Tag Archives: religion

When Siblings Get Religious

Not too long ago a CBC announcer spoke of an upcoming a radio commentary on what can happen in a family when one of the children becomes very religious. What kind of stresses will enter the family? How will people cope.

The on-air promotions only mentioned how one sibling would deal with another sibling who had become “super religious”.
I decided to get this podcast and listen to it. In light of the recent news reports of brothers (and sometimes sisters) leaving their secular Western families to run off and join the worldwide Jihad against Christianity by going to Syrian and participating in ISIS the topic seemed entirely in keeping with one of the dominant questions being asked: has the West somehow failed to be nice enough to these young people? This is the allegation made in the Washington Post by Masha Gessen regarding the reasons for the Boston Marathon Bombers engaging in terrorism. How Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s immigrant path explains his guilty verdict

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How Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s immigrant path explains his gu…Masha Gessen explores what shaped Boston Marathon bombers.
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I was naturally interested, too, in the problems of identity which arise when people leave their homeland and enter into some kind of diaspora community. What is “identity” and how does it enter into the lives of people in our ever more mobile world. How does the ideology of “multiculturalism” which seems to demand simultaneously that we should all maintain our “authentic” cultural roots as well as being completely tolerant of all other cultures regardless of their fundamental differences with our own.

The CBC broadcast I finally heard was about secular Jewish woman from Vancouver whose previously secular brother had become an Orthodox Jew and insisted on obeying all the kosher laws when he visited other members of his family.
Peace in the House: A not-so-religious Jew and her Orthodox siblings

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Peace in the House: A not-so-religious Jew and her Ortho…Danielle Nerman grew up in a secular Jewish household, with two secular Jewish siblings. Then something happened when they became adults. Her siblings got religio…
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As I listened I learned of the compromises which involved using paper plates, the purchase of a barbeque which would only be used to cook kosher meat, and how Danielle’s brother prayed every day. I heard about his wearing a ball cap to keep his head covered while at the beach. I heard about his concerns about how some “kosher” products were not really “kosher enough” and so on.
What I did not hear was any hint of a discussion between the secular sister and the “SuperJew” brother about such things as abortion, same-sex marriage, the political tensions in the Middle East, or really anything at all which related to “religious differences” other than the need to keep meat and dairy separate and observe the sabbath.

Nothing about siblings heading off to distant lands to engage in acts brutal aggression or die almost immediately. Nothing about differences of worldview and belief so thoroughgoing that the only shared emotions left were contempt, disappointment, and loss. Minor inconveniences, not broken hearts, were all which were likely to arise.

My memory wandered back to some people I met a few years ago. Their nice secular Jewish daughter had spontaneously (i.e. no “love interest” was involved) converted to Islam. She had begun learning Arabic. She had cut herself off from them. She had taken herself out of their lives completely. And they said they did not know why. They could not imagine why.

I wondered what they and their other children would have to say about this broadcast.

If religious fundamentalism were about nothing more than dietary laws, head coverings, not missing the daily prayers — the content of which is not to be discussed in any case — if religious fundamentalism were understood by everyone as nothing more than personal lifestyle choices which in no way required anyone else in the world to change their own behaviour for any reason other than keeping “peace in the house”, then we would not be living in the world of today. We would not be gazing helplessly at pictures of the Chibok girls abducted by Boko Haram, at the mass beheadings of Christians on beaches by ISIS forces, of the wanton destruction of Nimrud and other world heritage sites because of their being somehow “unislamic”, the destruction of the Timbuktu libraries because infidel books are haram, the multiplying of no-go zones in the cities of Europe, and so on.

We would not be wondering why thousands of people born and raised in Western countries would be inspired to embrace these religious teachings, run away, and join their communities either to be “fighters” or “brides”.

Keeping “peace in the house” is one thing.

Not noticing the gorilla in the living room is another.