Conversion

11th May
2009
written by Sharon

If anyone has any connections to either Jewish book publishers/agents or publishers who would be interested in my young German converts topic (see post), please, please contact me as soon as possible. I really think that this topic is under-covered, and both Germany and the worldwide Jewish community could benefit from such a book.

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6th May
2009
written by Sharon

My contributions to this year’s “36 Under 36″ Section in The Jewish Week –

Juan Mejía: At 15, Juan Mejía was attending a prestigious Catholic high school in Colombia, hoping one day to become a monk. Little did he know that 16 years later, he would actually become a rabbi…

Malkie Schwartz: When Malkie Schwartz first decided to leave behind her native Chabad-Lubavitch community in 2000, she had a strong network of support in secular New York — something that she realized most formers chasidim have difficulties finding. Three years later, she decided to change that by founding Footsteps, a comfortable learning and social environment where people can adjust to their new lives and discuss their decisions. “Unlike a lot of the people who leave, I had a support system and I obviously experienced challenges of my own,” she says…

Leslie Ginsparg: Looking for an outlet to unleash her creative side, Leslie Ginsparg decided to attend her first women’s open-mike event during a trip to Israel 10 years ago. Though she and her friends have always loved performance, their strict observance of kol isha laws have kept them away from public venues where men would be able to hear them sing, she says…

Ran Fuchs: Moving back and forth from Tel Aviv to New York as a child, 30-year-old Ran Fuchs describes himself as the quintessential Israeli-American hybrid. Ultimately, he and his parents settled in New York, but he never felt completely at home in either place. “In the United States I felt very Israeli, and in Israel I felt very American,” he says…

Brooke Goldstein: Brooke Goldstein went in and out of the West Bank for two years to probe some of the most dangerous Palestinian terrorists, compiling the clips that would become an award-winning documentary in 2006 — “Making the Martyr” — which exposes how Islamic militants force innocent children to become suicide bombers…

Deena Greenberg: As soon as she heard that the University of Pennsylvania had cancelled its program for study in Israel for the spring semester, Penn Hillel President Deena Greenberg knew she couldn’t stand still.
So she wrote a guest column criticizing the decision in The Daily Pennsylvanian — Penn’s independent student newspaper — where she had been a beat reporter and senior news writer for the past four years. Despite the ongoing Gaza War at the time, the United States had not issued a warning against traveling to Israel since September, and Penn was the only Ivy League university to shut down its Israel program, Greenberg and her co-authors wrote…

Elizabeth Samson: Frustrated by the way people can manipulate legal systems and demonize innocent victims, young lawyer Elizabeth Samson hopes to make free speech more of a reality in the world and crush a practice that she calls “libel tourism.” Samson equates libel tourism to international forum shopping, where plaintiffs look for a court in the country that will likely provide the most favorable outcomes for their cases. Often, such cases involve terror financing….

Cheryl Vinograd & Sharon Lewin: Over spring break last year, then first-year medical students Cheryl Vinograd (on left) and Sharon Lewin took a weeklong whirlwind tour of Israel – no, not on a Tel Aviv beach vacation, but on a volunteer mission shadowing doctors at hospitals and clinics all over the country…

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15th April
2009
written by Sharon

**Note: I’d like to preface this post by telling you just how long and hard I’ve worked on this article. I have been working on it ever since my trip to Germany in August, and I ended up amassing over 10,000 words of material, which I’d like to hone into a book proposal (**any tips on that??**). This is the 3,500-word version that appears on the front page of this week’s Jewish Week. I hope you enjoy, and I’d LOVE to hear any reactions.**

by Sharon Udasin
Staff Writer

Bernd Wollschlaeger, carrying the Torah, broke from his parents to become a Jew. His father, left, fought for the Nazis.

Bernd Wollschlaeger, carrying the Torah, broke from his parents to become a Jew. His father, left, fought for the Nazis.

Trekking through ice-coated fields in a brutally cold Russian October, Lt. Arthur Wollschlaeger pressed on, as he and his swastika-emblazoned companions conquered the western Russian city of Orel — another victory for the unrelenting German Werhmacht infantry. He had earlier taken part in invasions of Poland, Holland and France — a World War II military career that began when he first entered the Czechoslovakian Sudetenland, in 1938.

Half a century later, 30-year-old Bernd Wollschlaeger — Arthur’s son — trudged through olive fields in his Israeli Defense Forces convoy, a new M-16 slung over his shoulder as his unit approached Ramallah and set out to guard Israeli settlers living on the West Bank.

“I was a soldier very much like my father,” the younger Wollschlaeger, now 50, wrote in his self-published 2007 memoir, “A German Life: Against All Odds, Change is Possible.” He has been a Jew for 23 years.

Wollschlaeger, who grew up in a staunchly nationalist and Catholic home in Bamburg, Germany, first became fascinated with Judaism when he peered inquisitively at a six-pointed star that decorated an apartment near his dentist’s office. It was part of that town’s tiny Jewish community, he would later learn.

But the first incident to really ignite his passion for Judaism was the terror attack on Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics, a moment that shook Germany back to the largely unspoken atrocities of World War II.

Though pockets of Germans have been converting to Judaism since the end of World War II, Wollschlaeger is an early member of a little-studied second wave of predominantly liberal German converts, a small but growing group now two or three generations removed from the Holocaust. Local rabbis estimate that each year hundreds of Germans convert to Judaism.

Continue reading…

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