6/26/13,
The Jewish Daily Forward- As an Orthodox Jew, the first time I ever seriously
questioned the validity and applicability of the Torah — indeed, perhaps the
only time — was when I thought deeply about the issue of homosexuality.
I
believe that the Bible comes from God, and I believe in the commandments
within. However, I also believe that homosexuality is not a choice, not a
lifestyle, but simply a natural way of loving for many people. Gay men and
women deserve the same happiness and love as heterosexuals.
So
how do I integrate my two beliefs? The question haunts me, and so far in my
life I have not come upon a satisfactory answer. Instead, I choose to employ
heavy cognitive dissonance and believe in both, separately. I feel for my
Orthodox gay friends who continue to strive to live an Orthodox life, because
they are the ones who must live with this huge tension, every day.
This
morning, I rode the train to work with Twitter open for most of the hour-long
ride. The Supreme Court ruling would be announced at 10 a.m., and I was
counting down the minutes along with millions of Americans. Of course, my train
was late so 10:00 came as we were trundling through the tunnel to Penn Station,
where I always lose service for about 5 minutes (thank you for that, AT&T).
I was tapping my food impatiently until we finally made it to Penn.
Refreshing
my Twitter feed I read, “DOMA ruled unconstitutional.” I wanted to jump up and
down, grab the nearest stranger and hug him and dance a mini jig. Instead, I
smiled and posted the news straight to Facebook, the closest thing to
celebrating with others without being arrested for harassing strangers.
You
see, as much as I believe in the Torah, as much as I believe in Jewish laws, I
don’t think those laws apply to the United States government. My religious
beliefs are my own, and they shouldn’t influence the government. (Or, as a sign
I saw read, “Claiming that someone else’s marriage is against your religion is
like being angry at someone for eating a donut because you’re on a diet.”)
The
government’s promise to uphold equality for all is the reason my own
“lifestyle” is accepted in the first place — because my religion, like others’
sexualities, should not cause me to be treated differently. As Jewish people,
we should be especially sensitive to the American belief that all people are
created equal.
One
of the greatest tweets I saw this morning was, “Well, as a heterosexual married
person, I feel my union has been cheapened. #not.” We’ve all heard that idea
that allowing same-sex marriage will ruin the sanctity of marriage, destroy the
tradition of a religious union, etc. In my opinion, being married
(heterosexually) has only increased my desire to see same-sex marriage
recognized in this country.
Now
that I’m married, I can understand what marriage is, how it changed my life for
the better. I can’t imagine being told that I can’t marry the person I love.
Marriage is the greatest thing that has happened for me, and I see no reason
why everyone else doesn’t deserve the same happiness — in fact, I strongly
believe everyone else does deserve that happiness, should they choose it.
As
an Orthodox Jewish heterosexual married woman, I celebrate this new ruling. My
only question is why it took so long.
Read more: http://blogs.forward.com/just-married/179357/orthodox-married-and-for-gay-marriage/#ixzz2XQjBX9Ma
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