On being an Orthodox Ally

It’s the last day of Pride month, and I wanted to share a little about what it means to me to be ally to the LGBT+ community, and specifically as someone who is an Orthodox Jew. An ally is a heterosexual cisgender person who supports equal civil rights, gender equality, and LGBT social movements, challenging homophobia, biphobia, and transphobia. I’ve been an ally since my college days. I was even president of the Allies association at Texas A&M University, marching alongside the LGBT+ community, handing out information about services available to LGBT+ students and staff, and supervising ongoing training for new Allies so that they could provide more safe spaces for students to feel comfortable opening up and exploring who they were.

I remember getting threats and jeers for marching with my kippah proudly on my head, but I didn’t care. I knew that whatever I went through was a fraction of what my fellow students had to go through on a daily basis, and I heard so many stories of people who had horrible hardships coming out to their loved ones; but I also saw the beauty and passion of the community. I saw people fall in love with partners they would eventually marry, and I saw how much joy and positivity the community added to our school and to my life personally. So much of the dialogue when I was growing up focused on the pain of coming out or the awkwardness of trying to navigate a heteronormative world; but I slowly began to realize that LGBT+ people not only deserved to be in the same world I lived in, but that they made it better. Ultimately it’s not about tolerance or acceptance, it’s about affirmation that these are whole people, not missing anything, and that they bring something to the table that no one else can.

It’s not been easy having this mindset while also remaining an Orthodox Jew. People would criticize me within my community for supporting a “lifestyle” that didn’t jive with their view of the Torah, they accused me of abetting sinners and encouraging people to stay in their wicked ways when they could be changed. I heard some of the worst kind of homophobia and transphobia from people that I shared a table with, and it boiled my blood to hear them say it. For a long time after college, I just ignored what they said and chalked it up to just ignorant people saying ignorant things.

But that is not enough.

It is not enough to sit idly by while people stereotype, defame, insult, and degrade good and loving people. It is not enough to simply be comfortable in the fact that you know you’re not a bigot, while allowing those around you to stoke the flames of bigotry. It is not enough to be an ally to your LGBT+ friends while staying silent amongst your straight ones. It takes more.

It takes action to be an ally. It means stepping out of the comfort zone you have because of your heterosexuality and cisgender identity, and taking a stand. It means having difficult conversations and answering hard questions.

As an observant Jew, it means even more. It means engaging with your community in a way that is inclusive and open. It means making sure that everyone feels safe and welcome in your home. It means grappling with Halacha, even erring sometimes, in order to fulfill the commandment to love your fellow as you love yourself. It means being understanding when people leave Jewish practice behind because they cannot deal with the internal conflicts, and working for a world where people don’t feel the need to leave. It means putting yourself out there as an example, that a ben Torah can be an ally too. You have to be able to answer LGBT+ peoples’ questions, and have good answers as to why sometimes we can flex and sometimes we can’t, all while remaining compassionate and loving.

I want someone to see me as a resource, a shoulder to cry on, a listening ear, someone to explain things, but most of all as just someone who has love to give. My kippah and tzitzit shouldn’t automatically make me an unfriendly person, and I hate that we live in an environment today where that is still the case.

Thank G-d, things are slowly changing. Rabbis are working on the issues specific to the LGBT+ community, and doing so honestly and with integrity. There are still people out there that will say the Kaddish and write off a son or daughter, but those days are numbered. Slowly, slowly, the religious community is starting to realize that these people are not going anywhere and we cannot change them. I hope one day that the inclination to grieve or to mourn over lost dreams will be replaced by the simple love we can share with one another.

The other day, I was in a very Haredi area buying a new hat, and the guy helping me out noticed my pride bracelet that I had made. He asked me if I knew what the colors meant, and I told him I did, thinking that he was going to explain to me how the rainbow was simply Jewish, and try to dismiss any connections to pride. Instead, he simply said that he liked it, and that it was nice that I made it. I’ll never know if he was being genuine or not, but his knowing smile told me that he wasn’t just pulling my leg.

I don’t want to make this post about me, because being an ally isn’t really about who you are. It means standing up for what’s right, and acting when you can to make the world a better place. As an Orthodox Jew, that’s always been my mission plan, to reveal the goodness in everything. As pride closes this month, being an ally shouldn’t stop today. It doesn’t take wearing rainbow colors or marching in a parade to make a difference, and people in the Orthodox world are in a unique position to change things for a lot of people that are suffering because of longstanding discrimination and misunderstanding.

