Growing up in my East Yorkshire village, I was entirely unaware of Judaism and no Jews lived in that village. However, at eleven that changed somewhat when I passed the eleven plus exam and gained a scholarship to the poshest school in Hull.
Every morning, the posh school had an assembly in which there were Christian prayers and hymns. That section would be followed by general school notices.
Every morning, I had to ride thirteen miles into Hull on a country bus and because of this I was never in the school hall at the start of the assembly so I had to wait outside with around twenty others boys who missed the first part of the assembly because they were Jewish. When the religious part finished, we would troop into the back of the hall to listen to the notices. I think this is the reason that several of my classmates tried to tease me - calling me a "yid" - a term of abuse I had never heard before. Fortunately, the teasing did not last long and it did not cause me any remembered trauma at all.
Even at the age of eleven, I had become a non-believer so though I was christened within The Church of England, in truth I had already ditched all that hocus pocus. Effectively, I was already an "atheist" though that was another word that I had previously never heard.
Please excuse my ignorance but in this modern age I wonder why more Jews don't also turn their backs on religion and become non-believers? How can it be that someone who is a native born citizen of Great Britain or The Netherlands or Canada may self-define more eagerly through their religious heritage than through their nationality? I just don't get it.
Yesterday, there was a terrible event in the Lancashire city of Manchester. A dangerous young man of Syrian origin visited a synagogue with the intention of causing death and terror. Tragically, two Jewish men were killed and he caused injury to others before he himself was shot dead by the police.
In the news coverage that followed, I heard one Jewish woman declaring that she would now have to emigrate from this country where she was born and raised and I thought - why? This is your country as much as it is mine - why would you consider leaving it because of one murderous nutcase? So yeah - I don't really "get" several aspects of Jewishness at all. Much of it remains a mystery to me.
Am I allowed to say that in the field of arts and music, two Jewish songwriters have meant the world to me - Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen. Cohen's Jewishness was apparent in many of his songs but with Bob Dylan it was always less easily detected. However, here he is in one of his less well-known numbers, singing quite bitterly in defence of the state of Israel in "Neighbourhood Bully". I should warn you that it is four minutes and eleven seconds long...