Monday 6 February 2012

Jews don't want blacks in their cemetary (must watch)

DateSunday, February 5, 2012 at 1:53AM AuthorGilad Atzmon

Colchester, Connecticut (CNN) - Juliet Steer was dying of lymphoma when she told her brother Paul she wanted to be buried just like Jesus, following Jewish customs. Even though she's a black Christian, she chose a plot in the secluded interfaith section of this quiet town's Jewish Ahvath Achim Cemetery.

"She felt like it was a nice and peaceful place," Paul Steer said. Juliet liked the quiet. When she died, Paul had her buried in the plot, hopeful that she'd finally rest in peace.

But this Jewish cemetery in Colchester, Connecticut, has been anything but peaceful since one of its board members sued Paul Steer. It's now the center of a legal fight tinged with allegations of racial and religious prejudices.

Maria Balaban, a cemetery board member who has relatives buried there, is demanding Paul remove Juliet's remains from the cemetery because she is not Jewish and has no ties to anyone in the Jewish section. Paul Steer believes part of the reason Balaban wants his sister's remains removed is because she was African-American.

"Her lawyer said 'My client don't believe your sister accepted the faith and she has to be exhumed.' I said, 'What are you talking about?' 'Your sister don't (sic) belong there, the cemetery is only for Jews,'" remembers Paul, whose family is of Jamaican descent. "I said, 'Man, get out of here.'"

The dispute has upset members of the congregation, whose board - including Balaban - voted in 2009 to allow people of any faith to be buried in the interfaith section.

"That's the troubling thing about the case for us, we really don't understand the motivation, we really sure wish it had been raised at the creation of the interfaith section back on November 1 of 2009," said George Purtil, a lawyer for the congregation. "We wouldn't be in the pickle that we're in right now if somebody, if she had just spoken up."

In an exclusive interview with CNN, Balaban said she did speak up and accuses the board of inaccurately portraying her support for the interfaith section. "I would never have approved that and I did not approve it," she said. "The minutes are 80% wrong."

Her lawyer, Martin Rutchik, said Balaban's wishes are consistent with the rules governing most Jewish cemeteries. "There has been a violation of the sanctity and the respect of cemetery grounds that were created for Jews, who after centuries of running around went to Colchester and created a home of their own," he said.

Arthur Liverant, another board member, showed CNN the two sections, divided by a road and some fencing. Juliet, an African-American, is the only person to be buried in the interfaith section so far, he said, although four other plots are reserved and paid for.

The other four plots are for white people and Balaban has not objected to those, which has brought the issue of race into the debate at the synagogue. "They are white, but it makes no different to us," Arthur said. "Anybody is allowed to be buried there."

Balaban, who was born in Cuba, says race has nothing to do with her objections to Juliet Steer's remains. She says the other four plots were bought by people associated to members of the congregation. As a social worker who devoted years of her life to working with black teenagers, she said she's stung by any implication this dispute is about race.

The discussion in the temple to allow non-Jews into the cemetery began a few years ago, because so many Jews had intermarried or had non-Jewish relatives. The final decision was to permit everyone since people had different connections to Judaism, including civil unions and friendships.

The current debate has created bitterness on all sides, prompting Balaban and her lawyer to throw out a potential compromise. "I would suggest that the grave site of Juliet Steer not be disturbed and be surrounded by shrubbery," says an October letter from Balaban's lawyer.

George Purtill, the lawyer for the congregation, said that was completely unacceptable to the congregation. "That's gross," he said. "My client, the board of directors, was absolutely disgusted by that suggestion."

A judge will weigh in next month, when a temporary injunction to exhume Steer's body and move her remains elsewhere is scheduled to be heard. The congregation says it will never allow the body to be taken out. But Maria Balaban will have her day in court, facing her own congregation and Juliet Steer's family, which also vows to keep her in the resting place she chose.
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