Jesus, my lifelong friend, accompanied me through chicken pox, mumps, and measles when quarantine isolated me from my sisters, parents, and friends. No, I didn’t have Mother Theresa-like visions. He was more of an imaginary friend for my waxing brain, like an animated Pooh Bear.  Clergy at St. Mary’s school in Terre Haute, Indiana, taught that Jesus was born in Bethlehem and died in Jerusalem. Due to those back-to-back pre-vaccine childhood illnesses, I heard these Jesus facts my second time around in the first grade. The teaching doubled down in my malleable brain, which had grown to ninety-five percent of its total capacity, normal for a six-year-old.

There was never any question that Jesus was born of Jewish parents. Israel, presented as a holy place, not a political state, was sacred ground because that’s where Jesus lived. There was always the implication that we, as Catholics, were in Jesus’s family, that somehow we had Jewish roots. If Jews believed in Jesus, they got to go to heaven, like us Catholics. But no other religion. Such was my Roman Catholic schooling.

Our single black-and-white family television transmitted few programs into our living room in the 1950s. Roy Rogers and I Love Lucy were allowed, but my parents insisted we watch the nightly news. My sisters and I didn’t dare whine for fear of verbal reprisals like, “Shut up and listen—maybe you’ll learn something.” 

They’d let us watch “This is Your Life,” a forerunner to PBS’ “Finding Your Roots’. In 1953, This is Your Life broadcasted the story of 32-year-old Hanna Bloch-Kohner, a Holocaust survivor. I wasn’t much interested in the not-so-famous Hanna, but I did wonder about the Holocaust.

When I was ten years old, as my brain power peaked, local TV stations advertised the opening of Old Orchard Shopping Center in Skokie, Illinois. We lived in Wilmette, on the border of Skokie.

“Where’s Skokie?” I asked my mother.

“That’s where all the Jews live.” She answered.

All my thoughts screeched to a halt. I’d never seen a Jew. I assumed that whatever Jews were leftover from the time of Jesus surely had died in that mysterious “Holocaust,” a word adults uttered in a hush. Of course, I couldn’t ask my mother what Jews were doing in Skokie. She expected me to know what she knew, no matter the subject. She would have ridiculed me with a sarcastic, “You’re kidding me. Don’t you watch the news?”

From that moment on, I looked for Jews in supermarkets, at the beach, in the record store, and even at school. It’s possible I looked for men who resembled Jesus. In high school, I met a Jewish brother and sister. I stared them into my spiritual family. I wondered how they got to New Jersey from Bethlehem or Jerusalem or Israel, those holy places whose ancient remnants had settled in my bones, with Jesus. 

My brain, now waning, has reformed itself through evidence, facts, and logic into knowing and loving the Jewish story. There may be evidence, and there may be facts, but there’s no logic to knowing Jesus. 

That’s still a belief. 

7 thoughts on “Jews

  1. That such a cute little story. You are a very talented lady. I love the easy reading of your writing talent. You simply have the ability to take me there. It’s always an informative and fun trip. 

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  2. I love your writing!!!!

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    JudiChapnick 
    1-314-503-8008…( WhatsApp )
    900 N Lake Shore 
    Chicago, Illinois 60611 

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    h1 class=”quoteText” style=”margin: 0px 0px 15px; font-weight: normal; padding: 0px; line-height: 21px;”>Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our peop

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  3. I personally don’t descremenate  we are all children of God  I have friends from all colors  all religions 

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  4. love your personal Jesus story.

    here’s one of my childhood stories….

    when I was in the 4th grade we stopped going to church. because the board of the church told my father he had to start paying rent for the band of kids from the neighborhood & the church which he rehearsed at the church…and which played at church ice cream socials. we believe it’s because kids they did not want were in the band. dad said “church” from then on was Meet the Press.

    so we hid in the house on Sundays as everyone else attended church, mostly Roman Catholic churches. When we finally decided to just come out in play clothes one day my best friend was horrified when we told her we did not go to church. “That’s a mortal sin,” she exclaimed. my reply “we don’t have that.” We were Lutheran.

    the next Sunday she came over and said “Jesus was a Lutheran.” My reply, “No, he was Jewish.”

    the unchurched teaching the churched.

    thanks for prompting me to remember that.

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