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{{Short description|Jewish coming of age rituals}} | |||
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In ], a '''Bar Mitzvah''' is a boy, and a '''Bat Mitzvah''' a girl, who has gone through what is in some respects a Jewish ] ceremony. The terms also commonly refer to the ceremony itself, which normally takes place when the child has turned 13 (for a girl in the Orthodox movement, 12). | |||
{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Bar'' and ''bat mitzvah''}} | |||
{{Infobox event | |||
| title = {{nowrap|''Bar | |||
and ''bat mitzvah''}} | |||
| image = Jewish boy reads Bar Mitzvah.JPG | |||
| image_size = | |||
| image_upright = | |||
| image_alt = | |||
| caption = ''Bar mitzvah'' boy wearing ] and ] | |||
| native_name = ''Bar mīṣvā'': {{Script/Hebrew|בַּר מִצְוָה}} <br/> ''Bat mīṣvā'': {{Script/Hebrew|בַּת מִצְוָה}} | |||
| native_name_lang = Hebrew | |||
| english_name = | |||
| time = | |||
*] boys: 13 years old, girls: 12 years old | |||
*] and ] boys and girls: 12 or 13 years old | |||
| duration = | |||
| venue = | |||
| also_known_as = | |||
| type = Coming-of-age ceremony | |||
| theme = Reaching the age of ''bar'' or ''bat mitzvah'' signifies becoming a full-fledged member of the Jewish community | |||
| cause = | |||
| notes = | |||
}} | |||
{{Jews and Judaism sidebar|Religion}} | |||
A '''''bar mitzvah''''' ({{abbr|masc.|masculine}}), or '''''bat mitzvah''''' ({{abbr|fem.|feminine}}){{efn|''Bar'' and ''bat'' meaning 'son of' and 'daughter of' respectively; ''mitzvah'' meaning 'commandment' or 'law'. The plural of ''bar mitzvah'' ({{langx|he|בַּר מִצְוָה}}), used for both all-male and mixed-gender groups, is '''''b'nai mitzvah''''', also transliterated '''''b'nei mitzvah''''' ({{lang|he|בְּנֵי מִצְוָה}}). The plural of ''bat mitzvah'' ({{lang|he|בַּת מִצְוָה}}; ]: ''bas mitzveh'') is '''''b'not mitzvah''''' ({{lang|he|בְּנוֹת מִצְוָה}}; Ashkenazi pronunciation: ''b'nos mitzvah''). In English, ''b'nai mitzvah'' is also sometimes used in the singular as a gender-neutral term, including for ] youth;<ref name="perleberg-dy">{{cite journal |last1=Perleberg |first1=Ellen |last2=Dy |first2=Grace Elizabeth C. |title=Growing Up on the Wrong Side of the ''Mechitza'': A Case Study of Contemporary Queer Jewish Language |journal=Journal of Jewish Languages |date=25 May 2022 |volume=10 |issue=1 |pages=120–139 |doi=10.1163/22134638-bja10019}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Dolsten |first1=Josefin |title=This teen had a gender neutral b'nei mitzvah |url=https://www.jta.org/2018/03/01/lifestyle/teen-gender-neutral-bnei-mitzvah |access-date=5 May 2023 |work=] |date=1 March 2018}}</ref> other gender-neutral terms include ''simchat'' ('celebration of') ''mitzvah'', ''kabbalat'' ('reception of') ''mitzvah'', ''b'mitzvah'' (also ''bamitzvah'' or ''b-mitzvah'',<ref>{{Cite news |last=Krueger |first=Alyson |date=2019-03-27 |title=Bar or Bat Mitzvah? Hey, What About a Both Mitzvah? |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/27/style/gender-fluid-bar-bat-mitzvah.html |access-date=2024-05-18 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> all meaning 'in' or 'subject to' mitzvah), and ''brit'' ('covenant of') ''mitzvah''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Celebrating the Age of Mitzvah: A Guide for all Genders |url=https://www.keshetonline.org/celebrating-the-age-of-mitzvah-a-guide-for-all-genders/ |publisher=] |access-date=5 May 2023}}</ref><ref name="perleberg-dy"/>}} is a ] ritual in ]. According to ], before children reach a certain age, the parents are responsible for their child's actions. Once Jewish children reach that age, they are said to "become" ''b'nai mitzvah'', at which point they begin to be held accountable for their own actions. Traditionally, the father of a ''bar'' or ''bat mitzvah'' offers thanks to God that he is no longer punished for his child's sins. | |||
* ''Bar Mitzvah'' (] ''B'nai Mitzvah'') comes from the ]: בר מצוה, "one (]) to whom the commandments apply". (If it were ] it would be בן (ben) not בר (bar). בר is "son" in Aramaic, and בן (ben) is son in Hebrew.). | |||
* ''Bat Mitzvah'' ((] ''B'not Mitzvah'') is בת מצוה, "one (]) to whom the commandments apply" (]: ''Bas Mitzvah''). | |||
In Orthodox communities, boys become ''bar mitzvah'' at 13 and girls become ''bat mitzvah'' at 12. In most Reform, Reconstructionist, and Conservative communities, the milestone is 13 regardless of gender.<ref>{{cite web |title= Origins of the Bar/Bat Mitzvah |website= ReformJudaism.org |date= 19 October 2012 |url= http://www.reformjudaism.org/origins-barbat-mitzvah|quote=Today in almost all non-Orthodox congregations, all children mark symbolic entry into Jewish adulthood through b'nai mitzvah (bar or bat mitzvah) at age 13.}}</ref> After this point, children are also held responsible for knowing Jewish ritual law, tradition, and ethics, and are able to participate in all areas of Jewish community life to the same extent as adults. In some Jewish communities, men's and women's roles differ in certain respects. For example, in Orthodox Judaism, once a boy turns 13, it is permitted to count him for the purpose of determining whether there is a ], and he may lead prayer and other religious services in the family and the community.<ref name=GenesisRabbah63>] 63:10 (commenting upon ] 25:27) ] (in Hebrew)</ref> | |||
There is a common misconception that the Bar Mitzvah ceremony causes a change in status from youth to adulthood. The rights and responsibilities vest solely because of age; the Bar Mitzvah ceremony is typically an ordinary Sabbath service, in which the boy or girl participates for the first time as an adult. | |||
''Bar mitzvah'' is mentioned in the ]<ref>], ]</ref> and the ]. Some classic sources identify the age at which children must begin to participate in the ritual of fasting on '']'' as 13 for boys and 12 for girls. The age of ''b'nai mitzvah'' roughly coincides with the onset of ].<ref>] 45b</ref> The ''bar''/''bat mitzvah'' ceremony is usually held on the first ] after the birthday on which the child reaches the eligible age. | |||
According to ], when ]ish children reach the ] (generally thirteen years for ]s and twelve for ]s) they become responsible for their actions, and "become a Bar or Bat Mitzvah". In many Conservative and Reform synagogues, girls celebrate their Bat Mitzvahs at age 13{{Citation needed|reason=Please give a reliable source for this statement|date=September 2009}}, along with boys. This also coincides with physical ].<ref>Niddah, 45b.</ref> Prior to this, the child's parents hold the responsibility for the child's adherence to Jewish law and tradition and, after this age, children bear their own responsibility for Jewish ritual ], ], and ] and are privileged to participate in all areas of Jewish community life.<ref>Traditionally, the father of the ] boy gives thanks to ] that he is no longer punished for the child's sins. (Genesis Rabba, Toldot 23:11)</ref> | |||
==Etymology== | |||
In modern Jewish observance, the occasion of becoming a Bar Mitzvah or (in non-Orthodox congregations) a Bat Mitzvah usually involves the young man or woman ] and/or ] portion at a ] or other service and may also involve giving a ], a discussion of that week's Torah portion. Precisely what the Bar/Bat Mitzvah may do during the service varies in Judaism's different denominations and can also depend on the specific practices of various congregations. Regardless of the nature of the celebration, males become entirely culpable and responsible for following Jewish law once they reach the age of 13, and females once they reach the age of 12. | |||
