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“Blacks Are Not Usually Labeled Jews” – Why Does a Colored Boy Go to a Jewish School?

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Emma was born in 1956. Her parents survived the Holocaust with the help of false documents and their Slavic appearance – goes the family legend. Emma was brought up by her parents, according to communist principles. She is already 17 when she first learns from her aunt that she is Jewish. She meets her husband, Ben, a Nigerian, in 1976, and they leave for Nigeria. A year later Emma returns alone, pregnant, and from then on, her relationship with Ben is almost completely cut off. In 1990, Emma sends her child to a Jewish school. The analysis of the narrative interview reveals that for Emma, the meaning of choosing a stranger from a different culture was to get rid of a stigma. The presence of the colored child born from the relationship comforts her – if she manages to hide the Jewishness of the child, this covers her Jewishness as well. Along with this, she seems to be trying to protect her son from her identity problem: the color of his skin gives clear evidence of who he is and where he comes from. A decade later, she changes her strategy: now she wants the hidden stigma to be revealed and seen. And once more she uses her son to achieve this: if her son attends a Jewish school, he becomes Jewish. And if he is Jewish, that means that she too is Jewish.

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3(1)

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136-152

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Download can be found on page, “Blacks Are Not Usually Labeled Jews” – Why Does a Colored Boy Go to a Jewish School?

Bibliographic Information

Vajda, Júlia, Kovács, Éva “Blacks Are Not Usually Labeled Jews” – Why Does a Colored Boy Go to a Jewish School?. Regio - Minorities, Politics, Society - English Edition. 2000: 136-152.  https://archive.jpr.org.uk/object-1099