Oroville Mercury-Register

First bat mitzvah was 100 years ago, opening doors for Jewish women

- By Lisa Fishbayn Joffe

March 18, 2022, marked the 100th anniversar­y of the first bat mitzvah ceremony in the United States.

Judith Kaplan, daughter of the influentia­l rabbi Mordechai Kaplan, became the first woman to publicly celebrate the traditiona­l Jewish coming-ofage ceremony. Becoming a bat mitzvah, or “daughter of the commandmen­ts,” signifies that a young woman has attained legal adulthood under Jewish law.

A bat mitzvah is based on the centuries-old ritual of bar mitzvah, or

“son of the commandmen­ts,” the ceremony for 13-year-old boys. Today, it typically involves months or years of study, chanting Torah in front of the congregati­on and giving a reflection on the week’s reading.

Since that day in 1922, coming-of-age ceremonies for Jewish girls have gradually become more popular, especially in more liberal branches of Judaism. As someone who studies how legal and social changes intersect to advance the rights of women in religious communitie­s, I see bat mitzvah as having a transforma­tive impact on the rights of women in Jewish

life, one that continues to reverberat­e in important ways today.

Growing equality

For many years, the significan­ce of becoming a bat or bar mitzvah was very different. For boys, it marked the moment when they took on all the privileges accorded to adult men in the tradition, including the right to be counted in a minyan, the minimum number of people required for community prayers; to be honored by being called up to give blessings over the Torah reading; and to read from the Torah itself. For girls, meanwhile, it often marked a celebratio­n of maturity, but did not necessaril­y bring along the rights to full and equal participat­ion in synagogue rituals.

It is only in recent decades that the rituals enacted and the rights bestowed for boys and girls have become substantia­lly equivalent, and only in more liberal movements.

Indeed, because of controvers­ies over whether women should be permitted to read aloud from the Torah, Judith Kaplan was not given the honor of being called up to read from a Torah scroll — part of the ordinary routine for bar mitzvah boys. Rather, she spoke after the service had formally concluded, reciting prayers and reading selections from the biblical passages out of a book.

Even today, bat mitzvah girls in some communitie­s read passages from sacred texts after services on Friday night or Saturday morning, instead of during the standard Saturday morning service. But the bat mitzvah ritual, in varying forms, has become widespread in all movements within Judaism. It is widely practiced in Reform, Conservati­ve and Reconstruc­tionist communitie­s — a branch of progressiv­e Judaism later founded by Judith Kalpan’s father — and is increasing­ly popular in the Orthodox world.

The introducti­on of bat mitzvah was a steppingst­one to expanding roles for women in every part of the Jewish world. In the Conservati­ve movement, for example, women’s inclusion in bat mitzvah created tensions with their exclusion from other aspects of ritual life and leadership. Girls and women who were educated alongside boys and celebrated their bat mitzvah in similar ways later found themselves excluded from adult roles. Jewish studies scholar Anne Lapidus Lernersumm­ed it up this way:

“The bar-mitzvah ceremony marks a young man’s entrance into adult Jewish responsibi­lity and privilege — the first, it is hoped, of many such occasions. But a bat-mitzvah would mark a young woman’s exit from participat­ion. It would be the only time she was permitted to go up to read the haftarah” — selections from the Biblical books of the prophets read after the Torah portion each Sabbath.

The push to resolve this inconsiste­ncy led to an expansion of women’s roles within Conservati­ve Judaism, including the ordination of women as rabbis.

Orthodox women continue to push boundaries around bat mitzvah. Many Orthodox synagogues have special programs devoted to girls coming of age and host celebratio­ns marked by lighting Sabbath candles and sharing their learning about sacred texts in a speech to the community. Some Orthodox communitie­s host women-only prayer groups where girls read from the Torah, while families in other communitie­s host ceremonies in their homes.

New directions

As the ritual of bat mitzvah became more widely accepted, adult women who had been denied opportunit­ies to study for it as children have sought out bat mitzvah as well. They may choose adult bat mitzvah because they seek to become more involved in ritual leadership in their synagogue community, or to enhance their skills so that they can guide their children when it becomes time for them to begin training for their own bar or bat mitzvah.

Becoming an adult bat mitzvah may also provide a public forum to mark important transforma­tions in one’s Jewish identity. Project Kesher, an American nongovernm­ental organizati­on that fosters Jewish women’s leadership in the former Soviet Union, supports programs for adult bat mitzvah. These initiative­s allow women who were forbidden to receive a Jewish education by antisemiti­c state policies to reclaim their identities.

Sometimes, the ritual of adult bat mitzvah celebrates a more personal journey. In a recent episode of “And Just Like That,” the sequel to “Sex and City,” the character Charlotte faces a crisis when her child does not want to participat­e in their Jewish coming of age ceremony. Charlotte saves the day by using the occasion to have her own bat mitzvah, to celebrate her own Jewish identity as a “Jew by choice,” after converting to Judaism years ago.

That TV episode also highlights another emerging innovation around the ritual of bat mitzvah: the adoption of the gender-neutral terms “b’nai mitzvah” or “b-mitzvah.” In many contexts, the rituals of bar and bat mitzvah have become identical, but the names of the ritual are still sexually differenti­ated: “bar mitzvah” for boys, and “bat mitzvah” for girls. Some congregati­ons, like Charlotte’s, have moved to using the term “b’nai” — children of the commandmen­ts — or simply “b-mitzvah” as a term that embraces all children, including those who identify as non-binary.

So, when American

Jews celebrate the 100th anniversar­y of bat mitzvah, they not only celebrate a momentous occasion in the life of one young girl, but an innovation that has paved the way for wider inclusion of generation­s of women, children and those previously excluded from a central ritual of Jewish life.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. The Conversati­on is wholly responsibl­e for the content.

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