'']'' ({{Script/Hebrew|בַּר}}) is a ] word meaning 'son' ({{Script/Hebrew|בֵּן}}, '']'' in Hebrew), while ''bat'' ({{Script/Hebrew|בַּת}}), in Hebrew, means 'daughter'. '']'' ({{Script/Hebrew|מִצְוָה}}) is Hebrew for 'commandment' or 'law'. Thus, ''bar mitzvah'' and ''bat mitzvah'' literally translate to 'son of commandment' and 'daughter of commandment', respectively. However, in rabbinical usage, the word ''bar'' means 'under the category of' or 'subject to'. ''Bar mitzvah'' therefore translates to ' who is subject to the law'. Although the term is commonly used to refer to the ritual itself, the phrase originally refers to the person.{{cn|date=June 2024}} | |||
== History == | |||
==Responsibilities== | |||
The modern method of celebrating becoming a ''bar mitzvah'' did not exist in the time of the ], ], or ]. Early rabbinic sources specify 13 as the age at which a boy becomes a legal adult; however, the celebration of this occasion is not mentioned until the Middle Ages (from approximately 500 ] to 1500 CE; see ]).<ref name="Olitsky" /><ref>{{cite encyclopedia |url=http://jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=239&letter=B&search=Bar%20Mitzvah |title=History of the Bar Mizvah |encyclopedia=Jewish Encyclopedia |access-date=2013-04-13}}</ref> | |||
Whoever becomes Bar or Bat Mitzvah has the responsibilities of an adult Jew under ]. These include: | |||
Some late ]ic sources, and some medieval sources refer to a synagogue ceremony performed upon the boy's reaching age thirteen: | |||
* ] responsibility for own actions | |||
* ] quotes a ] interpreting the Hebrew word ''zo'' ("this") in ] 43:21 ("These people have I formed for myself, they shall speak my praise") as referring by its ] to those that have reached the age of 13.<ref>''Magen Avot'' on the Baraita on Avot 5:21</ref> This seems to imply that, at the time of the composition of the Midrash the bar mitzvah publicly pronounced a blessing on the occasion of his entrance upon maturity. | |||
* Eligibility to be called to read from the ] and participate in a ] (In Orthodox denominations, only males read from the Torah or participate in a Minyan) | |||
* The ]:<ref>; also ]'s "''Sefer ha'Likkutim''", i. 3a</ref> "The heathen when he begets a son consecrates him to idolatrous practices; the ] has his son circumcised and the rite of ']' performed; and as soon as he becomes of age he brings him into the ] and ] in order that he may praise the name of God, reciting the ]." | |||
* May possess personal property | |||
* ] (18:5) makes matters even more explicit: "In ] they are accustomed to initiate their children to fast on the ], a year or two before their maturity; and then, when the age has arrived, to bring the Bar Mitzvah before the ] or elder for blessing, encouragement, and prayer, that he may be granted a portion in the ] and in the doing of good works. Whosoever is of superiority in the town is expected to pray for him as he bows down to him to receive his blessing." | |||
* May be ] | |||
* ]:<ref name=GenesisRabbah63/> "Up to 13 years ] and ] went together to the primary school and back home; after the thirteen years were over, the one went to the ] to study ], the other to the house of idols. Regarding this, Rabbi Eleazar remarks, 'Until the 13th year it is the father's duty to train his boy; after this, he must say: "Blessed be He who has taken from me the responsibility for this boy!{{not a typo|{{"'"}}}} | |||
* Must follow the ] of the Torah | |||
Later on are references to a festive celebration on this occasion: | |||
* "It is a ] for a person to make a meal on the day his son becomes Bar Mitzvah as on the day he enters the ]."<ref>] 225:2, ] 4</ref> | |||
== |
===Age thirteen=== | ||
]]] | |||
===Jewish boys=== | |||
] in ].]] | |||
The Bible does not explicitly specify the age of 13. Passages in the books of ] and ] note the age of majority for army service as twenty.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Bazelon |first=Emily |magazine=Slate |date=May 19, 2005 |url=http://slate.com/id/2119069/ |title=Saving the Bar Mitzvah|access-date=2007-10-05| archive-url= https://archive.today/20071013162745/http://slate.com/id/2119069/ | archive-date= October 13, 2007 | url-status= live}}</ref> ] notes that {{bibleverse|Genesis|34:25}} refers to ] as a "man", when a calculation from other verses suggests that Levi was aged 13 at the time.<ref>, also found at {{cite book|title= Machzor Vitry|script-title=he:מחזור ויטרי|url= http://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=10172&st=&pgnum=153|language=he|page=549|access-date=March 7, 2018}}</ref> | |||
====Aliyah==== | |||
The age of thirteen is mentioned in the ] as the time one is obligated to observe the Torah's ]: "At five years old one should study the ], at ten years for the Mishnah, at 13 for the commandments..."<ref>] </ref><ref name="Olitsky">Olitsky, Kerry M. ''An Encyclopedia of American Synagogue Ritual'', Greenwood Press, 2000. {{ISBN|0-313-30814-4}} </ref> | |||
Calling someone to say the Torah blessings during a service is called an ] (from the Hebrew: עֲלִיָּה, from the verb ''la'alot'', לעלות, meaning, "to rise, to ascend; to go up"). The widespread practice is that on Shabbat on or after his 13th birthday, a boy may recite the blessings for the Torah reading, and may also read the week's portion from the Torah (five books of Moses) and Haftara (selections from the books of the Prophets), and/or give a ], which may include a discussion of that week's Torah portion. He may also lead part or all of the morning prayer services. Precisely what the Bar Mitzvah should lead during the service varies from one congregation to another, and is not fixed by Jewish law. Sometimes the celebration is during another service that includes reading from the Torah, such as a Monday or Thursday morning service, a Shabbat afternoon service, or a morning service on ], the New Moon. | |||
Elsewhere,<ref name="niddah56">Niddah 5:6</ref> the Mishnah lists the ages (13 for boys and 12 for girls) at which a vow is considered automatically valid; the ] explains this as a result of the 13-year-old being a "man", as required in {{Bibleverse||Numbers|6:2|HE|wlink=yes}}.<ref></ref> (For one year before this age, the vows are conditionally valid, depending on whether the boy or girl has signs of physical maturity.<ref name="niddah56"/>) | |||
====Celebratory meal==== | |||
Other sources also list thirteen as the age of majority with respect to following the commandments of the Torah, including: | |||
The service often precedes a celebratory meal with family, friends, and members of the community. In some modern communities, most notably among affluent North American Jews, this celebratory meal can eclipse the religious ceremony itself, often rivaling a ] celebration in extravagance. | |||
* "Why is the ] personified as the great king (] 9:14)? Because it is thirteen years older than the good inclination." That is to say, one's good inclination begins to act upon reaching the age of majority.<ref>] A. 16, B. 30; Midrash ] 9:2; ] Rabbah 9:15</ref> | |||
* According to ] 26, ] rejected the total ] of his father and became a worshiper of God when he was thirteen years old.<ref name="Jewish Encyclopedia"/> | |||
===The term "bar mitzvah"=== | |||
Some communities may delay the celebration for reasons such as availability of a Shabbat, during which no other celebration has been scheduled, or due to the desire to permit family to travel to the event; however, this does not delay the onset of rights and responsibilities of being a Jewish adult, which comes about strictly by virtue of age. Not having a Bar or Bat Mitzvah celebration does not make the child becoming an adult any less of a Jew. Jews become entirely culpable and responsible for following Jewish law once they reach the age of 13. | |||
The term "bar mitzvah" appears first in the ], meaning "one who is subject to the law", though it does not refer to age.<ref></ref> The term "bar mitzvah", in reference to age, cannot be clearly traced earlier than the 14th century, the older ] term being "gadol" (adult) or "bar 'onshin" (one legally responsible for own misdoings).<ref name="Jewish Encyclopedia"/> | |||
