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Bar mitzvah boy breaks down barriers for the deaf community

Josh Malinsky’s family say that preparing for the bar mitzvah has enabled them to connect with their Jewish heritage for the first time

May 7, 2025 11:37
Josh Malinsky preparing for his bar mitzvah, with help from his teacher Vicki Ashmore
Josh Malinsky preparing for his bar mitzvah, with help from his teacher Vicki Ashmore
4 min read

The Jewish community is rightly proud of its emphasis on its inclusion of a broad spectrum of individuals, but when it comes to making accommodations for deaf people, it would seem that there is still some way to go.

The Malinsky family, parents Tina and Darryl, and children Josh and Eve, all of whom are deaf, “just kind of let go” of Judaism and disconnected from the community due to what they consider a lack of concerted engagement with deaf people.

Sitting with her family and signing over Zoom through BSL interpreter and family friend, Vicki Ashmore, Tina says: “We feel let down by the Jewish community.”

Tina, 48, a sixth-generation deaf person, grew up in a Jewish family and “always felt and always knew” she was Jewish but, despite marking major holidays, has never felt able to fully engage with Jewish services or embrace the community.