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Yoni Birnbaum

By

Yoni Birnbaum,

Yoni Bernbaum

Opinion

2019 awoke a slumbering sense of belonging

'Events of this past year have made many young Jews like Alex seriously reflect upon what their Jewish identity means to them.'

January 2, 2020 11:41
Did 2019 make you more actively involved in Judaism?
3 min read

I have walked the desolate pathways of Auschwitz Birkenau with young Jews agonising over their place in the Jewish community of the future. I have listened to young Jews on Yom Kippur wrestle with the challenges of faith in the twenty first century. I have been inspired by young Jews who have made the heart wrenching decision to put the heritage of their ancestors before the person they love.

But I have never yet encountered a time in which an entire community of young people have directly considered the price of being Jewish. Never have I seen this many people ask themselves what being Jewish really means to them, look at the price they might have to pay for being different, and make the resolute 
decision to publicly and proudly affirm their Jewish identity.

That change was brought home to me through the moving words of a young father in my own community named Alex, whose heartfelt article for a recent shul magazine deeply moved me.

Events of this past year have made many young Jews like Alex seriously reflect upon what their Jewish identity means to them. It is true that the impetus for this may have been serious concerns over antisemitism in modern Britain. Yet, as time now moves on and we hopefully look forward to a politically calmer 2020, this new focus on Jewish identity shows no sign of slowing down. Our community has been badly shaken — and young Jews in particular are still continuing to gather their thoughts on what being Jewish really means to them.