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August 19, 2009 Inappropriate for the Shabbos Table By Aliza Hausman 48 Comments
![]() Sadly, there was also no Miss Manners school to prepare me for the leap from growing up on welfare to hobnobbing with middle and upper class Jews. Private day schools for them. Public school without enough books or chairs for me. They had mutual funds. I had $25 in my savings. After barely surviving a haredi conversion school in Israel, I knew how I would have fared at finishing school. Badly. You see, I have no manners. I blurt things out. I tell people they’re racist at the Shabbos table after they make jokes about Mexican housekeepers. I’ve even thrown turkey at a guest for such humor. And no, I’m not actually Mexican but being Hispanic, Dominican American specifically, is close enough for discomfort. I also don’t know how to eat at a table. I grew up eating dinner in my bed in front of the TV with my three siblings who spilled so much rice, beans and chicken on my pillowcases and sheets I had to beat the cockroaches away at night. And when the Republican at the table asks, “Do you really want your tax dollars going to poor people?” I rather impolitely explain that if it hadn’t been for the welfare checks my mentally ill mother collected throughout my childhood, I wouldn’t be alive today. I am frequently “inappropriate for the Shabbos table.” I make people laugh and cry. Sometimes, I make them stop talking altogether. Social norms and cultural codes go over my pretty little head. Why is homosexuality too controversial when the state of my ovaries is not? It’s never a secret that I am a convert, a stranger, in the Orthodox Jewish world. I made myself a chart of do’s and don’ts after one particularly memorable meal. It didn’t help. When I finally lost a friend over my manners (or lack thereof), I proclaimed myself “The Worst Guest in the World.” Our friendship ended over email after I was indicted on two counts of putting my feet up on the furniture, three counts of serving myself before others and one count of not excusing myself before leaving the table. But weddings are the worst. I attended one wedding as a child. I remember pulling the door open for the limo and then nothing else. I attended one Jewish wedding before I had my own, a big beautiful Jewish Dominican bash where I secretly dreamed of eloping so I would have a heftier savings account for trying economic times. Plus I think the wedding cost more than I’d ever made in a single year. Gulp. The first year I was married, I was invited to back-to-back weddings. I cried at the bottom of my closet before each one, feeling intensely shallow for having nothing to wear, nothing in the right shade of appropriate black. Where was Richard Gere with his unlimited Amex to save me? After all, wasn’t I in THAT Julia Roberts movie where she can’t figure out how to eat lobster and accidentally launches it across the room while yelling about those slippery things. Though, since I started keeping kosher I traffic in projectile salad. Specifically, tomatoes. For one wedding, I bought a new dress the same day and then changed in the backseat on the way. I thought if I just looked right, it wouldn’t matter that I had no idea what was going on. I walked into the latest wedding with too red lipstick, a too red shirt and a mismatched headscarf. The little silver star of David pendant felt like a blazing, scarlet letter next to everyone’s family pearls. I was swallowed by a sea of expensive sheitels and fancy hats and my self-esteem plummeted several notches. I tried to remind myself this was the bride’s day, not mine. No one was going to notice what I was wearing…were they? As my husband headed for coat check, I piled food onto my plate at the bedeken. I hadn’t eaten beforehand or maybe such nervous hording stemmed from a childhood worry about not knowing when to expect your next meal. I worried about being called Miss Piggy as I sat at a nearby bistro table and bit into a juicy appetizer. A friend, a dentist, approached me to ask me to translate some words her patients had tried to teach her the day before. She related the words in slow Spanish. “Those are dirty words!” I laughed. “But what do they mean?” she asked. I told her. Too loudly. The couple sitting across from us gave me one long, disgusted look and stalked off. “Oops.” “What happened?” my husband asked popping up from behind me. I explained remorsefully. “Someday you’re going to be a Rebbetzin,” he said shaking his head. “I know.” There would be plenty more non-wedding opportunities to lodge my size 7 foot into my big, big mouth. Later, on the dance floor, an old friend whispered in my ear. “Is that how you’re covering your hair?” Overcome by a beet red blush, I thought about heading for the bar but instead headed for our table. What had happened to going unnoticed? At the table, an overwhelming fear of making the next faux pas overtook me. I probed my friends with questions like: Do you have to send a thank you card to everyone after a Shabbos meal? Do people do Chanukah cards? Does everyone get an afikomen present? I decided the table was out to get me when dinner was served. There were too many glasses and more