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No best answer has yet been selected by mycatis. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I am Jewish by birth. Although I don't believe in God I am deeply attached to my historical, cultural and ethical roots, which sounds contradictory, but to me Judaism is much more than a personal relationship with a supreme being. There is a synagogue near where I live and I go there every week. It is my oasis in the world, and the people there are my extended family. I find peace and warmth there. Anyone is very welcome to visit, for services or just to see the building, by prior arrangement. We have local schools visiting nearly every week. We have really good relationships with local Muslims and Christians and meet up every 3 months to get to know each other better. There are more areas of commonality between the three faiths than any of us realised.
Your question about anti-Semitism etc deserves a long answer as it is a complex and difficult subject to discuss. The dignity I guess arises from faith and a belief in being the chosen people in that we have to try to set an example to rise above attempts to destroy the faith and culture.
A convert would be accepted if it he or she was converted in the Orthodox branch of Judaism. Other branches, like Reform or Progressive are not considered acceptable by the Orthodox. It is not easy to convert and demands a big commitment from the person.
There are many Jews around who do not practice their faith or even admit that they are Jewish, so when you say you don't know any Jews, don't be so sure of that! Just scratch the surface a little....
chongalolo has given a good answer, and is absolutely correct about converts, as I said, my family are Jewish, but I was brought up a Christian, both my parents converted out, to marry, I had to get a copy of my grandparents marriage certificate, go to a doctors for a letter to prove i'd been circumcised, take a 'coming back' course, and even then it was hard to find a Rabbi who'd marry us, even though my wife can trace her jewish ancestry back to Cromwellian times.
I won't go to much into anti-semitism, Jews in foreign lands have always been hard working and studious, as a result, have risen to positions of wealth and power, of course, this doesn't apply to all, so when a scapegoat was needed, Jews fitted the bill, it didn't help also, that in a Christian society, Jews were often blamed for killing Jesus, (not true).
A Semite is someone who comes from the Middle East, therefore, Arabs also are Semites, what your seeing now, with some people attacking synagogues, is not anti-semitism, but ant-Jewish, the same with the Holocaust, anti-Jewish, a distinction not many people make, but true.
Your last post about a sense of belonging, is very true, a wonderful feeling.