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The Jewish
community wrings its hands over intermarriage and the
melting away of America's Jewish population into the
larger culture. Many analysts say the root of the
problem is the unwillingness of many Jewish men to marry
Jewish women, and ask "why is this
happening?" |
Perhaps I can help provide
an answer.
Why didn't I marry a Jewish woman?
The reason I lost interest in many Jewish women was the
generally contemptuous, belittling, and bigoted attitude that
so many of them have towards men.
My family and I spend the Jewish
holidays and many other occasions with a large group of Jewish
relatives, friends, and acquaintances.
During the dinner conversation one
can be assured that, whatever couple just argued, broke up,
separated, or divorced, it was all the man's fault. If we're
discussing a woman who has chosen to be a full-time homemaker,
the conversation will be about how poor (insert female name)
suffers having to do the child care. No attention will be paid
to the contributions of the husband, who's working a 50 hour
week (or more) so his wife can have the time to love and care
for the kids she chose to have.
Challenges women face will be
discussed bitterly, and challenges men face will be ignored.
Women in the news will be portrayed positively and their flaws
excused or minimized. Men in the news will be portrayed
negatively and their flaws exaggerated and focused
upon.
While listening to the women at
these gatherings I've often wondered: do they really believe
that women are without faults? When they shake their heads
about "husbands who refuse to change," doesn't it ever occur
to them that sometimes they are the ones who need to
change?
Jewish women could learn much from
the story of Sarah, an attractive, accomplished, 30-something
Jewish acquaintance of mine who usually attended these
gatherings. She was engaged to be married to an intelligent,
successful, good-looking gentleman who had a great rapport
with kids. He spent many evenings with these relatives and
bore the manbashing, including Sarah's, without
complaint.
Eventually he broke up with her
and later married a shiksa, for which (of course) he is
vilified. The breakup could have happened for any number of
reasons. However, I'm sure that at least once, as he listened
to the women endlessly demeaning and belittling men, he stared
into his glass of Manischevitz and said to himself, "Do I
really want to spend the rest of my life listening to
this?"
A Jewish acquaintance recently
explained it best. When I asked him why he and his Jewish wife
were splitting up after 20 years of marriage, he replied: "I
got tired of being wrong all the time."
Once there was a discussion among
the women about a conflict involving one of the women present,
her secretary, her female boss, and her boss' secretary. The
conversation seemed to go on and on with the participants
unable to reach a conclusion. Finally my wife leaned over to
me and said softly, "They can't resolve this because the
conflict is only between women."
She's probably right. If there
were a man anywhere in the picture--a boss, a co-worker, maybe
even a delivery boy--the problem would have been conveniently
blamed on him and the conversation
could have moved on.
When challenged on their anti-male
prejudices, Jewish women, rather than considering that they
could be in the wrong, often say things like "Men are just
afraid of assertive women."
Nonsense. Most of my Jewish
friends have married Gentiles and I don't know of one wife
who's a pushover, least of all mine. The issue is fairness,
not assertiveness. While there are certainly many Gentile
women who harbor anti-male prejudices, in general I found them
to be less critical of men than Jewish women.
The misandry (prejudice against
men) of the modern Jewish woman isn't all her fault. Just as
those who are bigoted towards African-Africans, Latinos,
Asians, or Jews aren't born bigoted, neither are Jewish
females. Some of the anti-male hostility no doubt stems from
the days before feminism, when women's opportunities were
unfairly restricted.
Yet for men, who were sent to the
army or to war right after high school, who did hazardous work
in coal mines and steel mills, who had to support their
families by themselves without ever having the chance to stay
at home with their children, the gender restrictions were
anything but one-sided. My father, who worked six days a week
for 30 years to insure that my mother, sister and I had
everything we needed, never had a choice about his gender
role, either.
The other main cause of Jewish
misandry is that Jewish females tend to be highly educated and
thus have had much opportunity to imbibe the anti-male,
politically correct myths and prejudices so prevalent on
American college campuses. Most of these falsehoods about men
have been debunked by serious scholars and dissident
feminists, most prominently in Christina Hoff Sommers' "Who
Stole Feminism?" The fact that many Jewish women (and many
women of other ethnicities) still believe these myths is
certainly not entirely their own fault.
Did I avoid all Jewish women
because of Jewish women's misandrist tendencies? Of course
not. I knew many wonderful Jewish women and I had a
couple of near-misses at having an all-Jewish family. For
example, I dated one very intelligent woman who was studying
to be a rabbi. I was pretty head over heels for her, but I
liked her more than she liked me and she ended it. There were
others who didn't pan out for one reason or
another.
Jewish relatives have asked me if
I miss that heimish feeling, that sense of Jewish closeness
that can come only with an observant and all-Jewish family. I
think of my late Russian grandparents, of my aunts and uncles,
and of the Jewish celebrations of my boyhood and yes, I do
miss it. But for me, the true heimish feeling is little more
than a distant memory, for one simple reason: how can I
achieve closeness by sharing my Jewish identity when it
usually means that I will be degraded and belittled for my
masculine identity?
This column first appeared in the
Intermountain Jewish News (Denver) (7/20/01).
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