silverware spread across the tablecloth than I knew what to do with that moment. I looked around wildly for my husband but couldn’t find him. With a sigh, I picked up the nearest fork and started chomping away at my salad. That’s when my friend returned from the bathroom and said, “Has anyone seen my fork?” “Oops,” I said smiling sheepishly imagining lettuce stuck between my teeth. I handed her another fork which I wasn’t sure actually belonged to me. Then I made a quick grab for random, empty wine glasses in front of me. “That’s my glass,” another voice said as my hand circled around one stem. “Sorry!” When my husband walked over, I gestured to the glasses and mouthed, “Which one is mine?” The conversion process was not over when I stepped out of the mikvah. It is never-ending. And the ensuing period of cultural and class integration has left me with a sinking dread. In the pit of my stomach, I’m always worried I’m doing or saying the wrong thing. I’m funny when I’m not trying to be. I’m brave for frequently saying what no one else will when really I don’t realize why no one else was saying it. I’m a pauper trying to pretend to be a Jewish American princess. Early in the conversion process, I tried to shake a rabbi’s hand. He demurred kindly while I died from shame and wiped my sweaty hand across my skirt. After hearing a friend’s good news, I bought her a $25 gift certificate. Another friend gently pointed out the cultural norm is to wait until after the baby is born to buy gifts. I even lost a friend for my uncouth table manners or maybe it was because I somehow managed to break her fancy dining chair? I have found myself frequently apologizing for things. I apologized for not knowing what to do and when. I apologized for not knowing what to say and how. I apologized for frequently “murdering” my husband, my friends and myself through all manner of embarrassing circumstance. After every excruciating social event, I went home and played them back in excruciating detail. It has taken several delirious trips to Macy's and several boring black dresses later to realize I am never going to blend in. I am never going to be cast in the part of nice, Ashkenazi Jewish white girl. I am going to be different no matter what. My super appropriate friend said the first time she met me she thought I was a little crazy. (In my defense, she caught me in the midst of wedding planning.) “Gee thanks,” I said rolling my eyes. “And now?” “You’re just you,” she said. “I don’t know anyone else quite like you.” I furrowed my eyebrows in the way that creases my forehead and begs for Botox. (Just kidding.) “That’s a compliment,” she said. And I realized it really was. Why was I spending so much time trying to pretend I could be someone else? It was time to stop apologizing. So on Shabbos, when a woman at synagogue gawked at the hiking boots underneath my skirt and made a face, I smiled at her. “They’re really comfortable,” I said eyeing her heels which were probably worth three times as much as my boots and didn’t have any space for my orthotics. She smirked. I smiled. No apologies. Someday I’ll be able to tell the difference between a dessert spoon and a soup soon. I’ll even learn how to set a table properly. And maybe part of my conversion process is a crash course in a finishing school run by my peers. But somehow along the way, I managed to forget that there were plenty of people who accepted me just for being me. Because I didn’t. I was too busy worrying about fitting in. Too busy forgetting how far I’d come. I was the first college graduate in my family. The first to obtain a Master’s degree. And as the first-generation American child of poor native Spanish speakers, I became an English teacher who inspired students from similar backgrounds. Plenty of people were proud of me, except me, until I realized that maintaining my membership in the Jewish club was never going to hinge on table manners. No one was ever going to revoke it if I never learned which fork was mine. I am a lifetime member. Perhaps, the greatest lesson Judaism has taught me is that G-d wants me to be the best me I can be. I don’t want to get to heaven and be asked why I wasn’t the best Aliza I could be. Because I know the sorry answer will be that I spent all my life trying to be like everyone but me. So maybe it’s about time I started learning to accept myself and stopped worrying about whether my flats match my dress. Aliza Hausman is a Latina Orthodox Jewish convert, freelance writer, blogger and speaker. Currently working on a memoir, she lives in New York with her husband.
