- Yavilah McCoy
Yavilah McCoy (born
November 8 ,1972 ), anAfrican-American Jew , is the founder of Ayecha, anonprofit organization regarding the Jewish community and diversity. She is a teacher, writer, editor, and diversity consultant. She has taughtJudaic studies ,Hebrew , andEnglish literature in elementary and secondary schools.Early life
McCoy grew up in an
Orthodox Jewish home in a heavily Jewish area ofBrooklyn . In her home Jewish songs sung during religious observances were combined with the rhythm and spirit of African-Americangospel s into what she calls “Jewish gospel.”McCoy attended Jewish elementary and high schools, and she studied at
Hebrew University of Jerusalem inIsrael .Family's adoption of Judaism
Her great-grandmother on her mother’s side, growing up in
Virginia , was influenced byMarcus Garvey . He led acrusade for blacknationalism in the 1920s. What especially interested her was the notion that American blacks needed to investigate their African origins, and that they had a relationship withGod that was not required to go through a whiteJesus . “So she took off the shackle ofChristianity , so to speak, and took on the religion ofIsrael ,” McCoy said. “All she had was theBible . So most of my great-grandmother’s songs were the songs ofDavid .”The family moved to Brownsville in Brooklyn, where Jews and blacks lived side by side. She says::My grandfather started developing friendships with Jews and started to take on Jewish practices. He started to learn about
kosher and observing the Jewish holidays. He would wear ayarmulke and really started to identify as a Jew. In the 1940s and ’50s, there were a number ofpeople of color who identified with Judaism in Brownsville, many for similar reasons as those that drew my grandmother to the faith of the people ofIsrael in the ’20s and ’30s. When my grandfather met my grandmother, she took on his way of life.In her grandparents’ home, McCoy’s mother's parents bought kosher meat and observed the Jewish holidays. McCoy’s father converted to Orthodox Judaism in his early 20s, and later married her mother, who converted to Orthodox observance as well. [ [http://www.shma.com/june03/Yavilah.htm The Changing Face of Jewish Identity: Inside, Outside, and Other] ]
Ayecha
Yavila McCoy is the founder and director of Ayecha, a
nonprofit organization with offices in New York City and St. Louis which provides training and educational resources to build greater sensitivity toward differences in the Jewish community. The organization also serves as a support group and network for Jews of color and multiracial families. McCoy says: :We teach people how to understand their Judaism through the lens of race, age and economic status. When most people think of Jewish, they think white and they think European. But Jews of color have been alive and well for thousands of years in parts of the world. [ [http://www.ayecha.org/yavilah-mccoy.htm Yavilah McCoy] ]McCoy said recent research estimates that there are about 20,000 Jews of color in the
United States . [ [http://philanthropy.com/jobs/2003/05/15/20030515-359473.htm A Fledgling Grant Maker Nurtures Young Jewish 'Social Entrepreneurs'] ]Personal life
McCoy's husband is also African-American and Jewish, and the couple keeps kosher in their St. Louis home with their three children, who attend a local Jewish day school. [http://www.kansascity.com/mld/kansascity/living/15472766.htm]
Notes
External links
* [http://www.ayecha.org Ayecha]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.