In this edition of his Search for Meaning podcast, Stephen Wise Temple Senior Rabbi Yoshi Zweiback hosts Ben M. Freeman, author, educator, and founder of the modern Jewish Pride movement.
Born in Scotland, Freeman rose to prominence during the Corbyn Labour Jew-hate crisis and quickly became one of his generation’s leading voices against anti-Jewish racism. In February of 2021, he published Jewish Pride: Rebuilding a People, which became known as the Jewish Pride manifesto. In October of 2022, he followed that book up with Reclaiming Our Story: The Pursuit of Jewish Pride, the second in what will become a groundbreaking trilogy when he publishes his finale in 2024.
Freeman’s journey to Jewish Pride marries two distinct identities and experiences. For a long time, his identity as a gay man and his Jewish identity were, as he puts it “totally separate.” While he was raised in a vibrant, tight-knit, strongly Zionist Jewish community in Glasgow and proudly served that community for five years, the 36-year-old Freeman was born in 1987, at the height of the AIDS pandemic.
“That really clouded society’s perception of what it meant to be gay, and I absorbed that, and I internalized it,” Freeman tells Rabbi Yoshi. “I felt a huge amount of shame, and had to do a huge amount of work to undo all of that.”
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It wasn’t until 2018, when the Jewish community of Britain united to oppose Labour Party MP Jeremy Corbyn’s possible ascendance to the office of British Prime Minister, that the connection between Freeman’s two identities crystalized. Working at the Hong Kong Holocaust Center, Freeman was somewhat on the sidelines as a firestorm erupted around Corbyn’s history of antisemitic behavior, his defense of those espousing antisemitic conspiracy theories, and the increasingly antisemitic attitudes of the party he led. He took to social media with the aim to educate, approaching the situation from with his background as a Holocaust educator.
While he was inspired by the united response from the British Jewish community, he noted the difficulty many high-profile, left-leaning Jews had with calling out the clearly racist and antisemitic tropes present in Corbyn’s anti-Israel rhetoric.
“I believe they were so married to their identities as leftists,” Freeman says. “That just got me reflecting on my experience with gay pride, how it changed my life, and I thought, ‘This is unacceptable. We need a pride movement. We deserve a pride movement,’ and I started talking a bit online. I made a video with some friends, being like, ‘This is why I’m proud [to be Jewish]; why are you proud?’ and it went a little bit viral.”
Freeman emerged as a thought-leader on Jewish education, history, and identity, and his trilogy of books is informed as much by that as it is his own experiences with LGBTQ+ pride as a gay man. With his trilogy, Freeman aims to educate, inspire, and empower Jewish people to reject the shame of antisemitism imposed on Jews by the non-Jewish world, as well as non-Jewish perceptions of what it means to be a Jew.