© Orthodox Union - All Rights Reserved. The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of the Orthodox Union and its agencies Recent CommentsWow Aliza, your article brought tears to my eyes! Not because of the beginning of the article and the faux pas you made (those could be in any 'cultured' circle, Jewish or not, imagine going to a WASP function!), but as I was reading I kept on wanting to write to you that you are baruch Hashem married, that you mention friends in every other sentence, and didn't you realize that you sound so lovable and are blessed in your life? Then finally I got towards the end of the article and I realized that yes, you do know, you do accept yourself and will iyH go forward and up and up in your very own way! Chodesh Tov to you and thank you. Tamar posted on 08/20 at 07:21 AM. Aliza, Ernest Adams posted on 08/20 at 11:44 AM. I don't know if you're ever in Passaic, NJ, but you'll be welcome here. Don't be shy. -- My family and I are easy to find. Michael Lesher posted on 08/20 at 01:03 PM. As a convert myself, I feel this awkwardness most keenly... particularly as I watch my children reaching the age that they should really have a much better Jewish education than me stumbling through the Shema every morning and tripping over prayers throughout the day. Caliban Darklock posted on 08/20 at 01:08 PM. I too felt that way at first and had to learn that I could only be me. Alyse posted on 08/20 at 01:09 PM. Aliza!!! You go, girl!!! Eliana posted on 08/20 at 01:09 PM. Only opinions that count are 1) Hashem's (most important), 2) your husband's, and 3) yours. Depending on your relationship with your Rabbi/Rebbetzin you can add them to the list. Shevi posted on 08/20 at 01:26 PM. This is wonderful. As a Puerto Rican convert myself, I have experienced some of the same challenges you note there. The anxiety that makes you hyperventilate. The obsessing over your shoes, hair, the length of your sleeves. Even after so many simchas that I can dance a mean hora, I still have nightmares about not fitting in. Thanks for reminding me that I won't always fit in -- and that standing out is just fine. Chodesh tov and I love your blog. Moriah Rodriguez posted on 08/20 at 01:32 PM. Is all this "behavior" natural or do you try to be this way? If it is natural, just keep on being yourself because you have style and panache. if you are behaving this way to attract attention or to "make a statement" about something, you need to get help. People who ask the unaskable and say what they mean are rare and we need more of them. I hope that's you. Michael Fenton posted on 08/20 at 01:36 PM. I am so glad the article ended how it did, because that is exactly what I was going to say. You are someone I would most definitely want to be friends with. Life is too short and too precious to worry about what shoes you are wearing at shul on Shabbos or what shade of lipstick you are wearing or which silverware is yours at the table (I am never quite sure myself). Who really cares? If one can't learn to laugh at life and laugh at themselves, and appreciate all that G-d has blessed them with, then they are the ones we need to feel sorry for. Howie posted on 08/20 at 01:55 PM. Beautiful piece, Aliza. Mazel Tov on all your well deserved successes. Joel Sanchez posted on 08/20 at 02:05 PM. Aliza, Debra Darvick posted on 08/20 at 02:19 PM. Aliza: Myron, Houston, Texas posted on 08/20 at 02:32 PM. I'd be proud to sit next to you at any simcha or shabbos table. You sound like fun to me and I hate being so self conscious. I did it for the first 35 years of my life and for the last 3 I've been letting down my proverbial hair. BTW, I'm attending a shiva on Sunday. Wanna go? Faith posted on 08/20 at 03:01 PM. Aliza thank you for the inspiring article. I can relate. Dusty Lucero posted on 08/20 at 03:30 PM. I loved the article and Aliza seems to be a very nice and sweet person. I am concerned about those who "judged" her unfavorably, for such materialistic reasons. Judaism is not about materialism; and you don't have to be rich to be a good Jew! Aliza seems to have her values right. Israel posted on 08/20 at 03:32 PM. Thank you for sharing this. I found it quite compelling. I could relate to the part about Republicans and about the Mexican jokes, and the translation of Spanish words--while I am not really ethincally Hispanic [though my grandfather was from Puerto Rico, and his family from Spain so I guess this does make me like 1/4 Hispanic, lol] I do associate myself in that way because all my closest friends are Hispanic and I have grown up in very Latino neighborhoods. I can relate perhaps most of all to having conflicting parts of you being. I'm young [18] and my conversion should be complete soon IYH but as I get older I guess I'm becoming more comfortable with the fact that there is not a mold which one needs to fit into 100% especially when they are converts. Like you said, we will always be a little different just sometimes I wish I didnt feel a little like I was letting the religious side of me down when I seek something secular [like when I want to go to Corona with some friends and watch a popular movie at a local theatre, and when I am asked why I dont want to eat tacos or any other delicious smelling meat-- pollo asado or carne that is cooking around the neighborhood they just say aja its "cos youre religious" and then shrug.] I guess though I will have to find a way to combine my loves of Spanish language and Judaism...sometimes I listen to lectures in Spanish. Going into my senior year of High School, I have been considering college, seminary, marriage, and all the other things frum Jewish girls around my age preoccupy themselves with and it is indeed complicated. I've figured out some things [I think] I know i need, for myself at least, to go to seminary but although Israel is the obvious