Stars, much has been made of them in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where I live. There’s the Star of Bethlehem shining from South Mountain every night, visible across the city. There are the Moravian stars, with their 26 points, gracing many front porches, shops, and more. People can be stars also. Maybe they stand out in their community as leaders. Or maybe they’re so-called ordinary people who just really make a difference to those around them. Many times that difference has to do with welcoming a stranger, helping someone through a hard time, or just showing up for others, offering them a sense of belonging and being cared about.
Belonging is multifaceted
As I researched “Belonging to Bethlehem: Stories from the Christmas City’s Jewish community” I realized that belonging is a little bit like those stars, meaning multifaceted. I used to think that belonging was an either/or situation, binary. But it’s not. Belonging is much more nuanced than that. It may involve longing, joy, disappointment. Getting to belonging is a journey and often a process of fits and starts. Interviewing nearly 100 people for this project, I noticed that nearly everyone struggles with belonging; some more than others. I wonder if it ever really goes smoothly for anyone.
We do have some control
The other thing about belonging is that it is sometimes possible to influence our own or another’s sense of belonging. Our own: this may be by taking the first step, going to an event, a festival, a class, saying hello to someone at school or where you get coffee. Others: It may mean welcoming someone who has shown up in your life, motioning for someone to sit next to you, asking an acquaintance to tell you a little more about themself. These are all positive steps we can do today to increase that feeling of belonging. More negative would be the comment without thinking, the procrastinating about or avoidance of getting involved. In any case, it doesn’t take much to move ourselves or others forward or backwards along that path of belonging.
Stepping out of the comfort zone
In a world where loneliness is called an epidemic, there are simple, easy steps that we can all take. But the very first step is to free ourselves of the idea that “well, they belong and I don’t.” “Belonging to Bethlehem” is about a group of people living in a city named for the origin story of another religion! Yet most people grew into a sense of belonging. One person featured in the book, sharing about his Jewish schoolmates, was the Italian-American son of a Bethlehem steelworker. Who could better belong to Bethlehem? But no, he too experienced extraordinary isolation and had to find his way just like everyone else. “Belonging to Bethlehem” is filled with the personal stories of people who have experienced that journey, sharing reflections that light the way.