Ahuvah Gray

Ahuvah Gray
Born
Delores Gray

Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Website
ahuvahgray.com

Ahuva Gray (born 1944 or 1945) is an American writer on religion and memoirist. She is a former Baptist minister who converted to Judaism and chronicled her changing beliefs in the book My Sister, the Jew, published in 2001.

Biography

Gray is African-American and was born to a Baptist working-class family in the Lawndale neighborhood of Chicago. She is a relative of baseball player Lorenzo Gray.[citation needed] Each summer, she and her siblings visited her sharecropper grandparents in Mound Bayou, Mississippi.[1] Her first experience with Judaism was in seventh grade, when she began working in a dress shop owned by a Jewish family.[2]

After college, Gray worked for 23 years for Continental Airlines, working first as a flight attendant and later becoming an executive.[1] After Continental Airlines transferred Gray to Los Angeles, she became involved in a Baptist church, and was later ordained at the International Assemblies of God in San Diego.[1][3] Gray's church emphasized Christianity's Jewish roots, leading her to interact with local Jewish leaders and academics and to begin leading tour groups in the Middle East.[1] She also began to pray using the Jewish siddur.[1] She found herself disagreeing with some Christian dogma, such as original sin and the trinity.[2][3]

After a 1994 earthquake in California, Gray moved to Israel.[1] Wanting to study Judaism further, she entered the Nishmat College for Women in Jerusalem and supported herself by cleaning homes.[1] In 1996, at age 51,[1] she completed conversion through the Jerusalem beth din to become an Orthodox Jew.[1] She took the name of Ahuva.[4]

In Israel, Gray has worked as a tour guide, and as a lecturer abroad. Gray has lived in Bayit VeGan, Jerusalem since the mid-1990s.[1][4] She identified as Haredi.[1]

Personal life

While working for Continental Airlines, she married; she and her husband divorced amicably after 16 years, and had no children.[1]

Gray remains close with her non-Jewish family, who were supportive of her conversion.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Schiller, Mordechai (22 May 2006). "Go Where I Send Thee: A Former Minister Finds Torah". Jewish Action. Retrieved 15 October 2025.
  2. ^ a b Sarah, Shapiro. "Gifts of a Convert". Aish.com.
  3. ^ a b Radoszkowicz, Abigail (9 November 2001). "From Sister Delores to my sister the Jew". The Jerusalem Post. Archived from the original on 27 July 2010. Retrieved 3 August 2010 – via ahuvahgray.com.
  4. ^ a b "Ahuva Gray". Jewishmag.com. February 2003. Retrieved 3 August 2010.

Bibliography

  • My Sister the Jew. Philipp Feldheim Inc. 2001. ISBN 1-56871-276-6.
  • Gifts of a Stranger: A Convert's Round-the-world Travels and Spiritual Journeys. Targum Press. 2004. ISBN 978-1-56871-331-1.
  • Ahuvah Gray
  • Gifts of a Convert
  • From Baptist to Beshert
  • From Mississippi to Mount Sinai Archived 18 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine
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