PART ONE:
Rabbi Rifat Sonsino, Ph.D.
I grew up in
Istanbul, Turkey in the early 40’s in an Orthodox Jewish home. As a teen-ager,
I became the hazzan kavua (“permanent prayer-leader”) of my youth congregation.
At law school, I discovered American style Reform Judaism, and decided to come
to the States to become a Rabbi. This is the story of my arrival at the Hebrew
Union College in Cincinnati, Ohio:
In 1961, after completing my military service in
Turkey and a short stint in Paris at the rabbinic school (the now-defunct
Institut International d’Etudes Hebraiques), I started to make plans to come to
America. I was about 21 years old. In
Istanbul, my parents got me a huge suitcase that was so heavy that only a giant
could lift it. (One of the first things I did when I arrived in America was to
get rid of this monstrosity). As I was
packing my clothing and books, I had to decide what else to take along with me.
One item presented a dilemma: I had become a shohet (ritual slaughterer),
and had a special knife for slaughtering chickens. I asked myself, would I ever
use it again? Furthermore, how am I going to explain to the customs agents the
purpose of this particular knife? So, I decided to leave it behind.
How to travel to the US? Rabbi Isaac
Jerusalmi, a Hebrew Union College graduate and my rabbinic mentor then, suggested
the least expensive way: by train and boat. So, I got on the Oriental Express
to France, crossed over to England, and from there I boarded the Queen Mary,
one of the most luxurious ships of the time. I had a small cabin in one of the
lower decks, and spent a miserable time traversing the Atlantic Ocean. The
waves were high; I did not know anyone; I could not relate to the food. I
remember staying in the Library reading whatever I could find.
After a week at sea, I arrived in
New York late August, 1961. A group of women, among them Jane Evans and Ellie Schwartz,
representing the Union for Reform Judaism’s (then called Union of American
Hebrew Congregations) National Federation of Temple Sisterhoods, came to meet
me at the dock. They invited me to lunch at a local restaurant, and then put me
on the first train to Cincinnati, Ohio.
America was at that time in turmoil. On the one hand,
there was great excitement in the country because of the youthful image of
President Jack Kennedy. He inspired many young people to strive for the best.
On the other hand, however, the country faced serious international and local
problems. The Cuban missile crisis of October 1962 almost brought the USA and
Russia to the brink of war. The battle for civil rights for African-Americans
was raging furiously. In 1963 Martin Luther King Jr. gave his famous “I have a
dream” speech at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC. Then there was the
beginning of the Vietnam War, which escalated during the presidency of
Kennedy’s successor, Lyndon B. Johnson. In the beginning, I supported the war
based on the commitment that the US had made to its allies. But in time, along
with many others, I, too, could not find a justification for the ongoing
presence of the American military in Vietnam, and slowly distanced myself from
my initial position.
In America I found that the large
Jewish community of five million plus was secure and successful. One could live
as a Jew here with openness and pride, unlike any other country in which I had
lived up until then, or since. The lines between the major trends of Judaism,
namely, Orthodox, Conservative, Reconstructionist and Reform, were clearly
delineated. (Today they are not so clear).
Anti-Semitism was present here and there but it was not politically
acceptable.
Thank you for sharing about your life. I enjoyed reading and would like to know more.
ReplyDeleteThanks , maybe next week
DeleteI am always fascinated by your stories of your youth and your journeys. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks.:More to come
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