== Significance == | |||
After the celebratory bar mitzvah meal, it is traditional for the celebrant to lead the ], something he could not do as a minor. | |||
Reaching the age of bar or bat mitzvah signifies becoming a full-fledged member of the Jewish community with the responsibilities that come with it. These include ] responsibility for one's own actions; eligibility to be called to read from the ] and lead or participate in a ]; the right to possess personal property and to ]; the duty to follow the ] of the Torah and keep the ]; and the capacity to testify as a witness in a ] (rabbinical court) case. | |||
Many congregations require pre-bar mitzvah children to attend a minimum number of Shabbat prayer services at the synagogue, study at a ], take on a charity or community service project and maintain membership in good standing with the synagogue. In addition to study and preparation offered through the ] and Hebrew schools, bar mitzvah tutors may be hired to prepare the child through the study of Hebrew, Torah cantillation and basic Jewish concepts.{{citation needed|date=May 2022}} | |||
====Tefilin==== | |||
In current practice, boys who belong to branches of Judaism that regularly wear tefilin do not start wearing ] until they are close to bar mitzvah. The most widespread custom in those branches involves starting to wear tefilin about 30 days before the thirteenth birthday, although others commence about three months in advance, and there is also a custom (prevalent among ]) for tefilin to be worn for the first time on the thirteenth birthday. For this reason there is a strong perceived correlation between the bar mitzvah ceremony and the commandment of tefilin. | |||
According to Rabbi Mark Washofsky, "The Reform Movement in North America has struggled over the bar/bat mitzvah. At one time, this ceremony was on the verge of extinction in Reform congregations. Most of them preferred to replace bar/bat mitzvah with confirmation, which they considered a more enlightened and appropriate ceremony for modern Jews. Yet the enduring popularity of bar/bat mitzvah prevailed and today, in our communities, bar/bat mitzvah is 'virtually universally observed' by Reform Jews."<ref>{{cite book|last=Washofsky|first=Mark|title=Jewish Living: A Guide to Contemporary Reform Practice|year=2001|publisher=UAHC Press|isbn=978-0-8074-0702-8}}</ref> | |||
===Jewish girls=== | |||
In 2012, concern about the high post-bar/bat mitzvah drop-out rate led the ] to launch the B'nai Mitzvah Revolution, an effort to shift Reform congregations away from "the long-held assumption that religious school is about preparing kids for their bar/bat mitzvah" and focus instead on teaching them how to become committed and involved members of the Jewish community.<ref name=reform2012>, Winter 2012.</ref> | |||
Most non-Orthodox Jews celebrate a girl's Bat Mitzvah in the same way as a boy's Bar Mitzvah. All Reform and Reconstructionist, and most<ref>Conservative Judaism is ], and a small percent of Conservative synagogues reject the ] propriety of women reading the Torah portion in public.</ref> Conservative ]s have egalitarian participation, in which women read from the Torah and lead services. | |||
== Aliyah to the Torah == | |||
The majority of ] reject the idea that a woman can publicly read from the Torah or lead prayer services whenever there is a ] (] of 10 males) available to do so. This was done because a woman reading the Torah or leading the prayer services implied that the men were illiterate and could not do so. (Massechet Megilah) However, the public celebration of a girl becoming Bat Mitzvah in other ways has made strong inroads in Modern Orthodox Judaism, and also in some elements of ]. In these congregations, women do not read from the Torah or lead prayer services, but occasionally they will lecture on a Jewish topic to mark their coming of age, learn a book of ], recite verses from the ] or the ], or prayers from the ]. It is increasingly common in modern Orthodox circles for girls to read from the Torah in a ]. | |||
]]]] in ]]] | |||
The widespread practice is that shortly after a boy turns 13, they are called up for an ''],''<ref>Calling someone up to say the Torah blessings during a service is called an ], from the ]: עֲלִיָּה, from the verb ''la'alot'', לעלות, meaning, "to rise, to ascend; to go up"</ref> the ceremony of reading a portion of the Torah section of the day.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |title=How the Bar/Bat Mitzvah Child Participates in the Service |url=https://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/how-the-barbat-mitzvah-child-participates-in-the-service/ |access-date=2022-05-20 |website=My Jewish Learning |language=en-US}}</ref> | |||
On the Sabbath, there are seven main sections, plus an eighth, known as ''maftir,'' which is also connected to the reading of that day's '']'' section.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Talmud Bavli |volume=Megila |pages=21a}}</ref> It is most common to give the child the ''maftir'' reading.<ref name=":1"/> | |||
Rabbi ], a prominent Orthodox ''],'' has opposed anyone attending a Bat Mitzvah and has referred to the ceremony as ''hevel'', nonsense. The ] rabbi ], who served as ], has also opposed Bat Mitzvah. | |||
In most synagogues, a designated officiant, the ''],'' reads all of the Torah portions, and the people receiving each ''aliyah'' only say the blessings before and after their portion is read.<ref name="Jewish Encyclopedia">{{Jewish Encyclopedia |no-prescript=1 |article=Bar Miẓwah|url=http://jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/2473-bar-mizwah|year=1906|access-date=February 4, 2018|author=Marcus Jastrow|author-link=Marcus Jastrow|author2=Kaufmann Kohler|author-link2=Kaufmann Kohler}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Chapter 4: The Baal Korei – Shulchanaruchharav.com |url=https://shulchanaruchharav.com/halacha/chapter-4-the-baal-korei/ |access-date=2022-05-20 |language=en-US}}</ref> A bar mitzvah boy may learn to act as the ''ba'al korei'', either for the entire service, for just his ''aliyah,'' or any range in-between.<ref name=":1"/> He may also be ba'al korei for the ''haftorah'' portion if he receives the ''maftir,'' or may only be ba'al korei for the haftorah, without reading from the Torah at all.<ref name=":1"/> Any of these undertakings involves a steep learning curve and much practice, possibly taking a year of study, and is an impressive accomplishment.<ref>{{Cite news |date=1839-06-11 |title=Great Doings in the Jewish Synagogue |pages=2 |work=New York Daily Herald |url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/101789029/great-doings-in-the-jewish-synagogue/ |access-date=2022-05-13}}</ref> | |||
===Secular Humanist Jewish Practices=== | |||
Instead of reading from the Torah, some ] prefer to research, write, and present a research paper on a topic in Jewish history to mark their coming of age. | |||
Secular Jewish Sunday schools and communities — including those affiliated with the Congress of Secular Jewish Organizations and the Arbeter Ring (Workmen's Circle) — encourage their bas/bar mitsve candidates to select any topic that interests them and that relates to the Jewish part of their identities. After extensive, guided research and/or profound thought, the young people present their findings in any format they may select: reading an essay or creating an AV presentation, dramatic piece, work of biography or fiction, even a modern dance. | |||
===Second Bar Mitzvah=== | |||
Among some Jews, a man who has reached the age of 83 will customarily celebrate a second bar mitzvah, under the logic that a "normal" lifespan is 70 years, so that an 83-year-old can be considered 13 in a second lifetime. This practice has become increasingly common.<ref></ref><ref>Actor had a second Bar Mitzvah at age 83.</ref> | |||
