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    <title>Rachel Crossley: Sukkah sowed Jewish seed</title>
    <link>http://jta.org/ENTRY_PERMALINK_HERE/rachelcrossley/</link>
    <description>SAN FRANCISCO (JTA) &#151; When Rachel Crossley was growing up in Ohio, her family celebrated her father&apos;s Christian holidays and her mother&apos;s Jewish ones.     But she knew that she and her twin brother were Jewish &#151; her mother always told them so.    Then why, Rachel asked when she was 12, didn&apos;t the family go to synagogue? Why did they put up a Christmas tree and wait for Santa every year?    &quot;I decided I was half&#45;Jewish, and that&apos;s what I told people,&quot; says Crossley, now 25 and a third&#45;year rabbinic student at the Reform movement&apos;s seminary, Hebrew Union College&#45;Jewish Institute of Religion, in Cincinnati.    That same year, Crossley went to religious school for the first time with a Jewish friend. It was Sukkot, and for the first time she saw people eating in a beautifully decorated sukkah.     &quot;I fell in love with the energy and the ritual, the engagement of the whole family, how much fun they were having,&quot; she says.At Crossley&apos;s urging, her parents joined the temple. Crossley began studying Hebrew and celebrated her bat mitzvah at age 17.In college she led the weekly Hillel services, and it was that experience &#151; and having her fellow students turn to her with questions about Judaism &#151; that encouraged her to consider the rabbinate.    Crossley doesn&apos;t see her mixed background as a detriment.    &quot;Because we only observed a little at home, I had to look for what I wanted to know,&quot; she says. &quot;That made me appreciate it more. I have such a strong Jewish identity now probably because I was given the opportunity to search and ask questions when I was younger.&quot;    She also believes it will make her more sensitive to the intermarried families in her future congregation.         &quot;I&apos;d rather celebrate the impact Judaism has on them than push them away,&quot; she says. &quot;It was that celebration of Judaism that pulled me in.&quot;</description>
    <dc:language>en-us</dc:language>
    <dc:creator>SFish1998@aol.com</dc:creator>
    <dc:rights>Copyright 2007</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2007-03-08T;04:00:01-05:00</dc:date>
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