Several months ago I joined an online “social-networking site”. For a while it served as a great way to reconnect with old friends that I hadn’t contacted in years. In fact, may of them were involved in NCSY when I was becoming frum and many others were participants in NCSY when I was working for the organization. Until about 2 months ago, my “friends” from the “social-networking site” were actually about 90% Torah observant and the other 10% were not-yet observant (oddly enough some of them from my hometown and I am probably the only frum person they are in contact with).
Then there was a change in my friend demographics. Due to a public high school reunion coming up, someone from my high school found me online. He became my “friend”. Then other non-Jews that I really hadn’t thought of in almost 20 years started requesting my “friendship”. My demographics when from 100% Jewish “online friends†to about 20% non-Jews and 80% Jews.
During my last two years in high school I was Torah observant. I was also, then, submerged in the whole punk/alternative music scene sub-culture. My life revolved around bands, music, and concerts. In addition to all the outer signs of individuality that I displayed it was almost, to most people, incidental that I wore a yarmulka, didn’t go out on Friday nights, and didn’t eat much food outside my home.
Of course, once I was able to leave my hometown and engage in formalized Torah education many of my priorities changed. Eventually most of my old cassettes/cd from all the bands I couldn’t live without were sold and the money was used for seforim. Like most of us, I have over the years, immersed myself in the “frum” sub-culture. I realized as I started seeing names of friends from high school that I really haven’t spoke to in almost 20 years that I probably come off (via an online profile) as a very different person with different reading and music tastes that the ‘Neil†they once new.
It’s funny, because during my years in a ‘traditional’ conservative Sunday school and Hebrew school program we were constantly told that assimilation is, like, the worst evil. We were told that a Jew should never give up their identity as a Jew. Because the word ‘assimilation’ means to make similar I was raised that as a ‘traditional Jew’ I couldn’t be come similar to those around me. Well, as I examine who I am today, I think I’ve become an assimilated Jew. When I write ‘assimilated’ it is in the sense that I have submerged myself into a lifestyle and culture like that of my fellow Torah observant Jews.
I probably didn’t assimilate the way my old Hebrew school teachers thought I would, but then again, most of us BTs don’t when up where we thought we’d be. As for my friends from high school that have some out of the cyber-woodwork, let them go ahead and look up books like “Bilvavi Mishkan Evneh†and bands like “Piamentaâ€. This is who I am, someone ‘assimilated’ in Torah observant culture.
Music a very powerful force in shaping human behavior. Can be for good but usually is not. I think it is wise to cautious with modern music. As for the pro-Israel views of some of the posts, I am reminded by the Israeli back-packing wanta-be hippies I see so often AND the Torah reading of last Shabbat, Eretz Israel is no guarantee of Jewish survival unless it it backed up with Yirat Shamayim.
Jews who would like to live in Israel have not all managed to get there yet.
Arthur, it’s great that this does the trick for you. Not everyone, including not everyone with advanced Torah credentials, would agree with you. The H in YHO is duly noted!
I currently live in Chicago, when happens to be a very “religiously zionistic” community in general. I appreciate your comment and the mussar that I take from it. Thanks.
Neil,
You do not say exactly where you live.
IMHO unless and until you make the switch in your mind to live in Israel, you are assimilated, and not in the way that you refer.
All people must have a center. As Jews our center must be Israel as an actuality and not as an ideal.
I really enjoyed this post. Yiasher Kochacha.