Girls may have an aliyah in Reform, Reconstructionist, and Conservative Jewish synagogues. In Orthodox synagogues, aliyot were and typically still are restricted to boys, with a girl potentially giving a ] at the end of the service. Some Modern Orthodox girls give aliyot at women's services, with fewer than ten men (so as not to constitute a ]). | |||
===Bar/Bat Mitzvah gifts=== | |||
Like weddings, Bar or Bat Mitzvah celebrations commonly become an occasion to give the celebrant a commemorative gift. Traditionally, common gifts included books with religious or educational value, religious items, writing implements, savings bonds (to be used for the child's college education), gift certificates, or money . Gifts of cash have become commonplace in recent times. As with charity and all other gifts, it has become common to give in multiples of 18, since the '']'', or numerical equivalent of the ] word for "life", ("]"), is the number 18. Monetary gifts in multiples of 18 are considered to be particularly auspicious and have become very common for Bar/Bat Mitzvahs. Many Bar/Bat Mitzvah also receive their first ] from their parents to be used for the occasion. | |||
In Orthodox circles, the occasion is sometimes celebrated during a weekday service that includes reading from the Torah, such as a Monday or Thursday morning service. | |||
==History== | |||
===Bar Mitzvah=== | |||
The modern method of celebrating one's becoming a Bar Mitzvah did not exist in the time of the ], ] or ]. Passages in the books of ] and ] note the age of majority for army service as twenty.<ref>Bazelon, Emily. ''Slate'', May 19, 2005. {{cite web|url=http://slate.com/id/2119069/|title="Saving the Bar Mitzvah"|accessdate=2007-10-05}}</ref> The term "Bar Mitzvah" appears first in the ], the codification of the Jewish ] compiled in the early 1st millennium of the ], to connote "an who is subject to scriptural commands,"<ref>Tractate ] 96a.</ref> and the age of thirteen is also mentioned in the Mishnah as the time one is obligated to observe the Torah's ]: "At five years old a person should study the ], at ten years for the ], at thirteen for the commandments..."<ref>] 5:25, see </ref><ref name="Olitsky">Olitsky, Kerry M. ''An Encyclopedia of American Synagogue Ritual'', Greenwood Press, 2000. 160 pages. ISBN 0313308144 p. 7. | |||
</ref> The Talmud gives thirteen as the age at which a boy's vows are legally binding, and states that this is a result of his being a "man," as required in {{bibleverse-lb||Numbers|6:2|HE}}.<ref>Niddah 46A</ref> The term "Bar Mitzvah", in the sense it is now used, can not be clearly traced earlier than the fourteenth century, the older ] term being "gadol" (adult) or "bar 'onshin" (son of punishment); that is, liable to punishment for his own misdoings.<ref></ref> Many sources indicate that the ceremonial observation of a Bar Mitzvah developed in the Middle Ages,<ref name="Olitsky" /><ref></ref> however, there are extensive earlier references to thirteen as the age of majority with respect to following the commandments of the Torah, as well as Talmudic references to observing this rite of passage with a religious ceremony, including: | |||
Some communities or families may delay the celebration for reasons such as availability of a Shabbat during which no other celebration has been scheduled, or to allow family members to travel to the event. However, this does not delay the onset of rights and responsibilities of being a Jewish adult which comes about strictly by virtue of age. | |||
* ], at the close of the first century, gives in his saying on the ] in the ] attached to Abot v. 21 (see ]) the completion of the thirteenth year as the age for the commandments ("l']"); and the commentary to the passage refers to ], the son of ], who, at thirteen, is called "ish" (man; ] xxxiv. 25). | |||
* ], in his "]" to the Baraita, quotes a ] interpreting the Hebrew word ("this") in ] xliii. 21—"This people have I formed for myself, they shall pronounce ] "set forth"] my praise"—as referring by its ] to those that have reached the age of thirteen. This seems to imply that at the time of the composition of the Midrash the Bar Mitzvah publicly pronounced a benediction on the occasion of his entrance upon maturity. | |||
* the ] (see ]'s "]," i. 3a): "The heathen when he begets a son consecrates him to idolatrous practises; the ] has his son circumcised and the rite of ']' performed; and as soon as he becomes of age he brings him into the ] and school (']' and ']'),in order that he may praise the name of God, reciting the ']' (]) preceding the reading from the ]." | |||
* ] xviii. 5 makes matters even more explicit: "In ] they are accustomed to initiate their children to fast on the ], a year or two before their maturity; and then, when the age has arrived, to bring the Bar Mitzvah before the ] or elder for blessing, encouragement, and prayer, that he may be granted a portion in the ] and in the doing of good works. Whosoever is of superiority in the town is expected to pray for him as he bows down to him to receive his blessing." | |||
* the ] (] R. lxiii.), which, in commenting upon the passage (] xxv. 27), "and the boys grew," says: "Up to thirteen years ] and ] went together to the primary school and back home; after the thirteen years were over, the one went to the beit ha'midrash for the study of the ], the other to the house of idols. With reference to this, Rabbi Eleazar remarks, 'Until the thirteenth year it is the father's duty to train his boy; after this he must say: "Blessed be He who has taken from me the responsibility for this boy!"" "Why is the evil desire ('']'') personified as the great king? (]. ix. 14). Because it is thirteen years older than the good desire (']')." That is to say, the latter comes only with the initiation into duty (], A. xvi., B. xxx.; ] ix. 2; ]. R. ix. 15). | |||
*According to ] xxvi., ] rejected the idolatry of his father and became a worshiper of God when he was thirteen years old.<ref>Jewish Encyclopedia</ref> | |||
* "It is a ] for a person to make a meal on the day his son becomes Bar Mitzvah as on the day he enters the ]." (] 225:2, ] 4) | |||
== |
== Tefillin == | ||
] synagogue]] | |||
The obligation to lay ] begins when a boy reaches bar mitzvah age. The common custom is for the bar mitzvah boy to begin putting on tefillin one to three months before his bar mitzvah. This way, by the time he is obligated in the commandment, he will already know how to fulfill it properly.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/81815/jewish/Some-Laws-of-Tefillin.htm |title=Some Laws of Tefillin – The Basic Laws and the order of Putting on the Tefillin|publisher=Chabad.org |access-date=2012-08-13}}</ref> | |||
Except among ], no ceremony parallel to a boy's Bar Mitzvah ceremony developed for girls before the modern age: "There were occasional attempts to recognize a girl's coming of age in eastern Europe in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the former in Warsaw (1843) and the latter in Lemberg (1902). The occasion was marked by a party without any ritual in the synagogue."<ref>Marcus, Ivan G. ''The Jewish Life Cycle: Rites of Passage from Biblical Times to the Modern Age"'' (Seattle and London: University of Washington Press). 2004 ISBN 0-285098440-6, p. 105.</ref> | |||
] in ]]] | |||
== Parties == | |||
Documents record an Orthodox Jewish Italian rite for becoming Bat Mitzvah (which involved an "entrance into the minyan" ceremony, in which boys of thirteen and girls of twelve recited a blessing) since the mid-nineteenth century<ref>Marcus, p. 106.</ref> and this may have influenced the American Rabbi ], who held the first public celebration of a Bat Mitzvah in America, for his daughter Judith, on March 18, 1922 at the ] in New York City.<ref>Waskow, Arthur Ocean and Phyllis Ocean Berman. Excerpt from ''A Time for Every Purpose Under Heaven'' Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC at {{cite web|url=http://www.myjewishlearning.com/lifecycle/Bar_Bat_Mitzvah/History/HistoryBatMitzvah.htm|title="History of Bat Mizvah"|accessdate=2007-10-10}} | |||
