F: I'm in my early twenties. I grew up in a frum chassidish home. I went
to a Yiddish speaking school and didn’t learn science. Until a year ago, I
hadn’t even heard about evolution. My whole family was and is very frum. Still,
when I was 14, my friend and I used to sit in the park and imagine what it would
be like to be married. Her husband would be a basketball player and mine would be a
guitar player. That was a very innocent time.
But when I was 14, I was sexually
assaulted. I didn’t tell anyone. I didn’t understand what had happened to me. I didn't have the words to describe what had happened. I thought I would get in trouble. If people knew, I would never get married! It would get around! That girl! The one who asked questions and sat in the
park! Stupid reasons.
When we finally told the school, they asked
why I was in that facility. My parents had to talk to them about the rape and
the principal responded really coldly. She didn’t hug me. She wouldn’t even look at me. No one
knew how to respond. I felt like an outcast. Like everything about me was weird
and I didn’t fit in anymore.
I still hate the principal of my school. One day, I was
crying to her because I wasn’t a virgin anymore. And she was so technical with
me and cold. She said, “It’s like you ate bad food and now you need to vomit it
out,” and the implication was: Move on. Get over it. At the hospital no one
treated me that way. I felt accepted and supported.
What
connection do you have with the gay world?
F: My best friend is queer, and a good portion
of my friends identify as queer and/or gay. I had an argument with my father on
Shabbos and I panicked. I thought, “My dad thinks I’m a lesbian!” This is scary
because he is an Orthodox Jew who is extremely homophobic. I’m afraid my dad
will read my diary and see that my first kiss was with a girl. That would cause
a big fight, and our relationship would be ruined. Or whatever relationship we
have now.
To tell the truth, my first kiss was with a girl. After that,
everyone said, “Now you are a lesbian! I knew you were all along!” I said, “No.
I’m not.” I think I’m really afraid of ever being categorized under any term,
since I don’t think I fall into any category. I like boys. I like girls. I like people! Those categorizing words are so scary where I
come from.
F: Yes. But from what I’ve seen, it’s very
difficult to do. It’s the most difficult thing. Keeping Judaism relevant while
living a different lifestyle is 100 times more challenging. And the community
talks all the time about those frum gay Jews. Everyone is homophobic, even people you wouldn’t
expect. Even my best friend from high school openly admits being homophobic and
doesn’t think there’s anything wrong with it. The other day, she said, “I can’t
deal with that! I’m so homophobic!”
F: When she heard my first kiss was with a
girl, she was really weirded out.
She did that really narcissistic thing that
straight people do, which is, she immediately thought, “Oh no! F’s in love
with me!” She thought I wanted HER. I wanted to say, “You aren’t
indiscriminately in love with all of the men in the world. You are selective
and I am too. In fact, the last person I’d be interested in was you!”
It’s hard to hate her for this, though,
because I didn’t know how to be respectful either when I was younger. She
doesn’t know anything other than being homophobic.
What
is it about your connection with your father that makes you afraid to tell him
about your sexual identity?
F: Sometimes, people shave their beards but no
one excommunicates them, right? Bacon and non-kosher meat are exactly the same
al pi halacha and yet, chazer seems so much worse, to the point that it seems
like the evil of all evil. Gay has the same kind of stigma, an extra negative connotation, as if it’s extra
sinful and extra scary within the frum community. I wouldn’t tell my father
because even modern, non religious Jews are afraid of the gay, let alone my
conservative, republican, orthodox, Chassidic father.
My father keeps on sending me articles
about getting married young! He’d like me to have children, and this is what my
body is built for, to bear fruit. I do want to have kids. But not right now. I
can’t help but worry that I’m getting less fertile by the second, and that’s
silly, but it’s the way I grew up and all my friends are getting engaged and
having babies, making families. Other peoples’ thoughts live in my head.
I am scared to connect myself with “sexual deviance”,
because it’s a scary idea in our community. I don’t think my father would be
able to hear it. He couldn’t hear that I’m not as frum as him. He couldn’t hear
that I was dating. He could never hear that my sexuality is fluid. He just
doesn’t want to know.
What
do you see as the attitudes of the community towards frum gay people?
F: I was babysitting my sister and helped her
to make girl power pamphlets. She wrote “I like girls sooo much”. She’s five.
My
father made a face, and said, “I hope that’s not from hanging around at [name of
frum gay family]”. Now the gay is contagious! He laughed as he said it, which
was frustrating, because that laugh indicated he thinks the whole lifestyle is
silly.
At school, when everyone thought I was a
lesbian, people said, “Oh, that’s that dyke girl.” At yeshiva, boys think
someone is gay and they say, “He’s super gay” and not in a good way, as in
“He’s a weirdo. Don’t hang out with him.”
Have
you experienced many frum Jews who are tolerant?
F: No.
When I was talking about men objectifying
women, my father said, “The halacha set up a system to prevent that. You deny
the system/rules, but then you get mad when you are a victim of
objectification. That system is set up to protect you. You get mad when you
aren’t protected.” That’s really skewed.
When I was 16, my mother said, “You should
be careful how you dress. Especially given what happened to you.” That is so messed
up. This is the understanding of women, promiscuous, deserving of whatever
happens because they aren’t aligning themselves with the system designed to protect
them. I consider that illogical, irrational and self-righteous. That’s the same
tone I hear whenever I hear people talking about someone who is gay. A complete
misunderstanding of the issue.
What
would you like to tell the frum community?
F: I’ve always been really afraid to leave the
community . When I was younger they said once someone has tasted chassidus they
can never leave the lifestyle and be truly happy again without it. I believed
this. I was scared that I would leave and that my life would be shallow and
meaningless. We used to talk about people who had left and were unhappy. But
really, I was unhappy. I wasn’t happy or confident or supported as a person. I
always felt like I needed to repress myself.
But now, I really am happy and I am not fooling myself. It’s really offensive when
you write off my choices as not really mine, but just an influence of my yetzer
hara, as giving in, rather than actively choosing life and health. Living a
frum lifestyle is a beautiful thing, and I highly respect people who live that
life, but I would ask for the same respect for my own choices.
I’m happy for people who make a frum
lifestyle work for them. I want all the frum people to be happy for me too. I
hate how I feel silly and shallow when I say I am applying to colleges. My
friends are making humans and I am going to school. I love what I am doing and
I want them to see that I am happy and healthy and have made good choices for me. I want them to give me the
respect that I give them.
Discovered by accident. Great read :)
ReplyDeleteThanks. It helps me understand what my former best friend went through as she had some similar experiences to you. It helps me understand why she drifted away from me and how I may have offended her.
ReplyDelete