by Elise Coop­er

Although there are many themes to Ali­son Buck­holtzs book, Stand­ing By: The Mak­ing of an Amer­i­can Mil­i­tary Fam­i­ly in a Time of War, one that stands out is the impor­tance she places on her Jew­ish faith. She and her fam­i­ly relo­cat­ed to the small town of Ana­cortes, Wash­ing­ton after her hus­band began a three-year assign­ment. She gives poignant exam­ples on how Judaism helped her endure the hard­ships faced while her Navy hus­band, Scott, was deployed overseas.

The most heart-felt scenes involve her dis­cus­sion on how she tried to instill the Jew­ish faith in her two young chil­dren, Ethan and Esther. The author explained that as a mom she faced chal­lenges of being Jew­ish in a pre­dom­i­nant­ly Chris­t­ian mil­i­tary since pro­por­tion­al­ly there are far less Jew­ish mem­bers in the mil­i­tary than in the gen­er­al pop­u­la­tion. She said in our inter­view, I was con­cerned when I heard we were going to move to a remote area. How could I instill in my chil­dren Jew­ish tra­di­tions and val­ues? Every­thing I had grow­ing up, a Jew­ish edu­ca­tion and time spent in Israel, did not leave me qual­i­fied to teach my chil­dren Jew­ish edu­ca­tion. I was hop­ing to depend on Jew­ish orga­ni­za­tions for that.”

The author devot­ed a whole chap­ter in the book on how she came to grips with liv­ing in Ana­cortes, Wash­ing­ton, while try­ing to main­tain her Jew­ish roots. She writes, Judaism is a reli­gion that great­ly val­ues com­mu­ni­ty, and none of us want­ed to go it alone.” When she found out that the clos­est syn­a­gogue was a three hour round trip, she tele­phoned the chaplain’s office, hop­ing they had some ideas. To her hor­ror, she was giv­en the name of a Mes­sian­ic syn­a­gogue. Ali­son not­ed, I lat­er learned that mes­sian­ic Jews are attempt­ing to infil­trate the mil­i­tary in order to tar­get Jew­ish per­son­nel for evan­ge­liza­tion. My head explod­ed when I found that out and real­ized that Jews, like myself, who called the base for help were direct­ed to this orga­ni­za­tion whose pri­ma­ry goal was to con­vert them to Chris­tian­i­ty.” Through her efforts, the Navy chap­lain on the base respond­ed with a sense of urgency, strik­ing the con­tact from the ref­er­ence list. 

Unfor­tu­nate­ly, her prob­lems of want­i­ng to instill a Jew­ish iden­ti­ty in her chil­dren were not solved, and even­tu­al­ly Scott, Esther, Ethan, and Ali­son had to go it alone.They made the Jew­ish hol­i­days spe­cial, which includ­ed find­ing a place to pray on a remote trail. As for the chil­dren, she impro­vised by using DVDs and CDs to teach them about their Jew­ish his­to­ry. The Chabad rep­re­sen­ta­tives, clos­est to where the fam­i­ly lived, helped out, includ­ing read­ing the Megillah on base dur­ing the Purim holiday.

Her tenac­i­ty nev­er stopped as she con­tin­ued to search for oth­er fam­i­lies with whom she could share the hol­i­days. Even­tu­al­ly, a group was formed with Ali­son as the CEO,” orga­niz­ing the Hanukkah Par­ty, the Passover Seder, and mak­ing sure that all the fam­i­lies would con­vene for every major Jew­ish holiday.

What is espe­cial­ly poignant for any Jew­ish Amer­i­can read­ing this sto­ry is the blend­ing of her expe­ri­ences with her Jew­ish iden­ti­ty, many times with humor. For exam­ple, she wrote in the book, I found it hard to believe we would have a snowy Passover; that kind of thing just doesn’t hap­pen to desert people.”

She also writes about an inci­dent, relat­ing the Amer­i­can flag to a prayer book. Then, one day, the heav­ens poured. I looked out from my bed­room win­dow and saw the flag, soaked and heavy, droop­ing in the rain. I felt dis­re­spect­ful, even guilty, as if I had left a prayer book outside.”

Dur­ing our inter­view she reflect­ed on how Judaism became rel­e­vant in her life, espe­cial­ly dur­ing Scott’s deploy­ments. For her, it brought the tra­di­tions into the cur­rent day. There is a pow­er­ful pas­sage in the book where she dis­cuss­es the grief of sep­a­ra­tion and turns to her mar­riage con­tract, the ketubah for strength, At the end of the long road…she saw him stand­ing, wait­ing, for her, watch­ing for her through the night.”

Fur­ther, she dis­cuss­es the impor­tance of a mitz­vah. Ali­son writes, A rab­bi told me once that it’s crit­i­cal to take care with small good deeds as with obvi­ous­ly impor­tant big ones.” She did that by per­form­ing a mitz­vah, orga­niz­ing fel­low mil­i­tary spous­es to report for duty, to come togeth­er to help and sup­port one anoth­er. Ali­son felt a part of a team, a mitz­vah com­mit­tee, which per­formed their mag­ic of kind­ness for that per­son in need.

Stand­ing By, com­ing in paper­back tomor­row, is a pow­er­ful book that shows how Buck­holtz attempt­ed to lead a nor­mal Jew­ish life in a very abnor­mal sit­u­a­tion. She stat­ed in the inter­view, A lot of times I turned to my Jew­ish val­ues and expe­ri­ences for com­fort. In the midst of being sur­round­ed by unfa­mil­iar­i­ty it helped to bring back home some­thing that was part of me.” Read­ers will under­stand her pres­sures, joys, rewards, and stress­es, as she attempt­ed to main­tain a Jew­ish iden­ti­ty for her­self and her fam­i­ly while liv­ing in a mil­i­tary setting.

Relat­ed: A Chanukah vis­it to the White House with Ali­son Buckholtz

Elise Coop­er lives in Los Ange­les and has writ­ten numer­ous nation­al secu­ri­ty arti­cles sup­port­ing Israel. She writes book reviews and Q and A’s for many dif­fer­ent out­lets includ­ing the Mil­i­tary Press. She has had the plea­sure to inter­view best­selling authors from many dif­fer­ent genres.

Elise Coop­er lives in Los Ange­les and has writ­ten numer­ous nation­al secu­ri­ty arti­cles sup­port­ing Israel. She writes book reviews and Q and A’s for many dif­fer­ent out­lets includ­ing the Mil­i­tary Press. She has had the plea­sure to inter­view best­selling authors from many dif­fer­ent genres.