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Leah
and Louis Caplan, happy JDSR couple and former board members |
Our Way Helps
Jewish Deaf Singles Find Their Perfect Match
By Bayla Sheva Brenner
A runaway bestseller back in the seventies opened with these wise words,
“Life is hard.” I think we can give the Jewish singles’ update on that
observation. Shidduchim is harder. The grueling dating process, the
humiliating questions, the endless loneliness. It makes climbing Mt.
Everest sound like a pleasant jaunt. Now imagine conducting life’s most
important search without the ability to hear. Considering this painfully
isolating predicament, it makes tragic sense that 60 % of Jewish deaf
individuals intermarry, often out of desperation rather than indifference.
But one man proved that with the powerful blend of compassion and drive,
one can move even Mt Everest.
“Ninety-five percent of deaf people marry deaf people, and there are only
about 10,000 Jewish deaf in the world. It’s a very limited population,”
explains Rabbi Eliezer Lederfeind, the director and founder of Our Way/NJCD,
a division of The Orthodox Union’s National Jewish Council for
Disabilities. OU’s 35-year-strong mainstreaming program for the Jewish
deaf community provides religious, social, and educational opportunities
for this often isolated population
Rabbi Lederfeind broke open a world of marital possibility for this long
overlooked community of Jews with the Jewish Deaf Singles Registry. He
enlisted the aid of Shmuel and Rachel Landau, a deaf couple already active
in the Jewish deaf community, and launched a matchmaking service via an
international newsletter, featuring salient articles and a section
reserved for personal ads. “We have been able to combat intermarriage, not
by preaching to Jewish deaf singles, but by helping them to marry Jewish,”
says Shmuel Landau. 20 years and 20 marriages later, the program continues
to attract Jewish deaf singles anxious to meet their beshert (intended
marriage partner). JDSR comprises singles of all ages, religious
backgrounds, and communication modalities across the globe.
How the Registry Works
In Yiddish, we commonly refer to making a match as
“redding a shidduch” (speaking a match). It seems the key to a successful
match proposal rides on how effectively it is “spoken” or communicated.
“There’s a tremendous need to give them the most effective venue in which
to meet,” says Batya Jacob, Our Way program director. “They need a way to
contact each other, no matter where they live, and that’s why the written
registry works.”
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Batya Jacob (third from right) meeting with the JDSR board |
According to Mrs. Jacob, the JDSR newsletter reaches
across the US and Canada and around the globe to Australia, France,
Israel, England, and Austria. Readers receive announcements of upcoming
events, recaps of past ones, as well as articles that clarify the keys to
effective communication. “Communication is a big issue, because some of
our members sign, some of them speak, and others do both,” says Mrs.
Jacob. At once illuminating and pragmatic, the JDSR September issue
features articles that offer ideas on optimal interaction, such as:
“Dating Styles and Strategies,” “The Different Languages of Love,” and
“Two Jews Can Still be a Mixed marriage,” written by Louis and Leah Caplan,
a couple who met through the Registry, relating the rigors of making a
marriage work when one comes from a Modern Orthodox home and the other,
Reform. “All the articles assisting in the dating process are based on
Torah values,” says Mrs. Jacob.
The Registry works much like newspaper personal ads, with the added and
welcomed dimension of knowledgeable and concerned intermediaries – the
JDSR administrators. Each ad contains the member’s ID number, city of
residence, observance level, a brief description of him/herself, and the
stats and qualities they are seeking in a mate. “The Registry is very
diverse and as long as the person is halachically (according to Torah law)
Jewish, we welcome their participation,” says Mrs. Jacob. The JDSR
requires proof of Jewish status from each potential member. “We have a
responsibility to our membership. If our goal is to make sure they are
marrying Jewish, we have to make sure each participant is Jewish,”
continues Mrs. Jacob. “It’s a huge amount of work, but when you see them
marry each other, it’s worth every second.”
Shabbatonim Link JDSR with Hearing Community
In addition to sending out its regular newsletter, the program holds
yearly Shabbat retreats in various US Jewish communities under the
auspices of an OU affiliated synagogues. The JDSR staff arranges for a
separate section in the synagogue for their members, so that they can
follow the Shabbat services via a professional sign language interpreter.
Our Way employs licensed Jewish interpreters, well versed in Judaism and
Hebrew terms, through the National Interpreting Licensing Program. When
needed, they request a private room to conduct a Beginners Minyan to
accommodate the JDSR members who are unfamiliar with the Shabbat service.
