If there’s one thing we can all agree on, politics aside, it’s that love transcends all. In celebration of Valentine’s Day, msnbc.com’s “Love is Love” series will profile a variety of couples and their stories in the week leading up to February 14 to show that “love is love,” no matter your race, nationality, sexual orientation, disability, or gender identity.
Sulome Anderson and her boyfriend, Jeremy, became a viral sensation last year after a picture of them kissing went viral on the Internet. Why? Because Sulome is half-Lebanese and her boyfriend, Jeremy, is Orthodox Jewish. When they posted the photo of themselves kissing, they held a sign that read: “Jews and Arabs refuse to be enemies.” The photo became a worldwide sensation at a time when tensions between Israel and Palestine were rapidly escalating. Though Sulome and Jeremy come from very different backgrounds, they prove that those differences don’t have to mean they are enemies. Here, they share their story.
He calls me neshama, I call him habibi. Love doesn't speak the language of occupation #JewsAndArabsRefuseToBeEnemies pic.twitter.com/CpqwxNM6ys
— Sulome Anderson (@SulomeAnderson) July 13, 2014
Names: Sulome Anderson and Jeremy
Been together for: Almost a year
How did you meet?
Sulome: Online dating.
Jeremy: (Shhh, Tinder)
How did your friends and family react to your relationship in the beginning, and now? Have they been accepting?
Sulome: On my part, there were a couple of raised eyebrows at first. There are a few religious people in my family, but no one really made much of a fuss. My mother is Lebanese Christian, and she loves Jeremy. So does my father. They sit and talk for hours.
Jeremy: I think at first they didn’t take our relationship seriously, but after our picture went viral, overall, they did not react well. I come from an Orthodox Jewish family, so dating outside the faith is still a major taboo. My sister and I no longer speak after she called Sulome “a dirty Arab bitch.” One of my brothers told me he would sit Shiva (the 7 day mourning period after a family members death) if we got married … you get the idea. My father has been resistant to meeting Sulome, and as for my siblings, she has not met any of them, and doesn’t plan to. My less immediate family has been more open to the idea, but again, because of ideology, won’t embrace the relationship wholeheartedly.
What has the reaction from your community been like?
Sulome: My community has been fine with it. I guess some of my friends were a little upset that I was dating someone with political views so contrary to ours. But Jeremy has come around a little in that regard. I think we’ve both managed to consider the situation in Israel/Palestine from a humanist standpoint instead of a political one. We each brought different perspectives to this relationship, and I think we’ve both benefited from them.
When Jeremy was still a part of the Orthodox community, social pressure led to marriage at 20 years old. He has a four-year-old son from this marriage, and they are very close. I absolutely adore him. He’s a fantastic little boy, and I think he feels the same way about me. When his son’s mother found out about the viral photo, she and Jeremy were just beginning formal divorce proceedings. They had already been through their Jewish divorce, but as soon as she realized this was a serious relationship, she immediately sued for full custody and has been making our lives extremely difficult. She won’t allow her son to spend the night at our house; I’ll buy him toys and she’ll throw them away. It’s been kind of a nightmare, which is sad, considering that his son will be the person most traumatized by all this.
Jeremy: For the most part, I no longer keep in contact with my friends from the Jewish community, because sadly, since my departure we no longer have very much in common. The few I did speak with were happy that I found someone I loved, and who made me happy, having witnessed my previous marriage. They have been far more accepting than my family. I had also been working with an Orthodox Jewish-owned company when the photo came out, after which some of the employees called me a “Hamas supporter” and “terrorist lover.” I lost said job soon afterwards. I don’t think it was a coincidence. So overall, a mixed bag.
Have you ever experienced negative reactions when out in public as a couple? How do you handle it?
Sulome: We live in New York City, and we don’t have “Jew” and “Arab” tattooed on our foreheads, so no one bats an eye 🙂
Jeremy: Only that people wonder what a beautiful woman like her is doing with a gangly, Frankenstein-esque dude like me.
What do you say to people who might not understand your relationship? What do you wish people knew?