destination, I've been thinking more Argentina or somewhere a little south of the equator. lol. My dream I do believe, would be to teach English in South America, doing this and being frum and trying to figure my life out and the expectations of the frum community versus my own is just another part of adapting to conversion. The best thing about Judaism is that it's not stagnant, it changes, moves with the flow and yet retains its beauty. Although I intended this to be a comment on your article, it became a whole long blog response. I wanted to thank you for your honesty, your perseverance and ultimately for just being who you are and not being ashamed for it. Angela Bronsteinr posted on 08/20 at 04:09 PM. As a fellow Jewish sister, Aliza I am troubled and sad that you have encountered such an unfriendly welcome in Jewish circles. I don't know if this is any consolation but I'm sure that many reading your article, Jewish from birth or new to the faith like yourself can relate to your experiences. This is the sad truth, and we as a people have a lot to learn about Bein Adam L'Chavero. It seems by the end of your article that you yourself realized that none of this had anything to do with you, and the wonderful person you seem to be, but everything to do with the type of people you encountered and their lack of sensitivity and love of every Jew. I sincerely hope that you do not become discouraged, there are many, many beautiful, warm, welcoming Jewish communities out there waiting for you. Go out and make yourself a part of them. I wish you much B'racha and Hatzlacha! Aviva posted on 08/20 at 04:50 PM. Aliza, Bruce posted on 08/20 at 05:22 PM. Maybe your problem with manners is because you are in a rich New York environment. In a community like Providence there is a wide spread of economic levels. My view is from the bottom and I feel that those at the top are some of my best friends. Its not Judaism, its your social network. Look for some of your own friends, not just your husband's. I have known Dominicans who are the nicest people. If one of my sons brought a Dominican (Jewish) girl, I would be thrilled. Joe Winkleman posted on 08/20 at 05:22 PM. I really needed to read this because I always feel a little out of place myself. Learning to love and accept myself will be an ongoing hardest lesson I ever learned. Brenda posted on 08/20 at 05:30 PM. If you're a blogger, what's your blog? Please send me the link, thanks. Batya posted on 08/20 at 05:59 PM. Aliza, Adam posted on 08/20 at 06:09 PM. Aliza: Dale Sands posted on 08/20 at 06:52 PM. I don't know what circles you've been hanging out in, but they all seem awfully uptight. You're welcome to come to my Shabbos table any time! Avi Greengart posted on 08/20 at 07:21 PM. I enjoyed reading your article. As a convert myself, I can relate to a certain longing to fit in. When I realized that we are all here to learn and improve, I felt much less self-conscious of how I might appear to others. Also, along the way, I have met so many born-Jews with their own stories of wanting to fit in. In the end, it is indeed much better to be who HaShem sent us here to be! Chavah posted on 08/20 at 07:33 PM. The author's experience of self-doubt, social alienation and discomfort is, in essence, similar not only to that of many Jewish-born baalei-teshuva, but to many who are frum-from-birth. sarah shapiro posted on 08/20 at 07:48 PM. Dear Honourable Rebbetin Hausman: Otillia de Andrade posted on 08/21 at 12:29 AM. The Torah has many different halachos about not oppressing a convert, but one should especially refrain about commenting a convert's family or ethnic group of origin. It is indeed a tragedy that far too many "FFBs" either ignore or are ignorant of such a fundamental interpersonal obligation that presents the Jewish People in such a negative state. Steve Brizel posted on 08/21 at 03:43 AM. Aliza you would not have died except for welfare checks. For many welfare checks are the handcuffs and locks of of the prison of poverty and immorality. bvw posted on 08/21 at 04:53 AM. Great article. May I ask what you, and the other people who commented that they had similar experiences, convert in the first place? Karen posted on 08/21 at 05:58 AM. People who make critical comments about how other people look or behave, or who even think about the socioeconomic background of those who share a table with them at a simcha, are the ones who are "traif." We are supposed to treat each other as we wish to be treated. You seem like a wonderful, good-humored, and kind-hearted person and a "Shayne Yiddene" a beautiful Jew. Amy posted on 08/21 at 06:00 AM. I, thank you! I have been feeling the same way some time. Some people see my fumbling and just smile that knowing smile that make me feel all the more out of place, but the Rabbi's wife is a blessing! She is from Spain, a Jewish princess and me being a American convert she doesn't hold that against me. She will gently, softly teach me things. I love her for this. I know that I will mess up things and (giggling) take the wrong glass, but I look to her and she's watching with a smile and I know that its going to be OK. I don't want to be like everyone else. I will always stick out and be different