Category: Women
Just wanted to share a feel-good story today. Anyone who knows anything about Connecticut know that we are very proud of our Huskies – the UConn basketball teams. Basketball is pretty much the only US game this (British) Rabbi follows, and only because congregants (thanks Val and Linda!) initiated me a couple of years back with some live games watching a truly outstanding team. But today I found myself cheering for another Women’s team when I cam across the following news:
Israeli women’s basketball club Elitzur Ramla beat France’s Arras 61-53 last night to capture the EuroCup. Their amazing run makes them Israel’s first women’s club to capture the European Championship.
Go Team!
If Purim is over then it must be the season for the Women’s Seder! The pre-Passover timing allows for women who have, traditionally, had their hands rather busy doing a lot of the behind-the-scenes work at the family Passover Seder, to enjoy creating and leading the ritual aspects of the Seder. A pre-Passover Seder has also enabled some of the wonderful creativity – prayers, writings, stories, and music – that have emerged from the Women’s Seder ritual over the decades to make their way into family and other communal Seders.
The first Women’s Seder took place in Haifa, Israel and Manhattan, NY in the USA in 1975. The story of the early years and the text of the first haggadah written for the Women’s Seder can be found in ‘The Telling’, by E.M. Broner. These early Seder gatherings represented the coming together of second wave feminism with Judaism as women who had previously felt excluded from a Judaism that was perceived to be patriarchal and exclusionary began to reclaim their heritage and Jewish women’s spirituality. Sally Priesand had been the first US woman to be ordained as a rabbi in 1972, and Jackie Tabick was the first to be ordained in the UK in 1975. The times they were a’changin’.
Since those early years, the tradition of a Women’s Seder has spread far and wide and has evolved considerably. Many local communities have created their own haggadah, weaving together borrowed poems, stories, and songs with their own new liturgical writing and composing. One organization based in New York City, Ma’yan, was instrumental in the spread of the Women’s Seder internationally, with the music of the greatly missed Debbie Friedman, z’l, creating a phenomenon where, for a number of years, over 500 women a night would fill a room for 2-3 nights in a row for the Ma’yan Seder.
While a traditional haggadah makes no mention of the women who were so important to the unfolding of our people’s story of the journey from slavery to freedom, a Women’s Seder haggadah tells of the midwives, Shifra and Puah, Yocheved and Miriam. While a traditional haggadah only retells the discussions and interpretations offered by male rabbis and scholars through the centuries, a Women’s Seder haggadah weaves together the words of women, and returns our voice to our people’s history and heritage. Women have always passed on their wisdom and Jewish practices from generation to generation, and the Women’s Seder at Congregation B’nai Israel always includes structured sharing of stories, questions and answers, where our bat mitzvah students share their stories with older generations and vice versa; its a multi-generational gathering.
This year’s Seder is different from all of our previous Women’s Seders at Congregation B’nai Israel; this year we welcome our Christian and Muslim sisters in faith to join us for a Seder ritual that celebrates the themes of Freedom and Peace, weaving together the inspirational sources from our three faith traditions. This Seder is inspired by the pioneering work of Rabbi Arthur Waskow and The Shalom Center who formulated the first Seder for the Children of Abraham, Sarah and Hagar in 1999. Our Rosh Hodesh group has spent the year in a series of interfaith interactions with women from local churches and Muslim communities, and we look forward to welcoming them all to our Passover Seder. The goal is not to provide a ‘model Seder’ for the benefit of our sisters-in-faith, but to use the Passover Seder model and message to weave together lessons, songs and inspiration from all three faiths to inspire us to think and engage more deeply with the Passover message.
The Seder takes place at Congregation B’nai Israel, Bridgeport, Thursday, March 31st, 7:30 p.m. It is free and open to all women from the local community. RSVP to reserve a seat with lynn@congregationbnaiisrael.org
I hope to see you there!
Rabbi Rachel Gurevitz
On October 15,2010, the Women’s Torah Project, the joint work of 6 sofrot – 6 female Torah scribes – from all over the world, was brought together and completed for the Kadima Reconstructionist congregation in Seattle, Washington. Below, a short video tells the story of this wonderful project.
Women’s Torah from Sasha Perry on Vimeo.
The full story of the Women’s Torah project can be found at http://www.womenstorah.com/. On their website is the following poem to mark the culmination of this wonderful achievement:
The Torah Completed by Women
Embellished it all,
Together, we wove, many pieces;
The parchment — each line,
Accurately, singing its praises;
His-tory was changed,
By her work, which was honored and cherished;
Carried forward by one,
Whose insight was never daunting;
Not fathomed before,
Was ordered by deep emotion;
Like on Mt. Sinai,
Proclaimed — by the spirit, there, present;
We knew its dear meaning,
Much more, than just fulfilling;
The pinnacle reached:
The contract with G-d — Unbroken!
In words very Bold —
The Torah — Completed — by Women!
by I. Penn, Oct. 2010
Sisters of the Torah Siyyum Oct 13 – 17, 2010
Seattle, Washington, USA
Kol hakavod! What a wonderful achievement!
Rabbi Rachel Gurevitz (with thanks to Judith Lessler at B’nai Israel for sharing this)