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Creating Spaces of Belonging

Tani Prell

Tani Prell '13 is helping to expand ideas of what it can mean to be Jewish.

    By Dawn Araujo-Hawkins / Photo by Akilah Townsend

    For a long time, Tani Prell 鈥13 struggled to feel like she belonged anywhere. Her parents were sixteen and eighteen when she was born, and Prell, who is biracial, was raised by her mother鈥檚 white parents in a suburb of Chicago. She鈥檚 never had a relationship with her mother and has only recently gotten to know her father.

    And then there was school.

    Before college, Prell鈥檚 entire education took place at two conservative Lutheran schools. Yet, even as a young adolescent, she often felt out of step with the version of religion these schools presented. She had questions: Why is Eve to blame for everything? What is the role of free will? But her schools did not encourage questions, so Prell saved hers for her grandmother, an Italian Catholic by birth who was also a spiritual questioner.

    In middle school, Prell made a life-changing discovery when it dawned on her that the parts of the Bible that she connected to the most were also part of a thriving religion. 鈥淎s soon as I found out about Judaism, I was like, 鈥楾his is it. This is who I am,鈥欌 she says.

    She loved Judaism鈥檚 openness, the fact that asking questions was at the heart of the religion. It felt like the exact opposite of what she was experiencing at school and church. So she started studying Judaism in her downtime.

    Judaism also helped connect Prell to her Blackness鈥攁 process that she had largely been trying to work out on her own. When she sang Jewish prayers, she would often enter into a meditative state that made her feel connected to her Black ancestors, and she was elated to discover that ancestral connection was a part of many Jewish practices.

    At Macalester, Prell coupled her independent study of Judaism with formal coursework, which further cemented her desire to become Jewish. 鈥淚 went into Macalester thinking I had a really critical framework through which I learned and understood religion,鈥 says Prell, who majored in creative writing and minored in philosophy and religious studies. 鈥淢acalester expanded my thinking more than I could have ever imagined.鈥

    Prell planned to start the official, yearlong conversion process after graduation, but delayed her plans by a year to take on a Teach for America position. But in 2015 Prell converted to Judaism, and she hasn鈥檛 looked back.

    In February, Prell started her dream job as the Chicago director of 18Doors, an organization that helps people in interfaith relationships engage meaningfully in Jewish life. By supporting people as they explore the myriad ways they can integrate Jewish values into their lives, Prell is helping them to expand ideas of what it can mean to be Jewish.

    鈥淚 think because I struggled so much to feel like I belonged鈥攃ulturally I didn鈥檛 belong, and religiously I was never aligned with the institutions I was a part of鈥攊t just makes sense that the career that I would find is all about creating belonging for people,鈥 she says.

    Prell explains that her Judaism manifests in two ways: the internal and the external. Internally, Judaism is her calm in the chaos of the world. She especially loves the song Oseh Shalom, a prayer for peace. 鈥淓ven when I didn鈥檛 know Hebrew yet, it grounded me the first time I heard it,鈥 she says.

    Externally, Prell鈥檚 Judaism is about creating spaces of belonging and fostering tikkun olam, the Jewish concept of repairing the world.

    In her spare time, Prell offers antiracism education and consulting for local and national Jewish organizations, after her master鈥檚 degree in Jewish professional studies included research on antiracism in Jewish spaces. She also serves on the Union for Reform Judaism鈥檚 North American Board of Trustees, and helps guide the organization鈥檚 diversity, equity, and inclusion work.

    At times, being an advocate for inclusion can be emotionally draining, but Prell says it鈥檚 Judaism itself that sustains her. 鈥淥ne of the things I love most about Judaism is that it has a moment of pause and reflection built into it with Shabbat,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 take Shabbat as my moment to pour back into myself so that I have the capacity for sustained justice work.鈥

    In 2018, Prell was selected for the Union for Reform Judaism鈥檚 leadership development program for Jews of color, which helped her to cultivate a network of people she can relate to on a new level. It鈥檚 a growing demographic鈥攁 2021 Pew Research Center report shows that 15 percent of Jews under thirty identify as people of color.

    鈥淪o many times, I鈥檓 in white Jewish spaces, or spaces with other people of color,鈥 she says. 鈥淏eing in spaces with Jews of color is a merging of my worlds. It is an exhale. We have a shared experience of navigating what it means to be Jewish in America, while also navigating racist systems in America as Black, Indigenous, and people of color.鈥

    Jews of color historically have been omitted from the narrative of American Judaism. But there are people of color living deeply Jewish lives, she says, and they deserve to have their stories told, too: 鈥淭he Jewish present and future is multiracial.鈥

    Dawn Araujo-Hawkins is a religion journalist based in Kansas City, Missouri.