The JewAsian Phenomenon: Raising Jewish-Asian FamiliesPosted in Articles, Asian Diaspora, Family/Parenting, Judaism, Media Archive, Religion, United States on 2016-08-24 21:33Z by Steven |
The JewAsian Phenomenon: Raising Jewish-Asian Families
JewishBoston: The Vibe of the Tribe
2016-08-10
Judy Bolton-Fasman, Culture Reporter
A new book, as well as a conversation with its authors, sheds light on a growing segment of the Jewish population—Jewish-Asian children who are raised as Jews.
Helen Kim and Noah Leavitt are the authors of “JewAsian: Race, Religion, and Identity for America’s Newest Jews,” the first book-length study of Jewish-Asian couples and their children. While the two sociologists, who are married and professors at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Wash., have a personal stake in the subject, they have also observed that as a Jewish-Asian couple they are far from alone in raising their children as Jews. In the book, the couple’s research on Jewish-Asian families is encapsulated in interviews and extensive studies on the subject.
Keren McGinity, director of Interfaith Families Jewish Engagement at Hebrew College, notes: “‘JewAsian’ is groundbreaking because it’s the first book to complicate the intermarriage narrative by looking at it through the trifold lens of ethnicity, race and religion. Kim and Leavitt’s work highlights important new ways of understanding Jewish-American, Asian-American and Jew-Asian identities, challenging dominant racial, ethnic and interfaith marriage discourses in the process. I am thrilled to have it on my syllabus for the course ‘Jewish Intermarriage in the Modern American Context’ at Hebrew College this fall.”
Kim and Leavitt recently talked to JewishBoston about their new book and their family life…
Read the entire interview here.