As the first mention of a party associated with a synagogue bar mitzvah was in the 13th century, hosting some sort of party is traditional and frequently considered necessary.<ref name=":0">{{cite news|url=https://www.topic.com/the-bar-mitzvah-party-starters|title=The Bar Mitzvah Party Starters|last=Doll|first=Jen|date=9 December 2017|work=Topic|access-date=2017-12-23|language=en}}</ref> | |||
</ref> | |||
] dance]] | |||
Bar mitzvah festivities typically include a joyous ], a celebratory meal with family, friends, and members of the community, the bar mitzvah boy delivering on this occasion a learned discourse or oration at the table before the invited guests, who offer him presents, while the rabbi or teacher gives him his blessing, accompanying it at times with an address.<ref name="Jewish Encyclopedia"/> | |||
Kaplan, an Orthodox rabbi who joined ] and then became the founder of ], influenced Jews from all branches of non-Orthodox Judaism, through his position at the ] of America. At the time, most Orthodox rabbis strongly rejected the idea of a bat mitzvah ceremony.{{Citation needed|date=October 2007}} | |||
Some Jews celebrate in other ways such as taking the bat or bar mitzvah on a special trip or organizing some special event in the celebrant's honour. In many communities, the celebrant is given a certificate. | |||
In some times and places, local Jewish leaders have officially limited the size and elaborateness of mitzvahs.<ref name=":0" /> For example, only ten men were permitted to attend the party in 1730 in ], and music was banned at these parties in 1767 in ].<ref name=":0" /> These rules were usually meant to avoid offending non-Jewish neighbours, and to maintain the rule that it be a smaller celebration than a wedding.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
As the ceremony became accepted for females as well as males, many women chose to celebrate the ceremony even though they were much older, as a way of formalizing and celebrating their place in the adult Jewish community.<ref> http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/22/us/22batmitzvah.html | |||
Bar and bat mitzvah parties among wealthy Jewish families in North America are often lavish affairs held at hotels and country clubs with hundreds of guests.<ref>{{cite news |last=Cohen|first=Stefanie |title=$1 Million Parties – Have NYC Bar Mitzvahs Gone Too Far?|url=http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/million_parties_hBAxzzq32OAbhxtVHDYuqL|work=] |access-date=2010-04-18 |date=April 18, 2010| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20100420085204/http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/million_parties_hBAxzzq32OAbhxtVHDYuqL| archive-date= April 20, 2010 | url-status= live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Al |url=http://www.jewishhumorcentral.com/2011/01/saturday-night-live-mocks-over-top-bar.html |title=Saturday Night Live Mocks Over-The-Top Bar Mitzvah |publisher=Jewish Humor Central |date=2011-01-18 |access-date=2012-08-13}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |author=Allison Hoffman |title=Big bucks and pink thrones |url=http://www.chicagojewishnews.com/story.htm?sid=3&id=254985 |newspaper=The Chicago Jewish News |date=December 9, 2007 |access-date=2012-08-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121120151630/http://www.chicagojewishnews.com/story.htm?sid=3&id=254985 |archive-date=November 20, 2012}}</ref> The trend has been mocked, most notably in the movie '']''. These lavish parties were also heavily featured in the film '']''. In the 1950s, Rabbi Harold Saperstein of New York described them as too often being "more bar than mitzvah".<ref name=":0" /> Rabbi ] says that over-the-top bar mitzvah parties were already common when he was growing up in ] in the 1970s.<ref>{{cite news |author=Rabbi ] | url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rabbi-shmuley-boteach/extravagant-weddings-and-_b_691579.html | work=] | title=Extravagant Weddings and Bar Mitzvahs Humiliate the Jewish Community | date=August 23, 2010}}</ref> | |||
In 1979, the Responsa Committee of the Central Conference of American Rabbis addressed the Reform attitude toward bat/bar mitzvah: "Every effort should be exerted to maintain the family festivities in the religious mood at the bar/bat mitzvah. Some of the efforts of early Reform in favor of confirmation against bar mitzvah were prompted by the extravagant celebration of bar mitzvah, which had removed its primary religious significance. We vigorously oppose such excesses, as they destroy the meaning of bar/bat mitzvah."<ref name=reform2012 /> | |||
In May, 1992, the board of trustees of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (now the Union for Reform Judaism), the synagogue arm of the Reform Movement, unanimously passed a resolution decrying "excesses of wasteful consumption...glitzy theme events, sophisticated entertainment...and expensive party favors", calling instead for "family cohesion, authentic friendship, acts of '']'' (righteous giving), and parties suitable for children."<ref name=reform2012 /> | |||
The cost of the party depends upon what the family is willing and able to spend. Some families spend tens, or even hundreds, of thousands of dollars on the party.<ref name=":0" /> Generally speaking, these celebrations are less costly and elaborate than a wedding in that family.<ref name=":0" /> In addition to food and drink for the guests, the money at an elaborate party is mostly spent on renting and decorating a venue and hiring staff, from the catering team to ], ], entertainers, and dancers (also called "motivators") to encourage the guests to dance or play games.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
== Bat mitzvah customs == | |||
] | |||
] bat mitzvah in Israel]] | |||
] (Sephardi custom)]] | |||
Today many non-Orthodox Jews celebrate a girl's bat mitzvah in the same way as a boy's bar mitzvah. All ] and ], and most ] ]s have egalitarian participation, in which women read from the Torah and lead services. In Orthodox communities, a bat mitzvah is celebrated when a girl reaches the age of 12. | |||
The majority of ] and some Conservative Jews reject the idea that a woman can publicly read from the Torah or lead prayer services whenever there is a ] (] of 10 males) available to do so. However, the public celebration of a girl becoming bat mitzvah in other ways has made strong inroads into ] and also into some elements of ]. In these congregations, women do not read from the Torah or lead prayer services, but they occasionally lecture on a Jewish topic to mark their coming of age, learn a book of ], recite verses from the ] or the ], or say prayers from the ]. In some Modern Orthodox circles, bat mitzvah girls will read from the Torah and lead prayer services in a ]. Rabbi ], a prominent Orthodox ''],'' described the bat mitzvah celebration as "meaningless", and of no greater halakhic significance than a birthday party. However, he reluctantly permitted it in homes, but not synagogues,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Eleff |first1=Zev |title=Authentically Orthodox: A Tradition-Bound Faith in American Life |date=2020 |publisher=Wayne State University Press |isbn=978-0-8143-4482-8 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q1-lDwAAQBAJ&q=%22Feinstein+forbade+bat+mitzvah+in+the+synagogue+and+only+with+considerable+reluctance+tolerated+it+in+homes.%22&pg=PT73 |language=en |chapter=Chapter 2: How Bat Mitzvah Became Orthodox}}</ref><ref name=EleffSymp2016 /> as the latter would be construed as imitating Reform and Conservative customs; in any case, they do not have the status of ].<ref>Iggros Moshe OC 1:104 and OC 2:97</ref> Rabbi ] holds that it is a seudat mitzvah.<ref>Yabia Omer 2:29</ref> | |||
