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Posted: 2016-10-01T21:15:36Z | Updated: 2016-10-01T21:25:59Z

After Hurricane Sandy, roughly six weeks post Rosh Hashanah 2012, we temporarily moved into my in-laws apartment. The building is home to a number of observant Jewish families, my in-laws included.

Waiting in the laundry room, I noticed a grandma folding clothes while her four-ish year old twin grandchildren, a boy and girl played nearby.

Im going to sing a Rosh Hashanah song, announced the bright-eyed little guy.

After he got a few lines into his song I said, Thats a nice tune.

Hes a good singer, Grandma replied.

Yes. I havent heard that one before.

Just then, his sister whipped her auburn curls, looked me dead in the eye and declared, Thats because youre not Jewish.

Watch what you say to people! Grandma barked.

Watch what you teach her, I thought.

I bit my lip and explained, The Rosh Hashanah song I know is different. It goes like this

I sang a few lines of my holiday ditty. Thankfully the dryers buzzer went off. I took my clothes, wished them a good day and left fuming.

Why do I have to be Jewish to know a Rosh Hashanah song? Why did the girl assume I was different than she? We were in the laundry room, not synagogue and it wasnt Shabbat. Could she really have drawn her conclusion simply because I was dressed less conservatively than her grandmother?

It wasnt clear.

What was clear was this little girl had been taught either directly or indirectly to identify, judge and draw a conclusion about a person based on ones appearance relative to the other grown-ups in her life. As a Christian woman married to a Jewish man who takes pride in raising Jewish children, I felt offended and sad.

This week, my family will celebrate the Jewish New Year. Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are a time of reflection and new beginnings. Whether you observe or not, perhaps its a good time for us to think about the symbolic gestures we feel bring us closer to God. Although seemingly benign when practiced with a similar group, the question remains;

Do these gestures create an unhealthy divide, particularly when our children form false and hurtful conclusions based on them?

When all is said and done, I personally dont think God gives a rats ass about what clothes we wore, the food we ate, the holidays we observed or how many times a day we prayed.

It is how we view and treat each other while we are here that matters.

But lets be realistic; life is wonderfully diverse and so our lifestyles will vary and symbols sustain. So in an effort to close the gap, lets be mindful about consistently teaching young people that all religious and cultural perspectives are valid and deserve respect.

Grandma, you and I may have different ways of approaching our day to day living, but my hope is that we embody the same values. With this New Year upon us, lets show our children that when we look beyond the laundry room, we are all mishpacha.

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This post also appeared on InterFaith Family.