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I'm Converting: One Mother's Unexpected Path To Judaism

Jane Kemp and her son, Kieran, celebrate their first Hanukkah together.
Leslie Edelman Kemp
Jane Kemp and her son, Kieran, celebrate their first Hanukkah together.

Like millions of Jews across the county, Jane Kemp has spent the past week celebrating Passover. She attended two Seders — one with friends, the other at her synagogue in the Bay Area city of Richmond, Calif. This year, she was in charge of putting together the ritual platters for the Seder at her synagogue, serving about 130 people.

This wasn't always the norm for her. After growing up in a non-denominational Protestant church, she made the decision seven years ago to convert to Judaism. With that choice, she joined the 34% of adults who have changed their religious identity, according to data from the Pew Research Center.

Her journey started with the adoption of her son, Kieran Kemp. It was an open adoption, so Jane stayed in touch with his birth family. She visited his maternal grandparents in Lake Tahoe often, eventually learning that Kieran had Jewish ancestry.

That came as a surprise to Kemp because Kieran's birth mother identified as a Wiccan on his adoption papers. That sparked Kemp's curiosity.

When it came time to enroll Kieran in kindergarten, Kemp chose a Jewish day school. She thought it was the best choice for her son, but she wasn't sure how she would be received in her son's new school.

"I thought that being a non-Jew in a Jewish day school would be awkward and ostracizing," she says. "But the truth was that I had found people with similar moral compasses to me. I began to really identify and feel connected to Judaism in a way that surprised me because I didn't really know that much about the religion."

Through her son's education, Kemp learned about Jewish holidays and traditions — things she had never known much about.

But the pivotal moment in her choice to convert came when her mother died. Kemp and her siblings couldn't settle on a date for the funeral, which didn't sit well with her. In Judaism, the ritual around death requires prompt attention and support. Jewish funerals typically happen within a day or two after the death, and it's expected that everyone drop everything to make that work.

Kemp and Kieran after his bar mitzvah, the Jewish coming-of-age ceremony.
/ Cindy Ragin De Pena
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Cindy Ragin De Pena
Kemp and Kieran after his bar mitzvah, the Jewish coming-of-age ceremony.

"As a mourner, you are expected that you are disabled by your grief and your community rallies around you," Kemp says. "This is exactly what happened to me after my mother died even though I wasn't yet Jewish. Arrangements were made for my son to get to and from school. People dropped food off; they sat with me; they called me. It was this first week of grieving that made me realize that I wanted to be part of this religion."

Like many big changes in life, Kemp's conversion was a process rather than a moment. Years after her mother's death, it came time for her son's bar mitzvah — the Jewish coming-of-age ceremony. It was around this time she decided to take her curiosity in Judaism to a deeper level by joining a synagogue. She chose Temple Beth Hillel in nearby Richmond.

"We felt welcome and comfortable and I immediately felt connected to the congregants, and the rabbi and the cantor," Jane says. "As [Kieran's] bar mitzvah date got closer, my rabbi suggested I consider converting formally, saying he thought it would be really great if I could give an aliyah, a blessing, at my son's bar mitzvah."

Kieran with his Jewish blood relatives, great-grandmother Diana Coven (left) and grandmother Connie Nowlin.
/ Adam Cohen
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Adam Cohen
Kieran with his Jewish blood relatives, great-grandmother Diana Coven (left) and grandmother Connie Nowlin.

She set a date to proceed with the official process to convert a week before Kieran's bar mitzvah. First, she had to write an essay about why she wanted to convert. Then, she met with three rabbis to be questioned. The final step was the mikvah, a ritual bath, which was "a very spiritual moment for me," Kemp says.

Roughly 17% of American Jews are converts to the faith, according to Pew. For Kemp, converting to Judaism gave her a community and sense of belonging. But she was also able to give something back to her son.

"As an adoptive parent, you want to give your child as much wholeness as you possibly can," Kemp says. "I understood that he had Jewish family, but raising him in an open adoption and connecting him to his Jewish roots has definitely given him something very important that could have been so easily lost."

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