As much as I like our large Reform synagogue for many reasons, it's still very white, middle- to upper-class, Ashkenazi and hetero-couples-with-kids oriented. There is absolutely the intention to be accepting of all people, but I've seen lesbian couples asked if they're sisters (or mother and daughter, when the age difference is nowhere near that wide), unsure reactions to transwomen and complete bafflement when discovering that someone is a transman.
I cannot presume to say how Judaism should be. I can say how I would prefer it to be, and that is with the recognition that diversity within our people is something to be not merely tolerated, but celebrated.
(I've been reading bits of things here and there about the ongoing struggles of Sephardic, Ethiopian and Mizrahi Jews, in Israel and elsewhere. I converted into the Ashkenazic tradition, and I wish the Introduction to Judaism class had included more information about other Jews. There's probably a whole 'nother series of posts I could write, but I need to learn a lot more first. I can, however, say that I believe that no group who excludes these and any other traditions, whether or not it's intentional, can call itself truly inclusive.)
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