
On Monday, the news broke that a white supremacist was arrested for a plot to blow up a synagogue in Pueblo, a city in the southeast part of Colorado. Still, Steamboat felt safer, less threatening and definitely further away from the hideous hateful actions we so often hear about on the news.īut that nagging voice - “no place is safe” - grew even louder this week. Yet a nagging voice in the back of my mind creeps up now and then: “No place is safe.” And anti-Semitism is not new to Steamboat, even though, fortunately, our exposure’s been minimal during our years here: swastikas keyed into a couple Jewish high schooler’s car hoods a group of kids spouting hate speech and shouting “Heil Hitler!” before cannonballing into a pool an unintentionally overheard comment or two about the need to keep Jews out of public office. And we’re active in our small but perfect-for-us congregation. We are still committed to our dream of raising our kids - ages 9, 6 and 2 - in a place closer to nature, one that feels more spiritual and closer to what Judaism means to us. More than eight years later, we still wake up in awe of the scenery that so many people travel so far and pay top dollar to visit. After a stint in Denver, we moved to Steamboat Springs, a town with a population of 13,000, including 150 Jews.
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įast forward several years - plus two more kids and a dog. But that wasn’t the only perk: Colorado was friendly and affordable and safe.īut it’s a funny thing, that word: safe. We’d get to live in a place where loving the outdoors isn’t a trend or catchphrase, it’s a way of life.

Yeah, it would be perfect for our growing family. Plus, my husband was born and raised there, and his parents had just retired in the mountains.

We had visited the state dozens of times, though, and we loved the landscape, and the traffic beat California by a long shot. We’d certainly tossed around the idea many times before, but that would mean we’d have to leave the music business - the very profession that brought us together. But after those grueling two weeks apart, he said it was time to make a change - it was time to prioritize family togetherness.Ĭolorado? I thought. It was May 2011 and he had just returned home to Nashville - we had relocated there only recently from Los Angeles with the idea that we could balance our careers in the music industry with raising our newborn son. “Let’s move to Colorado,” my husband said.

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