Theodore Ross is the author of Am I a Jew?: Lost Tribes Lapsed Jews, and One Man’s Search for Him­self. His writ­ing has appeared in the pages (print and elec­tron­ic) of the New York Times, Harper’s Mag­a­zine, the Atlantic, Tablet, Saveur, Tin House, and a vari­ety of oth­er jour­nals and news­pa­pers. He is also the arti­cles edi­tor of Men’s Jour­nal mag­a­zine. He will be blog­ging here for Jew­ish Book Coun­cil and MyJew­ish­Learn­ing all week.

As this is my first post, please allow me to intro­duce myself: I am the author of Am I a Jew?: Lost Tribes, Lapsed Jews, and One Man’s Search for Him­self, which tells the sto­ry of a sec­u­lar Jew­ish kid (me) who moves from New York to Mis­sis­sip­pi, where he is forced by his moth­er to pre­tend he is a Chris­t­ian. As an adult, I deter­mine to under­stand what place, if any, there is in the reli­gion of my birth for a kid who sang lead in an Epis­co­pal school choir, stud­ied the Bible, and took Com­mu­nion. There’s more to it — every­thing from Jew­ish Catholic priests in New Mex­i­co to my ten-minute bar mitz­vah as a 38-year-old — but that’s a fair start to under­stand­ing where I’m com­ing from.

I some­times strug­gle to explain what renewed my inter­est­ed in Judaism. As I write in the book: I vis­it­ed a Holo­caust Memo­r­i­al site on vaca­tion in the Czech Repub­lic (it moved me to be sure, but not in this direc­tion); I had chil­dren (I love them but that didn’t do it either); I lost mem­bers of my fam­i­ly (I miss my grand­par­ents but I’m not [doing this] for them). The truth, banal as it might sound, is that I sim­ply want­ed to know. Or, more pre­cise­ly, I need­ed to. Like my moth­er, I had my own myth to make real. Only mine, instead of entail­ing the aban­don­ment of a spe­cif­ic and defined her­itage, would require its embrace.“

So I lack a sim­ple answer for what moti­vat­ed the project and process of answer­ing my ques­tion. I do, how­ev­er, remem­ber the spe­cif­ic thing that con­vinced me to re-enter the world of Judaism, in my own way: the Man­hat­tan eruv. Most read­ers of this blog, I assume, are famil­iar both with the con­cept of eru­vin as well as the unique his­to­ry of the one locat­ed in Man­hat­tan (you may not, how­ev­er, know, that a cer­tain Mod­ern Ortho­dox con­gre­ga­tion on the Upper West Side holds a — admit­ted­ly cer­e­mo­ni­al — 99-year lease on the entire island, at the bar­gain price of just one dol­lar), but I didn’t, and when I hap­pened one day some years ago to notice the wires of the Man­hat­tan criss­cross­ing the avenue out­side of my office, I was inspired enough to learn.

The pres­ence of this mas­sive, sym­bol­ic Jew­ish house­hold sug­gest­ed a few, very impor­tant things to me: first, I was in a Jew­ish world already and I didn’t know it; sec­ond, that world was com­plex and mean­ing­ful, even if I couldn’t real­ly accept its spir­i­tu­al under­pin­nings; and last, and most impor­tant, if I didn’t make the effort to see that house — that world — it would, for all prac­ti­cal pur­pos­es, not exist. Now, I wan­der the city doing some­thing very un-New York: look­ing up, scan­ning the street­lights for evi­dence of eruvin.

Read more about Theodore Ross here.

Theodore Ross is the author of Am I a Jew?: Lost Tribes Lapsed Jews, and One Man’s Search for Him­self. His writ­ing­has appeared in the pages (print and elec­tron­ic) of the New York Times, Harper’s Mag­a­zine, the Atlantic, Tablet, Saveur, Tin House, and a vari­ety of oth­er jour­nals and news­pa­pers. He is also the arti­cles edi­tor of Men’s Jour­nal mag­a­zine, and per the typ­i­cal require­ments, lives in Brook­lyn with his wife and children.

Look­ing Up in New York

Revi­sions for the Paperback

Mr. Expert on God