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Jennifer Lipman

ByJennifer Lipman, Jennifer Lipman

Opinion

My Jewish wishes for my newborn baby son

'I hope he will indeed develop a proud Jewish Identity; that he will be someone for whom his faith sits at the heart of his being.'

July 18, 2019 11:04
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3 min read

It’s been a period of high emotion and histrionics; of sleepless nights and bargaining with a capricious audience, of considering the future and (occasionally) fondly recalling the past. Not the Conservative leadership contest, but my personal life, after we welcomed a son into the world in June.

Amid the roller-coaster of new parenthood — what does that cry mean, when did he last feed, how many Amazon deliveries a day is too many? — I’ve found myself ruminating on his Jewish future.

On his eighth day, he was initiated into Judaism in keeping with tradition (taking our cues from Meghan and Harry, it was a private affair); a relationship I hope will sustain long after he has forgotten any introductory trauma.
 But, as he grows up, what will form and forge his Jewish self? What state will our community be in by his barmitzvah? And what do I hope for him from a Jewish perspective?

As last week’s Panorama made clear, recent events have thrown up questions about our place that I had assumed were long settled. If nothing else, I hope the British Jewish community that dates back to the great-great grandfather he is named after will flourish throughout my son’s life, and that he’ll find leaders who will fight for this. I hope the abhorrent anti-Jewish sentiment that is currently routine online is confined to history, and, especially, that the security measures that are necessary today at our shuls and schools are but a distant memory by the time he is old enough to recognise them.