There were occasional attempts to recognize a girl's coming of age in eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries, the former in Warsaw (1843) and the latter in Lemberg (1902). The occasion was marked by a party without any ritual in the synagogue.<ref>Marcus, Ivan G. (2004). ''The Jewish Life Cycle: Rites of Passage from Biblical to Modern Times''. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press. {{ISBN|0-295-98440-6}}, p. 105.</ref> | |||
There are documents that record an Italian rite for becoming bat mitzvah, known as an "entrance into the minyan" ceremony, in which boys of thirteen and girls of twelve recited a blessing, since the mid-19th century.<ref>Marcus, p. 106.</ref> There were also some bat mitzvah rituals held in the 19th century in Iraq.<ref>{{cite news |last=Barkat |first=Amiram |url=http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/coming-of-age-a-little-later-than-usual-1.8909 |title=Coming of age a little later than usual |newspaper=Haaretz |date=2003-05-27 |access-date=2013-04-13}}</ref> However, it was the American rabbi ] held the first public celebration of a bat mitzvah as we understand it in modern times for his daughter on March 18, 1922, at the ], his synagogue in New York City.<ref name="Jewish Virtual Library: First American Bat Mitvah">{{cite encyclopedia|url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/firstbat.html |title=The First American Bat Mitvah |encyclopedia=Jewish Virtual Library |date=1922-03-18 |access-date=2013-04-13}}</ref><ref>Waskow, Arthur Ocean and Phyllis Ocean Berman. Excerpt from ''A Time for Every Purpose Under Heaven'' Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC at {{cite web |url=http://www.myjewishlearning.com/lifecycle/Bar_Bat_Mitzvah/History/HistoryBatMitzvah.htm |title=History of Bat Mizvah |access-date=2007-10-10 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20071013163838/http://myjewishlearning.com/lifecycle/Bar_Bat_Mitzvah/History/HistoryBatMitzvah.htm |archive-date= October 13, 2007| url-status= live}}</ref> Kaplan was unaware of the earlier Italian precedent and learned of them several months later, while on holiday in Italy.<ref>Marcus, pg 112.</ref> ] recited the preliminary blessing, read a portion of that week's Torah portion in Hebrew and English, and then intoned the closing blessing.<ref name="Jewish Virtual Library: First American Bat Mitvah" /><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/27/style/bat-mitzvahs.html|title=Becoming a Woman Before Their Eyes|last1=Peiser|first1=Jaclyn|date=2019-04-27|work=The New York Times|access-date=2019-04-27|last2=Lyons|first2=Eve|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331|last3=Chafetz|first3=Marisa}}</ref> Mordecai Kaplan, an Orthodox rabbi who joined ] and then became the founder of ], influenced Jews from all branches of non-Orthodox Judaism, through his position at the ]. At the time, most Orthodox rabbis strongly rejected the idea of a bat mitzvah ceremony.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Eleff |first1=Zev |title=Authentically Orthodox: A Tradition-Bound Faith in American Life |date=2020 |publisher=Wayne State University Press |isbn=978-0-8143-4482-8 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q1-lDwAAQBAJ&q=%22the+rabbinate+in+the+United+States+had+already+decided+on+the+halakhic+impropriety+of+the+Bat+Mitzvah+ritual%22&pg=PT74 |language=en |chapter=Chapter 2: How Bat Mitzvah Became Orthodox |quote="...the rabbinate in the United States had already decided on the halakhic impropriety of the Bat Mitzvah ritual..."}}</ref><ref name="Eleff2020">{{cite book |last1=Eleff |first1=Zev |last2=Schacter |first2=Jacob J. |title=Modern Orthodox Judaism: A Documentary History |date=2016 |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-0-8276-1289-1 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Sa05DAAAQBAJ&q=%22Orthodox+leaders+resisted+the+%22innovation%22+and+impulse+to+be+%22with+it.%22+In+fact,+as+late+as+the+1970s,+only+the+most+accommodating+Orthodox+rabbis+permitted+bat+mitzvah+ceremonies,+and+they+allowed+just+the+most+modest+sort+of+occasions.%22&pg=PT225 |language=en |chapter=Chapter 9: The Orthodox Synagogue and Rabbinate. Section 1: Rites of Passage |quote="...Orthodox leaders resisted the "innovation" and impulse to be "with it." In fact, as late as the 1970s, only the most accommodating Orthodox rabbis permitted bat mitzvah ceremonies, and they allowed just the most modest sort of occasions..."}}</ref><ref name = "EleffSymp2016">{{cite journal |last1=Eleff |first1=Zev |last2=Butler |first2=Menachem |title=How Bat Mitzvah Became Orthodox," Symposium on Masorah, May 2016 (TorahMusings.com) |website=Torahmusings.com |date=January 2016 |url=https://www.academia.edu/25805815 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
As the ceremony became accepted for females as well as males, many women chose to celebrate the ceremony even though they were much older, as a way of formalizing and celebrating their place in the adult Jewish community.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/22/us/22batmitzvah.html |work=The New York Times |title=Having a Bat Mitzvah in Their 90s Because It's a Hoot |first=Christopher |last=Maag |date=March 22, 2009 |access-date=March 31, 2010}} | |||
</ref> | </ref> | ||
== Alternative ceremonies == | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Instead of reading from the Torah, some ] prefer a research paper on a topic in Jewish history to mark their coming of age.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.shma.com/2000/06/mollys-unforgettable-bat-mitzvah/ |title=Molly's Unforgettable Bat Mitzvah |first=Linda |last=Arking |publisher=Sh'ma, A Journal of Jewish Ideas |date=June 1, 2000 |access-date=August 15, 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Bar/Bat Mitzvah Program |publisher=] |url=http://www.citycongregation.org/index.php?pageID=0031 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080420094118/http://www.citycongregation.org/index.php?pageID=0031 |archive-date=April 20, 2008 <!-- LAST archive here that isn't dead -->}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |date=July 15, 2009 |title=At This Bar Mitzvah, Dylan's The Only Prophet |author=Carolyn Slutsky |work=] |location=New York |url=http://www.thejewishweek.com/viewArticle/c36_a16283/News/New_York.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090720071643/http://www.thejewishweek.com/viewArticle/c36_a16283/News/New_York.html |archive-date=July 20, 2009}}</ref> Secular Jewish Sunday schools and communities—including those affiliated with the Congress of Secular Jewish Organizations and ]—encourage the youngsters to select any topic that interests them and relates to the Jewish part of their identities. | |||
The ] movement in Israel also encouraged the celebration of the bar mitzvah. All those coming of age in the community for that year would take on a project and research in a topic of Jewish or Zionist interest. Today many kibbutz children are opting for a more traditional bar mitzvah celebration.{{Citation needed|date=May 2012}} | |||
Among some Jews, a man who has reached the age of 83 will celebrate a second bar mitzvah, under the logic that in the Hebrew Bible it says that a normal lifespan is 70 years, so that an 83-year-old can be considered 13 in a second lifetime.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jewishanswers.org/ask-the-rabbi-category/lifecycle-events/bar-bat-mitzvah/?p=2891|title=LifeCycle Events: Bar and Bat Mitzvah }}</ref> This ritual is becoming more common as people live longer, healthier lives.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://forward.com/culture/jewishness/384977/why-83-is-the-new-13-for-bar-mitzvahs/|title=Why 83 Is The New 13 For Bar Mitzvahs|author=Amy Oringel|date=October 19, 2017|website=]|access-date=January 31, 2018}}</ref> | |||