At the end of the day, G-d is love, and He loves us all, and He made us all in His image; and He doesn’t make mistakes. Halacha will have to learn to move with the times, and we will move along with it. No one needs to compromise their beliefs, because ultimately we all should believe that everyone deserves to be treated fairly in life and that everyone has value and meaning in their lives.

I’ll still keep wearing my pride bracelet tomorrow, not because I want just showcase that I’m someone that can be talked to, but because I want to remind myself of what I stand for. I stand for a world where love is love, and G-d is ultimately understanding. I cannot change the world, but at least I can be one guy in a kippah that’s willing to listen and ready to stand up when the time comes. I don’t think that G-d would have it any other way. I don’t have all the answers, but that’s ok, no one does. All I can do is love to the fullest, and hope that love can continue to change the world.

Finding Home

It’s been a few days since I first got here to the land of Stars and Stripes, and in many ways it’s felt like stepping onto an alien world, albeit one where everything foreign feels slightly familiar at the same time. I take the wheel of my rental car and remember what’s it’s like to drive the open road, but I cannot help but marvel at the grandness of the highways and the speed at which I travel. I see signs and buildings that stir memories in my mind, but the sheer amount of space around me and the size of everything makes me feel like I am closer to exploring the moon than being back in the country I called home for twenty-eight years. It’s the strangest feeling, reconnection with derealization, walking on old steps you’ve tread before while seeing that maybe your feet just don’t fit in the grooves you’ve worn into them.

Being “home” in so many ways has only reaffirmed where I truly feel home. I already miss my apartment, my neighborhood, and all the sights and sounds of living in Israel. As relieving as it is to speak in English with everyone around me, I catch myself putting on Israeli music, comforted by the language I barely have a grasp of. My mind is no longer the same, it has been opened up to an entirely different world, and this old one seems so strange and foreign to me that I feel like the alien in the land of my birth. Imagine an astronaut, on a mission to make a new home on Mars, given a two week pass to come back home, only to realize that he pines for the red dust more than the rich soil of the Earth.

Perhaps the old saying is true, that absence make the heart grow fonder. I first knew that I was in love with the woman I would one day marry when we were apart, realizing in a moment that everything was better with her in it, and that I never wanted to spend another night away from her again. I realize now that I am no longer truly an American, or at least more than what it says on paper. When the heart and soul yearn and look east towards Zion and hope for the return, maybe I am truly an Israeli. I breathe in the air here and it does not fill my lungs, the water does not quench my thirst, and the soil feels lifeless underneath my feet. I long to be back home, to feel the connection between myself and the place I am meant to be in, to feel and see G-d’s presence in everything around me.

I’ve gone from the holy land, and I can feel the emptiness. Exile is real and I can feel it in my bones here, and it goes past the inconveniences of being in a place where there isn’t kosher food everywhere or that I can take for granted that the people around me share a common fate. The distinction runs to my very soul, and for the first time in my life I really feel it. I know that I was completely right to pack up my belongings and make the journey to Israel, to build something in the land. Everything outside of it seems so strange, even though most of it is the only things I’ve known for the vast majority of my life.

I am enjoying seeing my family, they are one thing that keeps me bound to the earth here and let’s me see through haze of this land. Blood is thicker than any amount of ocean between us, and they are what make this trip worth it. I love them with my whole heart, but I can finally admit to myself that I no longer love this place. This place is not home, and it never could be again. I have seen the promised land, and I can never go back to living without its light.

Sending love to my brothers and sisters across the sea, and to my friends and family here in the land of the free. I hope this trip continues to go well, because this sojourn has been fraught with crises of identity, and I want to be back to the space where everything in my life just fits into place.

Am I home?

The reality is that that I am still living in-between worlds, a foot in each door, not really American, but not really fully Israeli.

In less than forty-eight hours, I will be in the air, travelling hundreds of miles per hour, over a vast ocean, to a place that I call home; or at least I did. I catch myself calling America home, and I always feel the need to correct myself; that I left the old country behind to build something in this new state in an old land. I have to say to myself that the United States is no longer my home, that I made a conscious decision to leave behind my possessions, my friends, my community, my family, my entire way of life to make a go of it here in Israel; but I still keep catching myself saying, “back home in America…” The reality is that that I am still living in-between worlds, a foot in each door, not really American, but not really fully Israeli.

