By Published: May 16, 2024

Asian Jewish Americans have a double reason to celebrate their heritage in听May


May is both听听补苍诲听. Two entirely separate commemorations for two entirely separate communities, right?

Think again. Not only do Asian American Jews exist, but we come from a variety of places and come to Judaism in a range of ways.

Centuries of history

Some Asian American Jews come from long-standing Jewish communities in Asia. The two most famous of these are the听听of the Henan Province in China and the听.

Samira Mehta

Samira Mehta is director of the Program in Jewish Studies and an assistant professor of women and gender studies at CU 麻豆影院.

Today, the Kaifeng Jews are听听to which very few, if any, Chinese American Jews trace their heritage. The community likely arrived in China from India or Persia around 1000 C.E. and probably had about 5,000 people at its peak.

Indian Jews, however, are another matter. In fact, they consist of three separate communities:听,听听and the Baghdadi Jews. Each arrived in India at different moments 鈥 with听听being the most recent 鈥 and therefore their traditions sometimes differ. For instance, the Jews of Cochin are known for听, and the Bene Israel give particular importance听.

In 2020, there were about听, but almost听听and a听.

Indian Jewish communities have distinct cultures that come from living in a majority Hindu and Muslim society. Indian American Jewish artist听, for example, creates art that fuses her American and Jewish identities with her Indian childhood 鈥 鈥渋nspired by both Indian miniature paintings and Jewish and Christian illuminated manuscripts,鈥 as the Brooklyn Museum听. Figures in her paintings are often blue, reminiscent of Hindu depictions of听incarnations of Vishnu, and they include images of听.

Multiple heritages

Many other Asian American Jews are children of one Jewish parent and one non-Jewish Asian parent 鈥 like听, the Korean American rabbi of New York City鈥檚 Central Synagogue. Buchdahl has an Ashkenazi Jewish father, meaning that his ancestors came from Central or Eastern Europe, and a Korean Buddhist mother.

Raised in a synagogue that her Jewish grandparents helped to found, Buchdahl has written and spoken publicly about the pain that she experienced as a teen and young adult when she was the only Asian person in Jewish spaces. At other times, she was not recognized as Jewish 鈥 for instance, by the听.

She has also talked about moments when her family blended their heritages. During Passover, for example, the traditional plate for the Seder meal includes 鈥渕aror鈥: bitter herbs to remind Jews of the pain of slavery. Many families use horseradish, but one year,听.

When the rabbi appeared on the PBS program 鈥,鈥 she talked about the resonances that she sees between Jewish and Korean Buddhist culture, such as respect for elders and education.

It is this type of experience 鈥 growing up the child of an interfaith, interracial marriage 鈥 that sociologists听听补苍诲听听focus on in their 2016 book 鈥,鈥 the first major study of Asian American Jews.

鈥榊ou鈥檙e Jewish?鈥

Other Asian American Jews were adopted into Jewish families, most of whom are white and Ashkenazi 鈥 an experience studied by听. Many families raising Asian American Jewish children face challenges that are shared with other transracial adoptive families, such as adoptive parents not knowing much, at least initially, about their child鈥檚 culture of origin.

Man in a synagogue in Mumbai, India

A Jewish man lights a lamp inside the Keneseth Eliyahoo Synagogue in Mumbai, India, after restoration work in 2019. (Photo: AP/Rajanish Kakade)

Some challenges, however, are more unique, such as the reality that Hebrew School and Chinese School are often at the same time. In fact, in my hometown when I was growing up, they were at the same time and in the same place, such that there was a Hebrew School-Chinese School car pool 鈥 but also such that no one could participate fully in both programs.

In addition, Asian Jewish adoptees and other Jews of color face assumptions from many white Jews that Jews of color听听or are converts. Usually, children adopted into Jewish families do undergo a formal conversion. They grow up in Jewish homes, as familiar 鈥 or not 鈥 with Jewish traditions as people born into Judaism.

Converting to Judaism

Some Asian American Jews are adult converts to Judaism, like SooJi Min-Maranda, the Korean American executive director of听, a movement that trains and ordains Jewish leaders from a range of Jewish backgrounds. So am I, a half-South Asian听scholar of American Jewish religious history.

I usually do not look for ways to combine my Indian heritage and my Jewish religious life, but every now and then I find myself doing so 鈥 as at Hanukkah, when I have听, and听, when I have imagined making the holiday鈥檚 signature booths out of Indian bedspreads.

As with all people who choose to live Jewish lives, Asian Americans convert to Judaism for many reasons. After conversion, we often find ourselves fending off the assumption that either we are not Jewish or that our conversions were motivated exclusively by marriage.

In fact, there are enough Asian American Jews out there that several organizations serve them. For instance, the听听鈥渃ultivates connection, belonging and visibility for Asian American Jews.鈥 They host Seders and Friday night Shabbat events for Asian American Jews, along with a range of other programming. Other organizations, such as听, founded by Chinese American Jewish activist Yoshi Silverstein, address a broader range of the Jewish community but carefully include and make space for Asian Jewish experiences.

Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month and Jewish American Heritage Month come every May. They offer us a moment to remember that both of those communities are far more diverse than one might initially imagine, that they overlap, and that in their overlap, there is truly amazing diversity.


Samira Mehta is director of the Program in Jewish Studies and an assistant professor of听women and gender studies听at the听.

This article is republished from听听under a Creative Commons license. Read the听.