The whole incident was a reminder that sex education is crucially important for everyone, from low-income communities with high rates of teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (STIs), to our relatively privileged and sheltered Jewish community.
Contrary to stereotype, Jewish teens do become pregnant in high school. They are susceptible to contracting STIs. They are sexually abused.
Statistics, however, are difficult to come by as many cases are “hushed up” or “taken care of” while a student is studying in Israel or abroad. I’ve heard countless stories in workshops from girls who ended up in abusive relationships in Israel because they were under the naïve misconception that “Jewish men are safe”.
In my experience, most Jewish day school students have not received any authentic sexuality education. They might have had a cursory class on puberty or the prevention of STIs — if they were lucky. But this desultory non-approach to sexuality education does not work. A survey commissioned by the Metropolitan Life Foundation* involving more than 45,000 students in 2,000 schools found no obvious difference between the behaviors of students with no health education and those who had received it for one year. Only after three years of continuous health programs and information did such education influence behavior patterns.
Young people today are bombarded with messages about sexuality: retail stores have background music playing with overtly sexual lyrics, pop-up advertisements with suggestive images commonly appear on our websites, and reality TV portrays high-risk sexual behavior and unhealthy relationships.
Are we in the Jewish community giving our adolescents enough information and time to talk about the changes they are experiencing? As our children grow and attend camp, overnight youth group events or study abroad programs, where the social environments often lead to intense bonding and romantic exploration, have we prepared them with the information they need to protect themselves from sexual assault, date rape or unintended pregnancy? Have we made it clear that we are created in God’s image and that our bodies are a gift we must honor?
While parents are and should be the primary educators who provide their children with information and values about sexuality, they often don’t know how to begin such conversations, or assume that discussing sexuality is a one-time conversation about reproduction.
Celebrating 10 Years & Marking the End of An Amazing Project
Celebrating 10 Years & Marking the End of An Amazing Project
At Jewrotica’s Evening of Bedside Readings, students declaimed monologues on sexual encounters that had a Jewish twist. At Columbia/Barnard Hillel, the speakers pushed their own boundaries by performing a range of explicit narratives that challenged how the audience thought of the relationship to Judaism and sex. During the speakers’ preparation, the arguments about which narratives would be appropriate forced students to take a stand and voice their opinion on their own beliefs about Judaism an… Read more
Jewrotica is something that the community has needed for a long time so that people can actually learn, express and share and have good relationships without having to stumble through life. Check out the site and learn something. Have fun!
I stepped out of my comfort zone to be a part of this. I was glad to open up the topic of sexuality in my community. We are trying to build a safe space to talk about sex. The result I am most happy about coming from this event is that hopefully now my friends know they can come and talk to me, that I can be their ‘safe space’.
The Jewrotica event “Evening of Jewrotica: Bedside Reading” was awesome. As Master of Confessions, I got to read the deepest, darkest secrets of people in the room out loud… It was scintillating, titillating, and – yes – even educational!
Learning about sex and what’s right and wrong when it comes to sex from a Biblical standpoint was an eye opening experience. I completely enjoyed it and think something like this could be a very cool thing to bring to even high school aged Jewish youth groups.
Such an amazing experience! The Sarah Lawrence Jewrotica workshop was more than I could have ever expected – a comfortable, safe, sultry environment where participants clearly felt good about sharing or listening to each other’s intimate experiences and relating them to sexy stories from the Torah. From the moment the workshop began, Ayo had a sweet presence that was kinetic and spread around the room; her storytelling abilities had everyone enraptured and made the conversation topics relata… Read more
Jewrotica is inspiring Jews and erotica with holiness and coolness, and is the pride of progressive Judaism. Jewrotica – awesome!
Bedside Reading with Jewrotica was funny, sexy, and hot all at once. The readings were honest about all kinds of sexuality, but the highlight of the evening was definitely the confessions, written by audience participants. Nobody knew who wrote them, and most were tell-alls that would make your bubbe blush. Unless your bubbe was very, very cool. Then maybe she’d make YOU blush!
While many people fear the “sex talk,” Jewrotica offers an opportunity for writers and audiences to speak about sexuality in a open and safe space. When I attended a Jewrotica reading, I heard stories that reminded me that love takes many forms, and that expressing it is a vital part of who we are as a people.
I love the inclusiveness – there is something for everyone, in and out of the Jewish community.
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