| Birthright Israel, Meet Birthright Armenia |
|
|
| Written by Jeremy Gillick | |||||
| Monday, 05 May 2008 | |||||
As Copycat Birthright Programs Proliferate, Questions Arise About the Changing Nature of the Melting Pot ![]() Birthright Israel participants. Courtesy Daniel Roth.
![]() Participants on Birthright Armenia. Courtesy Birthright Armenia. Gidi Mark, a spokesperson for Birthright Israel, says that Birthright Israel’s founders were not aware of Irish Way when they created Birthright. “When we launched,” says Mark, “we were not looking for other examples because we thought that we were the first and only such organization.” Of course, Birthright Israel was not even the first organization to send young diaspora Jews to Israel; starting in the 1950s, Zionist youth groups recruited diaspora Jews who then helped build modern Israel. However, Birthright has certainly been the largest and most successful. As of 2008, over 160,000 young Jews have taken part in the program. “The Birthright Israel format is a powerful example, and it has been imitated,” says Khachig Tololyan, professor of English at Wesleyan University and editor of Diaspora: a Journal of Transnational Studies. In addition to Birthright Armenia, Birthright Palestine, the Irish Way, and a trip informally known as “Love Boat,” which brings diaspora Taiwanese to Taiwan, there are now similar trips to Italy, Ethiopia, India, and Iceland. Shaul Kelner, a sociologist at Brandeis University, says that Birthright Israel has caused groups like Irish Way and Birthright Armenia to recognize that they’re doing similar work. Says Kelner, “Only in recent years have people begun to draw connections and realize they’re not the only ones.” As late as 2002, when Kelner got in touch with the Irish Way for research he was conducting on Birthright Israel, it was still unaware, or only vaguely aware, of the trips to Israel. Irish Way’s Walsh concurs. “We weren’t aware of any other programs,” she says. Andom Ghebreghiorgis, a 2007 Yale graduate, is working to develop a similar program for black Americans called Black to Africa. “As an American-born child of Eritrean immigrants,” Ghebreghiorgis says, “I always felt this desire to return to the ‘motherland,’ but only later did I realize the profound psychological and cultural impact ‘back to Africa’ trips would have on the global African diaspora. Upon hearing about Birthright [Israel] did I realize that this wasn’t some untenable fantasy only to be realized by wealthy black Americans; with Birthright Israel, I realized a nonprofit could be made out of this.” ![]() Irish Way participants. Courtesy Irish Way. Ghebreghiorgis remains skeptical. “The white supremacist patriarchal system still exists,” he says. “In the U.S., [assimilation] is less about infusing your cultural tradition into the melting pot and more about shredding what is standard to you.” Nonetheless, he too believes that “nowadays there is definitely a more tolerant, multicultural atmosphere that seemingly is open to a plurality of beliefs and perspectives.” Kelner agrees. “America is much more accepting of difference than it used to be,” he says. “We don’t have this Anglo-model anymore.” Does this mean that Americans, once strict adherents to the melting-pot theory of assimilation, now prefer their birthrights to their lentil soup? Not quite, Kelner says. Instead, it is becoming “easier and easier” for them to both assimilate and identify strongly with their heritage. If it matters that Birthright Israel has been copied (and it has) it is not because mimicry is wrong, or even unusual, but because the proliferation of Birthright-style trips reflects a shift in the nature of identity in America. There is, as Yepoyan puts it, a “movement” of people who want to reconnect with their roots. By using physical places to symbolize “roots,” Birthright-style trips are able to help diaspora populations build their unique American identities. Political differences aside, the philosophies that undergird these programs, including, perhaps to the chagrin of the Jewish press, Birthright Palestine, are fundamentally connected.
Powered by !JoomlaComment 3.12 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved. |
|||||
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|

.jpg)






