of Persia, Achashverosh.

This was no romantic courtship. Having executed his previous queen for not obeying his wishes, Achashverosh ordered that every woman in the kingdom present herself before him. Esther, a sweet Jewish girl, was deemed the most beautiful candidate, and so she was chosen to be king's queen. She had no choice - to resist meant death.

When an evil decree was made to annihilate the Jewish nation throughout the kingdom, Esther used her position to beg for the salvation of her people. She succeeded, but there was no happy ending for her. The Jews celebrated their victory in the streets, but Esther was stuck in the palace. She remained chained to her despotic husband till the end.

Esther is not a model of intermarriage. You can't compare her forced marriage to yours. But if you would like to take a lesson from Esther's life, perhaps it is this: Being married to a non-Jew in no way diminishes your responsibility to your people. Esther's marital situation was never used as an excuse for her to weaken her ties to Judaism.

A Jew, no matter how far they think they have strayed, remains a Jew. All the tasks and obligations expected of a Jew apply to you. The fact that you don't observe one law - the law forbidding intermarriage - does not exempt you from observing all the others.

Intermarriage is never good for the Jews. Esther was good for the Jews, because she never gave up her Jewishness. Neither should you.

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By Aron Moss   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Rabbi Aron Moss teaches Kabbalah, Talmud and practical Judaism in Sydney, Australia, and is a frequent contributor to Chabad.org.
Image: detail from an illustration by Chassidic artist Michoel Muchnik.

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Mar 15, 2011
To Avraham
I appreciate your viewpoint, but I find your distinction meaningless -- and its implications horrifying.

The essence of tribalism is seeing one's own group as different and unique, and believing that this uniqueness somehow passed on biologically. It's a concept I enthusiastically reject. Down that path lies every evil racism has spawned. (Please note, I am NOT calling you racist or in any way bad. I' sure you're a good and generous man. I'm just noting that your separatist viewpoint that, if pursued to its logical end, has led to some very terrible consequences.)

Though Jewish, I prefer to think of myself first and foremost as human, and any Jewish qualities I have are the result of heritage, teaching, and choice -- not of belonging to a particular bloodline or race. I am horrified by the viewpoint that our birth (as opposed to our upbringing) gives some feature that separates us from our fellow humans.
Posted By Paul, New York, NY

Posted: Mar 15, 2011
To Paul, New York
A Jew is not about tribalism. You either have a Jewish soul or you do not. If you have a Jewish Soul You are Jewish if you dont you,re not!
The Jewish soul can only be transmitted through the mother. Period.
If one converts the authentic way passed down from generation to generation than they receive a Jewish soul! All the best!
Posted By Avraham, Miami Beach, NY

Posted: Sep 8, 2010
The Tribe
I was struck by the sentence, "A Jew, no matter how far they think they have strayed, remains a Jew." It's a stark reminder what a tribal culture this is.

Other religions define themselves by their beliefs. Jews continue to define themselves by their bloodlines. In the 21st century, it may be time to abandon such tribalism and become citizens of the world.
Posted By Paul, New York

Posted: May 12, 2010
Didn't plan ahead
Some people that intermarry are not walking close to Judaism at the time. Later you want to re-connect and you have a non-jewish partner that can give you a hard time about it.
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: May 2, 2010
Answer to Anonymous
How genuine is the conversion?

In one way, this benefits the Jewish people by bringing in fresh genes, lessening the chance of harmful diseases which appear when recessive genes are expressed.

In another way, it harms the Jewish people by adding to the slimy insults against Jewish women, that we are somehow inferior and less attractive than non-Jewish women and therefore less desirable mates for Jewish men.

Sincere converts are always welcome.
Insincere converts not.
Who judges the sincerity? The convert's own actions following conversion.
Posted By Judy Resnick, Far Rockaway, NY

Posted: Mar 1, 2010
Intermarriage
is intermarriage good for the Jews when the non-Jewish partner makes a genuine conversion to Judaism and undertakes to live a Jewish life and raise a Jewish family?
Posted By Anonymous, Paris, France
via jewishberkshires.com



 


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