Today, I was talking with someone and he said that he was Israeli and that I was American. When I corrected him and said, no I’m Israeli too, he said to me in broken English that I was still an American. There is something unbridgeable between the sabra and I, or at least while I still speak broken Hebrew. This language barrier always comes up when I am in a big group of people that are speaking Hebrew. My mind still thinks in English, so I spend so much time trying to keep up with the fast-speaking sabras and translating in my mind that by the time I finally understand what’s happening, the conversation is already on another topic. When I’m speaking one-on-one with someone in Hebrew, my mind can switch, but inevitably I run into the wall of not knowing a word, or how to translate a phrase, or conjugate a verb correctly; my mind stops working when it’s in Hebrew mode, and I can acutely feel the inability to express myself in the language of this place I desperately want to call home and speak with the people who I long to be equal with; but is more than that.

I am caught in a place where my mind is stuck between worlds, between my old home and my new one. It’s been two years since I first stepped foot on these shores and the Ministry of the Interior handed me a little laminated card that said, Status: Israeli Citizen. In those two years, I’ve slowly undergone the process of klitah, absorption, into this society. I’ve changed the way I look, the way I speak, the way I interact with people, the way I view the world, and the way I view myself. I started off surrounded by fellow olim in my Hebrew ulpan, all of us coming from different corners of the world, trying to make sense of this new citizenship and this new identity of being an [insert country of origin] Israeli. Now, I’m surrounded by natives and every day is a challenge to navigate their world, or is it mine too? Everyone says I’m doing well for how long I’ve been here, that it takes time and patience, slowly slowly; but I still feel like something is missing, that I am out of place. I do not feel like I fit in to the puzzle that is this country.

Where did it all begin, this feeling of never having a place feel completely whole, of never feeling completely whole in a single place?

My parents got divorced when I was a small child, and I think that’s when I lost the real concept of what it meant to have a home. Shuttling back and forth between my parents, having two houses, two rooms, two places filled with “my” things, I learned to never put down roots. Every day could bring about a new change in where I slept at night, and that makes a kid think that nothing has permanence. I think that the old euphemism for my situation was that I came from a “broken home,” but my therapist said something different today. She said that really, I learned what it was like to be homeless, to never feel settled in a place, to have a place where I could crash and sleep, but never call home in the way that all of my friends spoke about the places they lived with their families. I would always envy my friends who went to summer camps, or went on trips together, or just always knew where they were going to be for holidays. I was jealous that they could just go to the same little building every day, go to their own designated quarters, and have a place they felt was theirs. It’s hard to sleep in a bed when you know that you have another one a thousand miles away that you’re also supposed to think of as yours. It’s hard to attach yourself to things when you also have treasures hidden away in another state. It’s hard when a parent has to tell a child, like a guest, that they’re always welcome in a place that’s supposed to be their home.

So, I spent most of the time after I left home at eighteen thinking exactly like this, thinking that no place was really home. Every year in college I moved: from my dorms, to my fraternity house, to an apartment with friends, to living with my girlfriend, to my first apartment after college, to my next apartment after that, until I finally got married and shared a space with someone again for the first time in years. I built what you could call a home, or at least a decent apartment. I bought furniture, decorations, bathroom furnishings, all the little things that make it yours. In five years of marriage, we moved three times. I never felt completely at home in any of them, or at least, I was already for the next move. I never felt so connected to any one place that I knew that this would be my home. It was always home for now, until we got something better, or felt like doing something new. Even with the best of intentions, I sowed the seeds of my own rootlessness.

Then, a little over two years ago, my wife and I made the ultimate decision to really cut off our roots and transplant ourselves to a place that we had only ever known on brief excursions. It was fun and exhilarating, but I’m only now beginning to understand how traumatic and stressful it all really was. I’ve always had mental health problems, and I feel like they were just bubbling beneath the surface in America, with occasional flareups making me get help. When we came here, everything that I had that kept all of those dark thoughts and problems under the surface just disappeared. I lost my support group, my habits, my routines; I lost the ability to just blend in and hide the problems away. Eventually, things got to a breaking point, and after a year here I was hospitalized in a mental institution, and my world literally shattered. I had gotten so used to changing places that I felt at home in a psych ward more than I did in the outside world. I got used to the cotton pajama clothing and sharing a room with a stranger, I got used to it all so quickly that when I tried to leave for a couple of days I completely lost my connection with reality and had to be readmitted.

Thankfully, things are better now. I’ve been in my outpatient program for a while, and things are finally starting to feel better. I still have bad days, but I can deal with them. What I still haven’t been able to get over, and this is one of the things that keeps me up at night, is still feeling like I’m an alien here. That as much I answer people that question, why I would choose the challenges of Israel over the comforts of America, with my love of this place and feeling connected here more than I did in America, I still feel disconnected from society; and if that’s the case, what does that say about how connected I ever felt to anything back in America?