The program offers partial scholarships to members who live far from the
retreats and can’t manage the travel expenses – making the difference
between a deaf single attending or not. (JDSR welcomes donations to the
scholarship fund.)
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Wherever we hold a retreat, the rabbi of the community always asks
us, ‘When can you come back?’ |
“The day is spent sharing in inspiring tefillah,
festive Shabbat meals, and taking part in lively discussions on topics
relevant to singles,” says Mrs. Jacob. “Ashkenazim, Sephardim, and people
who never experienced Shabbat before come to our retreats.” Members fly in
from across the country and around the globe, happy to meet other Jewish
deaf singles and hoping to connect with their counterpart. “It is very
difficult for me to find a religious girl,” shares Mordechai Weis, 28, a
JDSR participant. “I’ve gone to two retreats so far. It’s frustrating
since there are so many more men than women.” Batya Jacob says they would
like to branch out and run retreats in other communities throughout the
country. “Although a financial battle, it remains a major goal,” she says.
Apparently the JDSR members are not the only ones touched by these
invigorating Shabbat get-togethers. “Communities enthusiastically
volunteer their help and continue to open their doors and hearts to us.
Whether it’s Baltimore, MD; Highland Park, NJ, White Plains, NY, or West
Orange, NJ. wherever we hold a retreat, the rabbi of the community always
asks us, ‘When can you come back?’”
JDSR also offers Sunday activities during the year in the New York
metropolitan area, Philadelphia, and Baltimore. Recent expeditions
included Yeshiva University Museum and a bowling bash. These Sundays
afford the group an opportunity for an enjoyable, stimulating day of
cultural or recreational activities, and significant schmoozing with their
Jewish deaf peers.
“We’re working on an extended retreat of 10 days in Israel with a
projected date of 2006,” says Mrs. Jacob. “In addition to touring Israel,
we plan to set up programs with deaf groups from Beer Sheva, Tel Aviv, and
Jerusalem. It’s an expensive proposition, so we’re looking for potential
donors to support this vital effort, as well as looking into group flights
and telling our members to start saving.”
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Spindel family |
Registry’s Heartening Success Stories
Every act of hishtadlus (effort) marks a success, for both the individuals
placing their ads and the masterminds behind the JDSR. In the end, Hashem
brings chason and kallah together with the Registry providing an excellent
vehicle, delighting the Our Way staff with every new marriage.
Each JDSR coupling comes with a heartening story. A trans-Atlantic
shidduch, brought together a woman from Dublin, Ireland and a man from
Brooklyn, New York. After their first meeting, they both felt they
“weren’t for each other”. Not long after their mutual dismissal of the
match, Ms. Ireland and Mr. New York began a correspondence through the
Registry. “Barry and I started to writing, not knowing who each other
was,” says Deborah Spindel, a former participant. “We decided to exchange
photographs and to our surprise, we realized that we had met before.” The
happy JDSR couple and their children reside in Queens, New York.
“One of our couples attending a retreat liked each other, but decided not
to pursue dating because they were too different in terms of religious
observance and philosophy,” says Mrs. Jacob. “Leah became a board member
of JDSR and I was also asked to join,” says Louis Caplan. “We found that
we enjoyed working together, and had the same outlook on a lot of things
and a friendship developed.” Although they still harbored some nervousness
about their disparate religious upbringings, the Caplan’s chose to marry
and commit themselves to working out their differences. They live in
Virginia with their two children and have become leaders in the Jewish
deaf community there, initiating an active Our Way chapter and hosting
Shabbatons for the program.
After each retreat, the JSDR facilitates communication between the two
interested parties by arranging for them to see each other over Shabbat at
a Jewish community convenient to both singles. Those that meet through the
Registry personal ads also call upon the Landaus for technical as well as
personal assistance, to encourage the progress of a potential match. “The
most important thing is that we show people that we care, by working to
give them these vital opportunities,” says Shmuel Landau.
Our Way continues to enrich the quality of life for individuals throughout
the Jewish deaf community. By opening up previously locked doors of
possibility, the program continues to help these men and women lead fuller
Jewish lives, as they meet and enjoy each other’s company, learn about
their rich Torah heritage, build committed Jewish families, and feel an
integral part of Klal Yisrael.
For more information, email
Landau9@optonline.net or write to JDSR PO Box 2005, NY, NY
10159-2005.)
Bayla Sheva Brenner is Senior Writer in the
Communications and Marketing Department at the OU.
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