"I guess it was the Jewish part of me coming out;' she says. "You don't ignore other people just because you are the majority." Not everyone is satisfied with his upbringing. Twenty-one-year-old David asked that his real name not be used. He says his Jewish father is "not into religion" and his non-Jewish mother is "negative about doing traditional things that didn't make sense" — like ritual and prayer. David believes his parents had an agreement to raise their children as Jews. David had a bar mitzvah at rIbmple Kol Ami. "Most people at the temple wouldn't be keeping kosher," he says. "But us especially." He complains that because of his parents' indifference to Judaism, he is now uncomfortable during Jewish holidays. He says he feels ignorant and awkward about Judaism. "When I was in junior high, I tried to do some things — like have a seder, to say some prayers or songs at Chanukah. My parents never in- itiated things that much. "Mom resisted 'fanatic' Jewish things," David says. "She wouldn't have liked the idea of keeping kosher. Dad had gotten us to be Jewish and he didn't push. I don't know if they would have cared if we became Chris- tian. It almost seems like my mom was never fully resigned to us being Jewish?' David says he would like to marry a Jew and raise Jewish children. Because he is not considered a Jew by Halachah, Jewish law, he says he would go through a formal conversion to marry a Jewish woman. He says he would like to study more about Judaism to strengthen his Jewish identity. David's interest in strengthening his Jewish identity is unique. Accord- ing to Dr. Egon Mayer, professor of sociology at Brooklyn College, the remember that you're half Christian; I guess because he was Christian and he didn't want me to be Jewish." M Bunny Miller Shaw and her husband, Melvin Shaw. problem of confused identities stem- ming from an upbringing where no heritage is important doesn't last long for children of mixed marriages. "With almost no exceptions they marry non-Jews, so the problem is resolved when they become adults?' Mark Brown's mother is Chris- tian. His father is a Jew. Neither parent is religious, although the fami- ly celebrates Christmas at home and occasionally Jewish holidays with family friends. Recently, Brown, 30, was married in a Catholic ceremony. "I don't like to say I'm Christian," he says of his identity. "I like to say I'm Mark Brown." Glenn Triest Brown was raised in the Lafayette Park neighborhood near downtown Detroit. He attended the racially in- tegrated Friends School. In Lafayette Park, it was common for blacks and whites to socialize and to marry. Other Jewish-Christian mixed mar- riage families lived in the area. With racial, religious and ethnic dif- ferences so de-emphasized, Brown never had to consider his ancestry. "It was one of the least prejudic- ed neighborhoods you'll ever find. They took me for Mark Brown." He didn't think about his Jewish background until he became an adult and people began to point it out. "So- meone said to me, 'I have to any children of mixed marriages say they are more sensitive to preju- dice in whatever form it takes. One woman, raised as a non-Jew in the Unitarian Church but who is halachically Jewish, describes the anti-Semitism she sees because those around her don't know she's Jewish. "Anti-Semitism is more subtle than it used to be," she says. "If it wasn't that I could pass [as a non-Jew] I wouldn't be as aware as I am." Does Brown consider himself Jewish? When talking about Jewish things, about Israel, about the long, tangled road of Jewish history, he wonders if he should use the pronoun "they" or "we." After some thought he answers, "We." At Brown's wedding, the priest referred to those gathered as "Chris- tian company." "The priest knew that my father is Jewish;" Brown says. "It was callous, but I wasn't going to ruin the whole wedding because of it. We didn't have a mass because it would have kept out most of my family." He and his wife plan to raise their children as Catholics. Still, this descendant of Jews believes the Jewish people should survive. "If you have mixed marriages you'll have fewer Jews in each genera- tion. I don't know if it's important that people be 100 percent anything," he says. Brown stops to consider the future of the Jewish people if that path is traveled. "The ideas survive; the history survives. But the homogeneous per- son is not critical."0 In a 1982 study, Dr. Egon Mayer, professor of sociology at Brooklyn College, compared the commitment of children of mixed marriages with children of conversionary marriages — in which the non-Jewish partner becomes a Jew. The results indicate a stronger Jewish identity among children of conversionary marriages. Information compiled by Staff Writer Elizabeth Kaplan. IF BORN AGAIN, I WOULD LIKE TO BE JEWISH I WOULD BE UPSET IF MY CHILDREN DID NOT CONSIDER THEMSELVES JEWS THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 25