I think it all comes back to what I think home means, or at least what it means to have a home or feel at home. It’s hard for me to define, such a simple concept. It’s a building, a place, but that word means so much more than any physical structure. It means having a place where you feel comfortable, more than just a place you can rest your head. It means feeling like you have a place to call your own, and not just a place that you feel like you can stay at. It means feeling like you have a sanctuary, and not just shelter. It means even more than anything you attach to the place, it is a feeling you have with the life that is connected to that physical location. The home is what you base your life on, the foundation for everything else. All of the other places in your life are in relation to home, and in relation to yourself. You may be a worker at your place of employment, a congregant at your place of worship, a patron of your favorite bar or restaurant; but your home has to be the one place where you can feel like you can be completely yourself. The rest of the world could be going to hell or feel like an alien world, but your home is the one place you’re supposed to feel safe enough to be in your own skin.

When I close my eyes and imagine the home I want, I see experiences and not things. I see myself watering the plants in my garden. I see myself sharing a meal with my wife and laughing. I wish that my home would be a place where I can take off my shell and let myself feel comfortable in being exposed. I want it to be a place where I can sit and write to my heart’s content. I want it to be a place where I can curl up and just feel relaxed reading a book. I want to look around at then things on the walls and see expressions of what I hold dear in life. I want my bed to feel like the safest place in the world, and not just where I go when life’s troubles have me to exhausted to keep on going.

I don’t have that yet. Besides the physical things, I still struggle to feel like this place is my home. The food in my fridge has labels that I still sometimes struggle to decipher. When I get a phone call and have to speak in Hebrew, that outside feeling of alienation comes into my home. I don’t want my home to feel like a bastion or a fortress, I want it to feel like a hidden garden. I want to feel like life flourishes just for me, and that I am privileged to see it. Everyone brings their problems home with them, but it still feels like my home is dominated more by them than the refuge from them. I want to feel like a part of the rest of the world outside, but I want it to be my part of the world. I want to feel comfortable with not being comfortable all of the time, and I think that leaving America forced me to really do that for the first time. I’ve had hardships before, but there is nothing that compares to this immigrant experience.

Still, I have hope. When I lay my head down at night, it doesn’t feel like a hotel room, I feel like it’s my pillow underneath my head. When I pick up the phone and struggle to speak, I know that it’s ok, and that I am better now than I was when I finished my formal Hebrew education. I have more confidence, and part of that comes from knowing that I am different, and that the differentness might last forever. I look at my government and see people that were not born here, and I feel hope that I might one day make it here on my own terms. So many Hebrew phrases all boil down to the same idea, that things are going to be ok, and that someone upstairs is watching out for us.

When I pack my bags tomorrow, I know that I am not really leaving one home for another. Those days in my life are long gone, I do not have to bifurcate my existence between two worlds. I can be complicated, I can be nuanced, I can live life in a way that is not always one way or the other. There is even beauty in living this complex life, always learning and adapting to new situations. When the first pioneers came to this land, they came speaking a foreign tongue, and even the stilted Hebrew of our founding fathers betrays the fact that so many still spoke in their mother tongues in private. They learned to live and adapt to this world, but they also built it into something new, each generation of immigrants adding another layer to this beautiful Zionist project in the holy land. I may not always feel like it, but I am part of that too. To be alienated here is to also be essentially Israeli, to be a pioneer, to step outside your comfort zone and try and build something amazing even when you don’t always understand everything.

I will always be an American, but I will always be an Israeli; and that is something that I chose. I never got a say in where I was born, but I have a say in my future, and that future is here. I may not be where I want to be, but I will be one day. For now, I might still be between worlds, but I know where my home is. This land, these people, this country, they are mine. This is where I belong. This is where I am building my home, and G-d willing, I will have the home I’ve always dreamed of.

I will make it here. Israelis are resilient like that.

This night never ends

All of these nights just blend together, and they’re killing me slowly,

Each and every night never seems to end,
blending together in a maelstrom of insomnia, rumination,
and endless loneliness.
1 am, 2 am, 3 am, 4 am, 5 am,
meaningless demarcations in an experience that is truly marked by descent into
the void, the emptiness, the staring at the ceiling wondering when this will all finally be over with.

I stopped praying to G-d long ago for any kind of solace,
now I pray to Him only for an end; or I pray to the pills to take me anywhere but here.
When I walk the streets to escape from the sleeplessness, I only encounter the piercing feeling of loneliness.
Calling numbers that will never pick up, having conversations to fill the emptiness, desperately clawing at anything that will make a dent in all this pain I feel.
How do you tell someone that I am talking because the silence draws me deeper into madness?

