Jewish

Some of Tony’s best friends are Jews. His most significant boyfriend was too, he says. So when his Jewish friend Jessica said, “You can date all the WASPs you want, but you’re not going to find someone who’ll talk about his feelings or be willing to analyze them,” Tony, a New Yorker of non-Jewish Italian descent, found himself posting a profile on JDate.com, “the premier Jewish singles community on the Net.”

No avid J-suitor will be shocked to find Tony’s profile (which makes clear that he’s not Jewish) among the “BlueeyedJew”s and “BagelBoy”s who are both members of the site and members of the tribe. Non-Jews in search of Jews — gay and straight, male and female — have become commonplace on JDate. The percentage of JDate’s 650,000 members identifying themselves as religiously “unaffiliated” is now 13% and rising. (Caveat: that designation also includes Jews who don’t align themselves with a particular Jewish movement, e.g. Reform or Conservative.) JDate has not gone so far as to add check-boxes for religions other than Jewish — it’d be philosophically tricky — but non-Jews have reached at least one measure of critical mass: the site has added the option of designating oneself “Willing to convert.” At this point, it’s entirely possible that JDate could bring together two Gentiles. (“It’s kismet! We’re both into film noir, snowboarding and Jews.”)

JDate spokesperson Gail Laguna says she’s heard no complaints about non-Jews using the site and that no serious thought has been given to excluding them. (More conservative Jewish dating sites do.) “The site is designed for Jewish singles — there’s no way to make that clearer,” she says. “We just want to make sure everyone has the tools they need to represent themselves openly and honestly.”

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Date: Thurs, April 26th
Time: 7:30 PM
Where: Location: The JCC in Manhattan, 334 Amsterdam Ave. at 76th St.
Admission: FREE

Women writers who walk the walk and write the talk.

Panelists include Amy Sohn, Jamye Waxman, Rachel Shukert and Mindy Raf. This event co-sponsored by Kinkyjews

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By THOMAS BARTLETT

The Jewish Theological Seminary, considered the flagship institution for Conservative Judaism, will begin accepting gay and lesbian students into its rabbinical and cantorial schools, effective immediately, the institution’s chancellor-elect announced on Monday.

The decision followed a ruling in December by the movement’s highest legal body that allowed the ordination of gay rabbis but left it up to the seminaries to decide whether to do so. While that ruling paved the way for the change, discussion of the issue had been going on for a quite a while at the seminary, according to Arnold M. Eisen, the chancellor-elect. “It was a very long, deliberate, and thoughtful process of consultation,” he said.

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