first let me suggest that it is possible to not want ones children to marry outside a group without hating those outside the group - especially when the issue is religion, and one is dealing with a religion like Judaism that explicitly bans intermarriage (Orthodox AND Conservative AND the majority of Reform rabbis) And one which, unlike Christianity and Islam, is small in numbers and always nervous about physical survival.
OTOH i myself have problems with Jewish parents who dont particularly follow the Jewish religion, and then get upset about intermarriage - I mean what do you expect folks? The best way to avoid intermarriage is to make your religion and culture something so alive and compelling that its part of your kids life - then they wont want to intermarry, or might want to share their religion with any friends they become serious about. If you make it only a tribal thing youre asking for trouble with a detribalized generation.
I would also say that i have trouble with any Jewish parents who are more upset about marriage or dating with a Muslim than with, say an Episcopalian. Jewish law bans both equally. While I can understand a discomfort level based on current events, i agree there is an element of bigotry in it.
As for dating vs marriage - I may be a hypocrite here, as I dated non-Jewish girls, yet I realize that encouraging Jews to date Jews is a key to preventing intermarriage. Again, I would say that the best way to insure Jewish survival is to build the positive, not to emphasize what can only look like a bigoted ban.
Let me simply suggest that this is a difficult issue, and one that require thought - especially at age 14. This might be an opportunity for a heart to heart talk with your mom about values and life - probably more valuable than much else you could have at this age.
OTOH i myself have problems with Jewish parents who dont particularly follow the Jewish religion, and then get upset about intermarriage - I mean what do you expect folks? The best way to avoid intermarriage is to make your religion and culture something so alive and compelling that its part of your kids life - then they wont want to intermarry, or might want to share their religion with any friends they become serious about. If you make it only a tribal thing youre asking for trouble with a detribalized generation.
I would also say that i have trouble with any Jewish parents who are more upset about marriage or dating with a Muslim than with, say an Episcopalian. Jewish law bans both equally. While I can understand a discomfort level based on current events, i agree there is an element of bigotry in it.
As for dating vs marriage - I may be a hypocrite here, as I dated non-Jewish girls, yet I realize that encouraging Jews to date Jews is a key to preventing intermarriage. Again, I would say that the best way to insure Jewish survival is to build the positive, not to emphasize what can only look like a bigoted ban.
Let me simply suggest that this is a difficult issue, and one that require thought - especially at age 14. This might be an opportunity for a heart to heart talk with your mom about values and life - probably more valuable than much else you could have at this age.
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