A ] is a pseudo-traditional observance and celebration of a dog's ],<ref name="BarkMitzvahNYT">{{cite news |url= https://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/20/nyregion/20mitzvah.html |title= Today He Is a Dog; Actually He Always Was |author= Lily Koppel |work= ] |date= December 20, 2004}}</ref><ref name="CohenGindlinBook">Shari Cohen and Marcelo Gindlin. ''Alfie's Bark Mitzvah''. ]: Five Star Publications, 2007. Book with audio CD. {{ISBN|1-58985-055-6|978-1589850552}}.</ref> as in the Jewish traditional bar and bat mitzvahs. The term has been in use since at least 1958, when Beverly Hills couple Janet and Sonny Salter held a bark mitzvah for their 13 year old dog, Windy.<ref name="Salter Bark Mitzvah">{{cite book |last1=Salter |first1=Janet |last2=Salter |first2=Sonny |title=Beverly Hills Gothic |date=2009 |publisher=Salter Lipsky Press |location=Beverly Hills |page=290 |url=https://charlie07.domain.com/ebooks/BHG_I_online/mobile/index.html#p=303 |access-date=25 July 2021}}</ref><ref name="RabbiLetterNYT">{{cite news |url= https://www.nytimes.com/1997/01/19/nyregion/l-a-rabbi-s-view-of-a-bark-mitzvah-216160.html |title= A Rabbi's View Of a 'Bark Mitzvah' |author=Rabbi Charles A. Kroloff |work=] |date=January 19, 1997}}</ref> Bark mitzvahs are sometimes held as an adjunct to the festival of ].<ref name="SantaMonicaNationalGeog">{{cite news |url= http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/10/061006-pet-church.html |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20061018000532/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/10/061006-pet-church.html |url-status= dead |archive-date= October 18, 2006 |title= Pets Gaining Recognition in Places of Worship |author= Maryann Mott |work= ] |date= October 6, 2006}}</ref> | |||
== Gifts == | |||
Bar or bat mitzvah celebrations have become an occasion to give the celebrant a commemorative gift. Traditionally, common gifts include books with religious or educational value, religious items, writing implements, savings bonds (to be used for the child's college education), gift certificates, or money. Gifts of cash have become commonplace in recent times.{{when|date=September 2011}} As with charity and all other gifts, it has become common to give in multiples of 18, since the '']'', or numerical equivalent of the ] word for "life", ("]"), is the number 18. Monetary gifts in multiples of 18 are considered to be particularly auspicious and have become common for the bar and bat mitzvah. Many b'nai mitzvah also receive their first ] from their parents to be used for the occasion and ] where this is appropriate. Jewelry is a common gift for girls at a bat mitzvah celebration. Another gift for the bat mitzvah girl is Shabbat candlesticks because it is the duty and honor of the woman to light the candles.<ref>{{cite web |url= https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/1918218/jewish/Bat-Mitzvah-What-It-Is-and-How-to-Celebrate.htm |title=Bat Mitzvah: What It Is and How to Celebrate |access-date=May 16, 2020}}</ref> | |||
== In adults == | |||
{{Main|Adult bar and bat mitzvah}} | |||
While the traditional age to hold a bar or bat mitzvah is 13 for boys and 12 or 13 for girls, some adults choose to have a bar or bat mitzvah if they do not have them as children, alongside the previously mentioned non-traditional ceremony of having a second bar mitzvah when one turns 83. | |||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
== |
== Notes == | ||
{{notelist}} | |||
{{JewishEncyclopedia}} | |||
== References == | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==Further reading== | == Further reading == | ||
* Goldberg, Harvey E. "Rites of Passage: Jewish Rites". ''Encyclopedia of Religion''. Ed. Lindsay Jones. 2nd ed. Vol. 11. Detroit: Macmillan Reference, 2005. pp. 7818–7824. . | |||
Oppenheimer, Mark. ''Thirteen and a Day: The Bar and Bat Mitzvah across America''. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2005. | |||
* Golding, Nora. ''Bat Mitzvahs in America''. Lulu, 2015. {{ISBN|978-1-312-92108-5}}. | |||
* Hilton, Michael. ''Bar Mitzvah: A History''. University of Nebraska Press, 2014. | |||
* Kaplan, Zvi, and Norma Baumel Joseph. "Bar Mitzvah, Bat Mitzvah". ''Encyclopaedia Judaica''. Ed. Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik. 2nd ed. Vol. 3. Detroit: Macmillan Reference, 2007. pp. 164–167. . | |||
* Oppenheimer, Mark. ''Thirteen and a Day: The Bar and Bat Mitzvah across America''. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2005. | |||
* Vinick, Barbara and ]. ''Today I Am a Woman: Stories of Bat Mitzvah around the World''. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2011. {{ISBN|978-0253356932}}. | |||
==External links== | == External links == | ||
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Latest revision as of 20:29, 15 December 2024
Jewish coming of age rituals
Bar mitzvah boy wearing tallit and tefillin | |
Native name | Bar mīṣvā: בַּר מִצְוָה Bat mīṣvā: בַּת מִצְוָה |
---|---|
Time |
|
Type | Coming-of-age ceremony |
Theme | Reaching the age of bar or bat mitzvah signifies becoming a full-fledged member of the Jewish community |
A bar mitzvah (masc.), or bat mitzvah (fem.) is a coming of age ritual in Judaism. According to Jewish law, before children reach a certain age, the parents are responsible for their child's actions. Once Jewish children reach that age, they are said to "become" b'nai mitzvah, at which point they begin to be held accountable for their own actions. Traditionally, the father of a bar or bat mitzvah offers thanks to God that he is no longer punished for his child's sins.
In Orthodox communities, boys become bar mitzvah at 13 and girls become bat mitzvah at 12. In most Reform, Reconstructionist, and Conservative communities, the milestone is 13 regardless of gender. After this point, children are also held responsible for knowing Jewish ritual law, tradition, and ethics, and are able to participate in all areas of Jewish community life to the same extent as adults. In some Jewish communities, men's and women's roles differ in certain respects. For example, in Orthodox Judaism, once a boy turns 13, it is permitted to count him for the purpose of determining whether there is a prayer quorum, and he may lead prayer and other religious services in the family and the community.
Bar mitzvah is mentioned in the Mishnah and the Talmud. Some classic sources identify the age at which children must begin to participate in the ritual of fasting on Yom Kippur as 13 for boys and 12 for girls. The age of b'nai mitzvah roughly coincides with the onset of puberty. The bar/bat mitzvah ceremony is usually held on the first Shabbat after the birthday on which the child reaches the eligible age.
Etymology
Bar (בַּר) is a Jewish Babylonian Aramaic word meaning 'son' (בֵּן, ben in Hebrew), while bat (בַּת), in Hebrew, means 'daughter'. Mitzvah (מִצְוָה) is Hebrew for 'commandment' or 'law'. Thus, bar mitzvah and bat mitzvah literally translate to 'son of commandment' and 'daughter of commandment', respectively. However, in rabbinical usage, the word bar means 'under the category of' or 'subject to'. Bar mitzvah therefore translates to ' who is subject to the law'. Although the term is commonly used to refer to the ritual itself, the phrase originally refers to the person.
History
The modern method of celebrating becoming a bar mitzvah did not exist in the time of the Hebrew Bible, Mishnah, or Talmud. Early rabbinic sources specify 13 as the age at which a boy becomes a legal adult; however, the celebration of this occasion is not mentioned until the Middle Ages (from approximately 500 CE to 1500 CE; see Post-classical history).
