Become a Member
The Jewish Chronicle

Christmas is when secular Jews go crackers

When I happily drink a seasonal toast, my lack of belief is different to that of a gentile

December 23, 2009 14:59

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

2 min read

A question for secular Jews: Which festival makes you feel most Jewish? It is hard to beat the piety that comes with the abstinence of Yom Kippur. But piety, surely, is more a Christian concept.

What about Rosh Hashanah? For me, the elemental call of a ram’s horn ushering in the new year sends me at the speed of light back to Rosh Hashanahs of my past. And to one in particular.

I was in that period of ostentatious observance common among Jewish boys in the run-up to barmitzvah. I laid tefilin, I asked questions. In synagogue, I sang loudly. It didn’t last.

In shul, holding a handful of fringes from my talit, I nudged my dad and whispered: “What are these for?” Though he came from an observant family, my father, now dead, believed in no god. And though shul trips were rare, he found the Liberal synagogue we attended too lightweight. You would think, for a secular Jew, the lighter the better but, like his whisky, he preferred religion undiluted.