yehud, israel  |  The young would-be convert to Judaism with a gold Star of David pendant peeking through a buttoned shirt is still baffled by the summer afternoon he said he was called in and dismissed from an Israeli army conversion course for being gay.

Y.B., as he asked to be identified, had not disclosed his sexual orientation to anyone in the course, but one of the rabbi instructors “outed” the 23-year-old to administrators after presuming he was gay.

“I was in shock. I felt the color draining from my face,” Y.B. said. “I left, eyes full of tears and angry, asking myself, why are they doing this to me? I have a partner of six years who comes from a religiously observant home and we are there every Friday night for Shabbat. The family is accepting and loving. If they come from such a traditional place and accept us with love, why can’t others?”

Y.B., an Argentine-born Israeli who has a non-Jewish mother, said he was told to drop out of an Israeli army conversion course because of his sexual orientation. He declined to be identified. photo/jta/dina kraft

During the tense dismissal meeting, Y.B. said he was told by two program officials that homosexuality is an aberration of Jewish law and that he would be welcome to return to the course if he committed himself to a heterosexual lifestyle.

The soldier’s experience highlights the plight that gay would-be converts to Judaism face in Israel: Because there is no separation of state and religion, and the state religion is regulated by the Orthodox-controlled Chief Rabbinate, it is practically impossible for an openly gay person to convert to Judaism. Under Orthodox Jewish law, a would-be convert who rejects a tenet of the Torah — in this case, the prohibition against homosexual intercourse — cannot join the faith.

The Israel Defense Forces’ conversion course, under the auspices of the army’s chief rabbi, has been considered a more open and tolerant vehicle for conversion than those overseen by the Chief Rabbinate.

A bill is pending in the Knesset that would make the army program officially independent from the Chief Rabbinate.

An IDF spokesman denied that Y.B. was expelled from the course because he is gay.

“The IDF believes that a person’s origin, gender and sexual orientation cannot have an impact on his or her ability to appropriately complete the conversion process,” the spokesman said in response to a query. “The soldier in question chose to leave the course of his own accord because, as he noted, ‘He did not feel ready to complete the conversion process.’ The soldier was clearly informed he could return to the course when he felt ready to do so.”

Y.B. said that during his meeting with conversion course officials, he signed a form saying he was not ready to complete the process, but only because he was told he could not continue to study if he indeed was gay. The stipulation for his return would be his agreeing to pursue relationships with women, Y.B. said he was told.

Y.B. said he grew up believing he was fully Jewish. So it came as a surprise when one of his officers approached him to see if he was interested in signing up for Nativ, the IDF conversion course through which some 4,000 soldiers have converted.

Y.B. immigrated with his family at the age of 2 from Buenos Aires, Argentina. His father is Jewish and his mother is not, but she kept a kosher home, lit candles for Shabbat and went with the family to synagogue. Y.B. had a bar mitzvah and observed the holidays.

“I remembered that my mother had mentioned not being Jewish, but it was not something I ever really thought about,” Y.B. said. “Everything I knew about our home was Jewish.”

But Y.B. decided he also wanted to be Jewish under the eyes of Jewish law and the State of Israel, so he signed up for the course when he was 19 while doing his mandatory military service. He decided not to continue to the second of two seminars but later regretted his decision.

Some three years later, when he was approached again to join a new conversion course for those in the reserves, Y.B. said he jumped at the chance.

By the time he started the course in July, Y.B.’s observance had deepened. He was observing Shabbat and praying daily. He also was concerned about his father, then battling cancer. He said his father was heartened that his son was doing the conversion course.

“It had been very hard for my parents to accept me, and I thought I could never be hurt like that again,” Y.B. said. “But when [the dismissal] happened, I felt like it was happening all over again.”

His father died last fall, just a couple of months after Y.B. had to leave the conversion course.

“He took it very hard,” Y.B. said. “He said he was surprised by this discrimination within Judaism. He asked, why do people distance those who want to join our religion?”

During his three years of mandatory army service, Y.B. said he was always open about his sexual orientation and never encountered any problems because of it.

“The army was always such a supportive place, which is part of why I was so surprised when all of this happened,” he said. “I felt like I had gone backward in time, back to when I was meant to feel like a mental case.”

Looking down at his gold engagement ring — he has plans to marry his partner — Y.B. said he understood that homosexuality is condemned in the Torah. But he said he views the prohibitions in context, noting that the Torah also calls for adulterers to be stoned.

“I don’t think God hates me because I’m gay,” he said. “I believe he made me gay because that is the way he saw me. He makes us in his image.”

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