OK, well maybe I have to get back to Judaism. In the sense that if I look at me and my forebears forever stretching back to I don't know, whenever there's no sense of place and therefore no sense of nationality.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Judaism is interesting in that there is something there that I think you just can't understand if you're not a Jew - it moves into a realm of true mystery.
I really don't even think of myself as being Jewish except when I'm in Germany.
I'm half Jewish, but no one believes me because my looks lean a little WASP-y... It's sometimes hard for me to get the roles I'm drawn to.
I came into the world a Jew, and although I did not live my life entirely as a Jew, I think it is fitting that I should leave as a Jew. I don't want to turn my back on a great and noble heritage.
I consider myself more of a cultural Jew; I'm not religious in any way.
Living in different cultures helped me work out who I was going to be, separate from where I came from.
The funny thing is that I write and I act a lot about being Jewish, but I don't really think about it as a regular person.
I remain convinced that I can be a true universalist only when I am a better Jew.
I'm a Jewish born-again Christian.
I identify myself as what I am. I'm half Jewish, like Proust. I have no other way to put it.