even in my own Family who have pretty much disowned me for converting, but I have a bigger family now and more loving towards me than my own blood (sad but true). As I read the post to you I can see even more family I have not met, loving me from afar. Shalom my Sister Zeruiah posted on 08/21 at 06:30 AM. The misconceptions about Republicans and their philosophy is so prevalent. Republicans aren't against providing aid to poor people, especially those with disabilities, as in the case here. The problem they have is with benefits, food stamps, etc. going to non-disabled people and those who make it an inter-generational entitlement, rather than a temporary assist. Reuven posted on 08/21 at 06:31 AM. It's unfortunate that whoever was leading you through the conversion process didn't also provide you with tips on what would be considered kosher/unkosher behavior as an Observant Jew. Or that you didn't seek that out, so you would be more comfortable in your new environment once you'd converted. Laya posted on 08/21 at 06:45 AM. What this article discusses is very typical sad as it is. It is even worse If the ger is an african hispanic MALE. That sexual dynamic is enough to really see the sad state and condition in the orthodox jewish world. When I finally had enough of it I made the best decision. I became a community of one. Rather than give up my beautiful Faith which I worked hard for. I made peace with my fellow co-religionists. Aryeh posted on 08/21 at 06:54 AM. I would love to know what made you convert to Judaism. Have you considered publishing your experiences with Judaism? Thanks so much for sharing them here with us. Alida posted on 08/21 at 08:29 AM. Aliza, if you and your husband are ever in Queens, you're welcome here. We're so informal that some of the the "phony-baloneys" I know would cringe, but the genuine people appreciate it. M.E.S. Atik posted on 08/22 at 04:45 PM. Aliza, Batsheva Frankel posted on 08/22 at 08:33 PM. Mazel tov Aliza, you sound like a class A shtetl Yid. Actually, you remind me of the character portrayed by Barbara Streisand in the film 'The Way We Were'. Schvach posted on 08/23 at 11:27 AM. Try a Sephardi or Mizrachi congregation. Mine welcomes everyone (including our Ashkenazi brothers & sisters) - Spanish is the 2nd language here (after Hebrew; English is third); many congregants are from Latin America, others from Israel where EVERY color is a Jewish color. As for your hair - any head covering (hat, scarf, mantilla, //even// a peah (wig) is OK). Yohanon posted on 08/23 at 11:45 AM. Aliza, anytime I come across something you've written, I know I'm in for a treat! You truly sound like my kind of woman - real, no pretensions, and not afraid to speak her mind. Someone who understands that life is short (120 years can truly fly by), and if we don't laugh now, what are we waiting for? BTW, don't think it's only converts who fumble, I've gotten more then a few strange looks in my day for things I've said. If someone doesn't like it, that's their problem, not mine. Charnie posted on 08/24 at 06:10 AM. Like a lot of other people said you and your husband are welcome to move to Baltimore. You won't have to worry about remarks about Latina maids, none of us have the money to hire one if we wanted to. Jason Goldstein posted on 08/24 at 10:48 AM. Aliza, newsflash: there are many FFBs who don't know the "rules" either. Could come from growing up with a grandfather who had a PhD from the school of hard knocks and living out of town most of my life, but there's much I'm as bewildered by as you, and I can be outrageous on a good day too. fayge posted on 08/24 at 11:53 AM. A person does not "convert" to Judaism. He or she is born with a lost Jewish soul that through the centuries has somehow been separated from his or her people. It is drawn to returning to its true identity. That soul derives joy and comfort from following Jewish law and being a part of his or her people.It has come home! If that is true of you then you did not "become" Jewish, you were Jewish from the day you were born and eventually found yourself. It is your natural condition regardless of nationality, politics, race, manners, language, shoes, or the lashon hara of Mrs. Whatshername. Gerald Rothman posted on 08/25 at 11:21 AM. I really enjoyed this piece. I grew up Jewish, middle-class, Ashkenazi-white-girl and still often don't fit in "at the Shabbos table". As others have commented, it's a mix of finding ones people and accepting oneself. Thanks for sharing! Jennie Rivlin Roberts posted on 08/27 at 06:45 AM. I am not a convert. Born Jewish, but in a low income reform home. Let me tell you, aside from not being able to translate dirty words in spanish (well i do know a few as I live in NYC!), there isn't any faux pas you've made that I haven't. Just try not to spit at people accidentally when you speak, and aside from that...you be you! Suzanne posted on 10/22 at 05:39 AM. You can come be a guest in my Jerusalem home anytime. We don't even have a coffee table. Ilene Rosenblum posted on 11/18 at 06:01 AM. Submit a CommentComments posted on this website are subject to editing for space, language and/or clarity. |
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