May 22, 2015

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Volume XXI, Issue XI  |  www.thejewishvoice.org Serving Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts

GRADUATION

4 Sivan 5775 | May 22, 2015

PHOTOS | FRAN OSTENDORF

Rabbi Alan Flam with Rev. Sekinah Hamlin.

Poverty conference speaker tackles economic growth for all BY FRAN OSTENDORF fostendorf@jewishallianceri.org PROVIDENCE – An improving economy typically doesn’t help everyone equally and a lot of well-intentioned efforts

Breaking ground for the new memorial.

Holocaust Memorial construction finally underway

don’t pay dividends because the BY FRAN OSTENDORF very people who most need help aren’t involved in shaping soluTen years of meetings, designs, tions. “We can’t talk about growing negotiations, stops and starts an economy for all if ‘all’ aren’t all led to a warm sunny Monday morning on May 11. Shovels in POVERTY | 23 the ground, handshakes and ex-

citement in the air. The Rhode Island Holocaust Memorial in downtown Providence is fi nally being built. Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo, representatives from the State House delega-

tions and dignitaries from the community were in attendance. A crowd of community members closely watched the speeches, accolades and stories, MEMORIAL | 14

1 in 6 Jews are new to Judaism – and 9 other new Pew findings BY URIEL HEILMAN NEW YORK (JTA) – The Pew Research Center’s newly released 2014 U.S. Religious Landscape Study offers a trove of data on American Jews based on interviews with 35,071 American adults, 847 of whom identified their faith as Jewish. Here are some of the more interesting findings about the Jews.

We’re highly educated

There are more American Jews with two or more university degrees than those who have just one – 31 percent have a graduate degree and 29 percent have just a bachelor’s degree. With a college graduation rate of about 59 percent (more than twice the national average of 27 percent), American Jews are the second most-educated religious group in America after Hindus, at 77 percent.

We’re the biggest religious minority

Judaism is the largest faith group in America after Christianity, and its relative size in America has grown slightly since 2007 – from 1.7 percent of the U.S. population in 2007 to 1.9 percent in 2014. The denominational breakdown of Jews who identify with the Jewish faith (“Jews by religion”) is 44 percent Reform, 22 percent Conservative, 14 percent Orthodox, 5

percent another movement and 16 percent no denomination.

the percentage of Asians was negligible.

American Jewish adults are 90 percent white, 2 percent black, 4 percent Latino, 2 percent Asian-American and 2 percent “other non-Hispanic.” That’s a notable change from 2007, when whites comprised 95 percent of American Jews, Latinos comprised 3 percent, blacks comprised 1 percent and

When it comes to religious retention rates, American Jews come in third, retaining 75 percent of those raised Jewish. By comparison, Hindus retain 80 percent and Muslims 77 percent. Behind the Jews are Evangelical Christians at 65 percent; Mormons, 64

We’re not as white as we used to be

A quarter of us are losing our religion

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PEW | 25

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May 22, 2015 by Jewish Rhode Island - Issuu