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Adoptee from China celebrates her bat mitzvah
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Do you think this really should have made the news? If Cecelia was Catholic and being confirmed, I really don't think it would have made the NYT. |
From the article
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Also the article seems to be about the phenomenon of being Chinese and Jewish which as one says is normal to her, but weird for her to actively think about. |
She's a Chinese girl adopted by a lesbian Jewish couple. It's a multicultural trifecta.
Yea! |
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I do highly suspect that the lesbian/Jewish/Chinese thing has something to do with it, but half of "local interest" stories require the reporters hearing about something and saying "Hey wouldn't it be neat to write a story about X" |
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Human Interest stories are interesting not NEWS. I open up the paper on Monday morning and there's always some story about some 85 year old guy who collects pictures of cats riding tractors. Or some people who've hand painted those geese that sit in people's lawns for the past 50 years. They aren't news they're human interest. People apparently like hearing about other people who do things differently from themselves. The NYT is not just a national newspaper, it's a city paper that has to appeal to its residents.
I don't know why you're suprised that it discusses life in NYC in the NYT. |
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Yes, it's interesting because for the most part Chinese people aren't Jewish. It's a story that points out the unique multifaceted or fluid nature of identity in the US. One can take for granted the experience of being a member of two groups that usually don't overlap.
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Now go watch this "You-Tube" video of "Tradition" from Fiddler.......a catchy little ditty, if ever there was one. |
Well considering the demographic of the NYT’s readership, no I’m not surprised one bit that they did a story on this.
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I found it to be an interesting article and am thrilled that formerly unwanted children are now loved, taken care of, and accepted not only into their families but into the community as a whole. I still don't understand your point. Because I know I don't go through the paper and say... that wasn't interesting, I'm going to post a thread about that. Quite the opposite really. Your comments suggest you don't like the fact that her (their) ethnicity and culture both by birth and adoption affected the fact that this article was written. And I don't really understand why. |
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I don't think they're making a big deal out of it. You act like because it's the NYT everything in it must be IMPORTANT NEWS. Or that they're trying to say it is important news Can you tell me you've never read the human interest stories that are just about some random people who live in the area? For example, today in my local paper there's a story about a Reverend who is also... a carpenter. Not news. Without Human Interest stories, newspapers don't keep their readership and lose subscribers to the internet.
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I just don't think they should have made a big deal out of a Chinese girl's bat mitzvah just because she's Chinese. They wouldn't have made a big deal out of a child from a country where there is a known Jewish population. |
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I thought it was a really nice story and I found it interesting.
You're right that these days a Russian adoptee/emigre's bar or bat mitzvah may not be in the New York Times. But it certainly was not so long ago. The former Soviet Union was not exactly known for religious freedom and back when I was of bat mitzvah age, it was very common to have a bar or bat mitzvah "twin" - a Jewish boy or girl in the USSR who wasn't allowed to have a bar mitzvah. |
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