Nights turn into weeks, weeks into months, and soon,
living becomes a plod to oblivion to the slow cadence of a death march.
Days don’t seem like days, they are a blur, all time becomes a binary experience:
with people and feeling alive enough to live or being alone enough to feel like you’re not alive.
I close my eyes for the few hours rest I can wrestle from the heavens, and when I awaken,
I feel alone with nothing but the remnants of nightmares and alarm clocks to wish me good morning.

Even a nap is dangerous.
Night terrors rob me of any relief, waking to an altered reality, caught in the dreamscape, panicked, and feeling like I can still hear the screams and violence inches from my face.
Uncontrollable sobbing, gasping for air, feeling life strangling me, why would I ever want to wake up?
Caught between the horrors of what my sleep brings and the reality that never seems to really exist,
why wouldn’t I choose the devil I know over whatever unknown this world brings?

But these nights, these damn nights, they kill me over and over again.
Restless, waiting, disappointed, fearful, and all so alone.
The loneliness is the true torture, the real demon that haunts these sleepless evenings.
In prison, in your cell, at least you have someone to talk to.
In this prison of mine, I have to make up all of the voices.
I hate what they say to me, and I hate myself for talking back to them.

So I call, and I call, and I call the list.
Every name a possibility, someone to give me a break from the yoke of this loneliness.
Ten minutes, thirty minutes, anything I can take to make me feel less utterly alone in this pain.
I hate myself for needing them so much, almost as much as I hate hearing the silence when no one answers.
I have friends around the world, or so I think, but it is hard to reach out, to grab hold of some kind of hope
when multiple time zones keep you away from the vast majority of people that ever cared about you.

Maybe tonight will be different, I have been blessed with a new pill to try.
Will it give me rest? Will it silence the nightmares? Will it finally make the voices stop?
I can only pray to whatever is up there that this night will be different;
but I don’t have much hope.
Too many nights have been fed to the hell that I am living, the fires that devour me every night,
the same fire that fills my veins with flames, my mind with a swirling inferno, and turns my soul to embers.

This has all been one long night without end, days are merely punctuation.
Loneliness while awake, horrors in my sleep, over and over and over.
The fire feeds itself and propels my body even though I try and will it all to just stop.
1 am, 2 am, 3 am, 4 am, 5 am,
meaningless numbers that mark nothing but the time left before I have to suffer vertically.
These nights are killing me slowly, lonely, one sleepless hour at a time.

Why do I do this?

Why do I write?
To confess?
To unburden myself?
To leave a record of my trials, of my tribulations, of my slow and inescapable descent into madness?
Do I simply write because I cannot speak all of the words racing in my thoughts?
That even my mother tongue cannot capture the words aloud?

Is it because I live in a world where my truth is too much?
Too powerful?
Too graphic?
Too real?
Too undesired?
Too unwanted?

Am I lying when I speak?
Do I bear false witness to the world?
Why must I always hide behind this mask?
Behind the greatest lie of all, “I am all right.”

I smile in despair.
I laugh while choking down tears.
I write self-affirming words when I am filled with self-hatred.
I am okay, my guiding deception.

I am a liar, a fake, a fraud, an impostor.
I am a fox clothed in wool,
lying in wait to take advantage of the best intentions of those around me.
I am an emotional sponge, a succubus of the heart.
I absorb everything around me:
emotions, experiences, traumas, and the suffering of everyone around me.
I anguish over their pain, I cry over their sorrows.

I am the demon in their nightmares, I pine for death over their lamentations.
I cannot escape this misery, this overwhelming and all-encompassing agony.
It tempers every happiness, every moment of joy; it never fails to to extinguish the flame within me.

Sometimes that pain is the only fire I have left, the only truth I can cling to.
The memories and regrets, forever carved into my flesh, stand as a monument to the only past I can remember.
I look at the them, I think of those moments, I think of the look on her face, I think of the hate and anger and utter desire to make myself feel pain.
My greatest work, written in blood, forearms as pages, lines fading like an old book.

I do not know why I do this, why I break open my chest to let the world see my aching heart, my bleeding soul.
It is a compulsion, an obsession, an unquenchable desire to scream somewhere that everyone can hear me and no one can mute me.
I must write this all down, either by ink, in ones and zeroes, or in blood.
I cannot keep this in.
The truth does not flow out of me, it breaks itself out of my breast, clawing it’s way to the freedom of the ether.
Why do I write?
Because I cannot stop, no matter how hard I try.