metro » Why Be Jewish? Converts explain what drew them to Judaism. Judy Greenwald | Contributing Writer W e’ve all heard the words: Jew by choice. But what does it mean to choose to follow a Jewish lifestyle? Here, four people: a young mother, a devoted husband, and a father and daughter who all made this momentous decision share their feelings on each of their journeys to embrace a dif- ferent faith than that into which they were born. Meet Ashira Solomon, 27, of Oak Park, who was born a Baptist Christian with Jewish roots on her father’s side. Solomon is married to husband, Ethan, an obser- vant Jew by birth who works at Akiva Hebrew Day School in Southfield, and they have a 9-month-old daughter, Naomi. Solomon said she never really felt con- nected to the Baptist church — while her parents were spiritual people, they weren’t regular churchgoers. “I did go to Sunday school,” she said, “but at a very young age I knew I didn’t really enjoy it. Growing up in Oak Park and going to school in Berkley, I had a lot of Jewish friends and was introduced to Judaism even in elementary school. When it came time for friends’ bar and bat mitzvahs, I was going to Reform and Conservative synagogues with Friday night services and Saturday celebrations. “Many of the parties were over-the-top gorgeous, but even with that, my interest was in going to shul. I said to one friend, ‘I need to learn the blessings, to know what they mean.’ I was so intrigued by what I’d learned so far and wanted to keep learn- ing.” Being in synagogue provided a spiri- tual connection she had never felt before, Solomon explained, and after the parties ended, she still wanted to continue to go to services. She said she experienced a true thirst to learn more and, at 13, told her parents she knew she wanted to become Jewish. “My father said it was perfectly fine if that’s what I wanted, but that since becoming Jewish was a big responsibil- ity, I should wait until I was an adult to make that decision,” she recalled. “He said if I knew this is what I wanted, waiting wouldn’t change that. And then, after I turned 18, if this was how I still felt, then yes, I should be Jewish.” In high school, she was able to study comparative religions at the Center for Advanced Studies and the Arts, a public Marcy and David Troy Ashira and Ethan Solomon with daughter, Naomi consortium school in Oak Park, and her knowledge of Judaism came to bear once again. Her teacher, she said, “was relying on my knowledge of Judaism to help teach the course! This really fed my neshamah, my Jewish soul, and I knew I was on the right path.” Solomon’s college years took her to Arizona State University and, in addition to general studies, she began learning with Rabbi Rony Keller at Congregation Beth Israel in Scottsdale, a Reform congrega- tion. She had been studying all along in Reform and Conservative venues, but says she still didn’t feel she was where she belonged. “I was taught what each of the different denominations (Reform, Conservative and Orthodox) believes, and it occurred to me: I’m in the wrong class. I realized it was the Orthodox voice that really spoke to me, where I could fully connect spiritually.” In February 2009, she began “the pro- cess,” going to the beit din (rabbinic court) and meeting members of the Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit. She learned with them for some three years. In addition to the formal studying, Solomon said, she’s learned (and continues to learn) from the welcoming religious community where her family lives. Solomon finished her conversion pro- cess in January 2012 and was very proud to show off her certificate, whose language included the fact that she has accepted all of the mitzvot with a full heart, immersed in a mikvah for the purpose of conversion in accordance with Halachah and is now a Jewish woman in every respect. “Going to the mikvah was an amazing experience, and I was fortunate that my parents wanted to be involved and came with me,” she said. CONSERVATIVE CONVERSION Happiness in married life was an influ- ence for Catholic-born David Troy, 46, of Ferndale in his decision to convert, but he also said that his conversion within Conservative Judaism opened up a some- what more religious outlook in his life. “I was raised Catholic,” he said, “but wasn’t really a religious person. When I met Marcy, she and her family belonged to Shaarey Zedek, and I saw that my becoming Jewish was important to them. Originally, that was the reason I wanted to convert, for my wife, but the more I talked to and studied with the rabbi, and the more I learned about being Jewish, the more the process became for me.” Troy’s process took about a year and involved taking a weekly class at the syna- gogue, where he studied the Tanach and learned Hebrew. His beit din included rab- bis from Shaarey Zedek in Southfield and Adat Shalom Synagogue in Farmington Hills. He went to the Conservative mikvah at Adat Shalom. “I went to Catholic school for 12 years,” Troy said. “But once I started taking classes at the shul, I did feel a connection to Judaism. It made sense to me. The tra- ditions and holidays appealed to me. “Even though I accepted the Jewish faith,” he said, “my parents didn’t totally understand why I converted. But they did teach me that I could make my own decisions, and this is why I became a ‘Jew by choice.’ I’m against using that term derogatorily, but it isn’t insulting to me personally. Conversion was a decision I came to as an adult, and it was my choice. I am proud of my accomplishment.” REFORM CONVERSION Rachel Chezick, 21, of Troy was raised as a Charismatic Catholic, a movement within the church that incorporates aspects of Catholicism and the charismatic prac- tice of expressing gifts of the spirit. The Indiana-born young woman, who is study- ing to be an animator, said that she and her family stopped going to church when continued on page 16 14 March 17 • 2016