Congressman-elect Delgado’s wife talks about the couple’s Jewish involvement

Congressman-elect Delgado’s wife talks about the couple’s Jewish involvement

Lacey Schwartz Delgado, her husband, Antonio, and their twins, Maxwell and Coltrane. (Courtesy of Antonio Delgado for Congress)
Lacey Schwartz Delgado, her husband, Antonio, and their twins, Maxwell and Coltrane. (Courtesy of Antonio Delgado for Congress)

In 2014, Lacey Schwartz made headlines around the world for a documentary in which she explored a shocking family secret.

“Little White Lie” tells her real-life story of being raised in a white Jewish family in the upstate New York town of Woodstock. Though she had a darker complexion than other family members, she was told she had inherited her Sicilian Jewish grandfather’s skin tone.

In college, however, she no longer could ignore the fact that she didn’t really look white. She confronted her mother, who eventually admitted that Schwartz’s father actually was an African-American family friend with whom she had an affair.

The revelation set the filmmaker on a path of self-discovery, which she shows in the documentary. She now is the national outreach director for Be’chol Lashon, a group that advocates for diversity in the Jewish community.

Four years after the film’s release, the 41-year-old filmmaker, who now calls herself Lacey Schwartz Delgado, is on yet another new path.

Her husband Antonio Delgado prepares to represent New York’s 19th district in the U.S. House of Representatives. (The district, just north of the New York City suburbs, includes parts of the Hudson Valley and the Catskills.) He ousted Republican incumbent John Faso, pushing a platform that includes protecting local jobs, supporting universal healthcare and safeguarding the environment.

Here, Schwartz Delgado talks about her involvement in the campaign, her husband’s view on Israel, and how the couple, who met as students at Harvard Law School, are raising their 5-year-old twin boys as Jews.

The following excerpts from the conversation have been edited for clarity and style.

Josefin Dolsten: How did you and Antonio decide that he would run for office?

Lacey Schwartz Delgado: We had a real coming together moment for a variety of different reasons after the 2016 election. We were turning 40. He was at a real crossroads with his professional career, and I had gotten off the road after being on the road for the greater part of two years promoting “Little White Lie,” and we realized that a lot of the country was jokingly saying “Let’s move out of the country,” while we wanted to do the opposite, which was move back home.

We have 5-year-old identical twin boys, and two sets of what I call empowered grandparents, and so it was really about, how do we live our ideals, how do we live near family and where and how are we going to raise our children? And with that we also started looking into political spaces, which my husband has been more traditionally oriented to but had problems with the system. We have problems with money in politics and with the way in which when you get into it you have to open yourself up to unfortunate, inevitable personal attacks that come with it. But when we looked around and we saw what was going around, we felt like both on the left and the right, that the world was becoming too extreme.

JD: Were you surprised that he decided to run for office?

LSD: I’m not totally surprised. I think my involvement to the degree that it is surprises me more in a sense. I would have obviously always supported him and of course I believe in him, and I am partially involved because I am supporting him. But to the degree that I am involved it’s really not him, it’s about my strong viewpoints on what it takes to build a stronger community and how important community is for me. One of those things that we’ve seen in my opinion fail for the political system in the past few decades is an overemphasis on the presidency and federal politics, as opposed to starting at the bottom and launching it from bottom up, looking at our villages and our towns and our counties and our states.

JD: How do you relate to Judaism as a family?

LSD: I grew up in a Jewish community near where we live. I was bat mitzvahed here. And Antonio was not raised Jewishly but we have very much embraced passing down Judaism to our kids. Our kids are 5 years old, so we are in certain ways very similar to many families who have kids of this age, whether or not they are two Jewish parents or only one Jewish parent. He has been exposed to what Judaism looked like in my family in previous generations. I think like many people the traditions I learned from my family are a large part of my Judaism, and I have my own connections through Jewish wisdom. So I think like many young families we’re at a very typical point where were figuring out what does it look like for our family.

JD: In your documentary you explore how your newfound racial identity clashed with your being raised as a white Jew. How do you relate to that now?

LSD: There’s always this conversation about where is the black-Jewish dialogue, but there’s a bunch of us who are actually having those conversations internally and struggle to internally integrate those identities. I think a lot of that is because society was almost telling us that being black and Jewish was at times almost diametrically opposed, and in fact it’s not in reality. So for me it was going through a process and truly an educational experience of learning the reality of who we are as a Jewish people, which is diverse group of people, from very diverse backgrounds.

JD: Antonio was criticized for saying in a debate that “Israel is not a Jewish democracy.” He later clarified his stance, saying the country is indeed “a Jewish democracy.” Can you speak more about his views on Israel?

LSD: He understands the deep importance of Israel, and I think in terms of the conversation, he did clarify it in terms of it being a tense thing and he clarified it quite specifically in terms of his complete support for Israel. I think it just goes to speak to that all too often in the political space, rather than it being a dialogue, people want to jump on something and misinterpret it and put it into a certain box, and I think that is not who we are. We are not somebody who is out here talking about issues for political sake. We are living it, we are putting ourselves through the process, we’re asking ourselves the hard questions and we’re making sure that we remain committed to the ideals that we believe in, and support for Israel is a big one of them, for both of us as a Jewish family.

JTA Wire Service

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