Month: December 2009 (Page 1 of 3)
Tonight, our last blog in solidarity with Women of the Wall is a prayer, written by Becca, created last week at our Rosh Hodesh group program.
Dear God,
I am a Jew and I celebrate my life as a Jew.
Dear God,
I am a woman and I celebrate the joy of being a woman,
and dear God,
I am both Jewish and a woman and can only imagine embracing both passionately.
I want to draw closer to You, to learn more about how to learn Your truths, Your love, Your trust in the people of this world. I want to understand more and cannot get enough of Your Presence.
Dear God,
I am a Jew and a woman and I want all of that, and I celebrate becoming that Jewish woman, growing and blossoming in Your love.
I am thrilled to know that I, and my Christian male bell choir director, and my Conservative daughter, and my atheist son, and all the other people who I have not yet met – that we are all loved by You.
And I sing Hallelujah!
Part of a solidarity blog series for Women of the Wall. Each piece is written by a member of the Rosh Hodesh group of Congregation B’nai Israel. Tonight’s blog is by Heidi Gassel.
Rabbi Peter Knobel and Cantor Jeff Klepper,1983
Part of a solidarity blog series for Women of the Wall. Each piece is written by a member of the Rosh Hodesh group of Congregation B’nai Israel. Tonight, Beth Lazar reflects on meaningful moments drawing close to the Torah.
My cousins are Reconstructionist Jews and I went to services with them. They sang some of the same tunes that we sing at B’nai Israel and they also have a Saturday morning Torah study group that meets before Saturday morning services, to study and discuss the portion of the week. I felt very at home at my cousins’ temple.
My cousin also took me to a gathering of Conservative and Orthodox Jews who rented space to have Shabbat and Festival services. We went to pray with them for a Passover Shabbat service. The leaders of the service noticed that I was a new face, and asked me to dress the Torah after the reading.
I have a T-shirt with a picture of women dancing with the Torah at the Western Wall. It is my hope that someday that drawing become a reality. And all Jews can pray together here in the USA, and Israel.
Part of a solidarity blog series for Women of the Wall. Each piece is written by a member of the Rosh Hodesh group of Congregation B’nai Israel. Tonight, Rabbi Gurevitz shares a reflection:
I grew up in an Orthodox synagogue. As a young teen, I watched the boys in front of the mechitzah with envy. I wanted to be fluent in reciting prayers that no-one ever taught me. I wanted to wrap myself in a tallit and cover my head to have intimate conversations with God. I was not permitted to partake, and so I chatted with friends, I yawned, I ignored the hushes when our voices rose too much – what did they care? Our voices didn’t count anyway.
Fast-forward 13 years. In adult bat-mitzvah classes with a woman rabbi. We studied texts and made tzitzit. We talked about wrapping ourselves with the presence of the Shechinah. We talk about the tzitzit connecting us to the covenant and our heritage. Our heritage. I am invited to reclaim my heritage.
In an ethnic arts and crafts store in Swansea, Wales. Hanging on the wall – a large cloth, banded with stripes, like a Tallit. But these bands are fire orange and black. And, at the boundaries of the fire and the black, the colors merge – not hard, firm boundaries, but blurred, permeable boundaries. This is my tallit – my first tallit.
It transforms my prayer and, soon, it will transform my life.
Part of a solidarity blog series for Women of the Wall. Each piece is written by a member of the Rosh Hodesh group of Congregation B’nai Israel. Tonight’s blog is written by Marjorie Freeman, who grew up in a Reform congregation.
As a school girl, I attended – participated in – services every Saturday morning. All the adult women wore hats, the men were bare-headed, in order to show respect. I studied Jewish history, the holidays, ethical teachings, and the bible – with more intensity each year.
In my senior year of High School, our class read key portions of the Torah each week, coming together ready to present our own view of the meanings. After heated discussions, our teacher present the ‘official’ Reform interpretation, which we sometimes respectfully disagreed with. But isn’t that the Jewish way?
At the end of the year, four of us, two girls and two boys, were chosen to give ‘sermonettes’ the Friday evening of our graduation ceremony. It was such an honor to be chosen, but also so scary! What topic to choose, how to write something worthy of the congregation and the rabbi’s attention? How to stand up in front of so many people and speak the words?
Never once did it occur to me to question why two boys and two girls. We were the top students in the class; it was obvious why we were chosen. Yet this was 1962 – none of us had ever heard of a bat mitzvah, let alone a woman rabbi.
My sermonette was on the first commandment – everything follows from ‘I am the Lord your God.’ All the other commandments, all the ways of righteousness, of helping others, of doing good. “I am the Lord Your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage.’
Now it is for us to do the same for each other, and to worship God together and to be Holy in the sight of our God.
Part of a solidarity blog series for Women of the Wall. Each piece is written by a member of the Rosh Hodesh group of Congregation B’nai Israel.
Wrapped in the ‘arms’ of God
Embraced in love and intimacy …
Easing into the secure comfort
I am free to pray with all my heart …
God’s voice pours out of me
as I feel the Breath fill my body …
Sometimes there are tears of joy or sadness
But always there is a feeling of ‘coming home.’
One of the most powerful times of prayer was in the beautiful space of a chapel at a Christian Retreat Center. This was clearly a sacred place. God was in this place and, yes, I did know it. Freedom to be who I am, a Jewish woman of faith … welcoming sisters.
How ironic that Jewish women do not have that freedom to pray so safely in ‘our homeland’, at one of the most sacred sites of the Jewish people. How sad to realize that ‘my people’ would not honor my right to pray, abuse me and treat me as less than human. Maybe they are not ‘my people’. Does God listen to and answer their prayers?
Lisa Grant is a member of Congregation B’nai Israel, and Associate Professor of Education at Hebrew Union College, New York. Lisa is currently in Israel and, after seeing last night’s blog entry dedicating the coming week to solidarity blogs with Women of the Wall, she sent me this eye-witness report of being one of the women praying this Rosh Hodesh, on Friday morning at the Kotel.
I arrived in Israel on Thursday night and woke up early Friday morning to attend Rosh Chodesh Tevet services with the Women at the Wall. In the pouring rain, we were well over 100 strong, with women of all ages, students, mothers, grandmothers. We gathered at the back of the Women’s section at the Kotel, clustered tightly under umbrellas and joined together in prayer surrounded by a chorus of voices shouting out bitter epithets ranging from the rather mild “Shame” and “scum” to the more shocking “Die” and “You’re the reason why the Intifada happened.” We were not deterred by either weather or curses and managed to raise our voices together in prayer. There were a number of police in our midst, who mainly kept telling us to keep our tallitot under our coats. When we finished Hallel, we began a slow walk out of the Ezrat Nashim towards Robinson’s Arch for the Torah service. On the way, we sang songs of faith and strength in support of our right to freely express ourselves as Jews in the Jewish state. We were joined by a couple dozen men who walked with us in solidarity. Other men continued to shout at us and spit on us while the police looked on.
Lisa D. Grant
Associate Professor of Jewish Education
Hebrew Union College – New York