Some late midrashic sources, and some medieval sources refer to a synagogue ceremony performed upon the boy's reaching age thirteen:
- Simon Tzemach Duran quotes a Midrash interpreting the Hebrew word zo ("this") in Isaiah 43:21 ("These people have I formed for myself, they shall speak my praise") as referring by its numerical value to those that have reached the age of 13. This seems to imply that, at the time of the composition of the Midrash the bar mitzvah publicly pronounced a blessing on the occasion of his entrance upon maturity.
- The Midrash Hashkem: "The heathen when he begets a son consecrates him to idolatrous practices; the Israelite has his son circumcised and the rite of 'pidyon haben' performed; and as soon as he becomes of age he brings him into the synagogue and school in order that he may praise the name of God, reciting the Barechu."
- Masseket Soferim (18:5) makes matters even more explicit: "In Jerusalem they are accustomed to initiate their children to fast on the Day of Atonement, a year or two before their maturity; and then, when the age has arrived, to bring the Bar Mitzvah before the priest or elder for blessing, encouragement, and prayer, that he may be granted a portion in the Law and in the doing of good works. Whosoever is of superiority in the town is expected to pray for him as he bows down to him to receive his blessing."
- Genesis Rabbah: "Up to 13 years Esau and Jacob went together to the primary school and back home; after the thirteen years were over, the one went to the beit midrash to study Law, the other to the house of idols. Regarding this, Rabbi Eleazar remarks, 'Until the 13th year it is the father's duty to train his boy; after this, he must say: "Blessed be He who has taken from me the responsibility for this boy!"'"
Later on are references to a festive celebration on this occasion:
- "It is a mitzvah for a person to make a meal on the day his son becomes Bar Mitzvah as on the day he enters the wedding canopy."
Age thirteen
The Bible does not explicitly specify the age of 13. Passages in the books of Exodus and Numbers note the age of majority for army service as twenty. Machzor Vitri notes that Genesis 34:25 refers to Levi as a "man", when a calculation from other verses suggests that Levi was aged 13 at the time.
The age of thirteen is mentioned in the Mishnah as the time one is obligated to observe the Torah's commandments: "At five years old one should study the Scriptures, at ten years for the Mishnah, at 13 for the commandments..."
Elsewhere, the Mishnah lists the ages (13 for boys and 12 for girls) at which a vow is considered automatically valid; the Talmud explains this as a result of the 13-year-old being a "man", as required in Numbers 6:2. (For one year before this age, the vows are conditionally valid, depending on whether the boy or girl has signs of physical maturity.)
Other sources also list thirteen as the age of majority with respect to following the commandments of the Torah, including:
- "Why is the evil inclination personified as the great king (Ecclesiastes 9:14)? Because it is thirteen years older than the good inclination." That is to say, one's good inclination begins to act upon reaching the age of majority.
- According to Pirke Rabbi Eli'ezer 26, Abraham rejected the total idolatry of his father and became a worshiper of God when he was thirteen years old.
The term "bar mitzvah"
The term "bar mitzvah" appears first in the Talmud, meaning "one who is subject to the law", though it does not refer to age. The term "bar mitzvah", in reference to age, cannot be clearly traced earlier than the 14th century, the older rabbinical term being "gadol" (adult) or "bar 'onshin" (one legally responsible for own misdoings).
Significance
Reaching the age of bar or bat mitzvah signifies becoming a full-fledged member of the Jewish community with the responsibilities that come with it. These include moral responsibility for one's own actions; eligibility to be called to read from the Torah and lead or participate in a minyan; the right to possess personal property and to legally marry on one's own according to Jewish law; the duty to follow the 613 laws of the Torah and keep the halakha; and the capacity to testify as a witness in a beth din (rabbinical court) case.
Many congregations require pre-bar mitzvah children to attend a minimum number of Shabbat prayer services at the synagogue, study at a Hebrew school, take on a charity or community service project and maintain membership in good standing with the synagogue. In addition to study and preparation offered through the synagogue and Hebrew schools, bar mitzvah tutors may be hired to prepare the child through the study of Hebrew, Torah cantillation and basic Jewish concepts.
According to Rabbi Mark Washofsky, "The Reform Movement in North America has struggled over the bar/bat mitzvah. At one time, this ceremony was on the verge of extinction in Reform congregations. Most of them preferred to replace bar/bat mitzvah with confirmation, which they considered a more enlightened and appropriate ceremony for modern Jews. Yet the enduring popularity of bar/bat mitzvah prevailed and today, in our communities, bar/bat mitzvah is 'virtually universally observed' by Reform Jews."
In 2012, concern about the high post-bar/bat mitzvah drop-out rate led the Union for Reform Judaism to launch the B'nai Mitzvah Revolution, an effort to shift Reform congregations away from "the long-held assumption that religious school is about preparing kids for their bar/bat mitzvah" and focus instead on teaching them how to become committed and involved members of the Jewish community.
Aliyah to the Torah
The widespread practice is that shortly after a boy turns 13, they are called up for an aliyah, the ceremony of reading a portion of the Torah section of the day.
On the Sabbath, there are seven main sections, plus an eighth, known as maftir, which is also connected to the reading of that day's haftorah section. It is most common to give the child the maftir reading.
In most synagogues, a designated officiant, the ba'al korei, reads all of the Torah portions, and the people receiving each aliyah only say the blessings before and after their portion is read. A bar mitzvah boy may learn to act as the ba'al korei, either for the entire service, for just his aliyah, or any range in-between. He may also be ba'al korei for the haftorah portion if he receives the maftir, or may only be ba'al korei for the haftorah, without reading from the Torah at all. Any of these undertakings involves a steep learning curve and much practice, possibly taking a year of study, and is an impressive accomplishment.
Girls may have an aliyah in Reform, Reconstructionist, and Conservative Jewish synagogues. In Orthodox synagogues, aliyot were and typically still are restricted to boys, with a girl potentially giving a d'var Torah at the end of the service. Some Modern Orthodox girls give aliyot at women's services, with fewer than ten men (so as not to constitute a minyan).
In Orthodox circles, the occasion is sometimes celebrated during a weekday service that includes reading from the Torah, such as a Monday or Thursday morning service.
Some communities or families may delay the celebration for reasons such as availability of a Shabbat during which no other celebration has been scheduled, or to allow family members to travel to the event. However, this does not delay the onset of rights and responsibilities of being a Jewish adult which comes about strictly by virtue of age.
Tefillin
The obligation to lay tefillin begins when a boy reaches bar mitzvah age. The common custom is for the bar mitzvah boy to begin putting on tefillin one to three months before his bar mitzvah. This way, by the time he is obligated in the commandment, he will already know how to fulfill it properly.
Parties
As the first mention of a party associated with a synagogue bar mitzvah was in the 13th century, hosting some sort of party is traditional and frequently considered necessary.
Bar mitzvah festivities typically include a joyous seudat mitzvah, a celebratory meal with family, friends, and members of the community, the bar mitzvah boy delivering on this occasion a learned discourse or oration at the table before the invited guests, who offer him presents, while the rabbi or teacher gives him his blessing, accompanying it at times with an address. Some Jews celebrate in other ways such as taking the bat or bar mitzvah on a special trip or organizing some special event in the celebrant's honour. In many communities, the celebrant is given a certificate.
In some times and places, local Jewish leaders have officially limited the size and elaborateness of mitzvahs. For example, only ten men were permitted to attend the party in 1730 in Berlin, and music was banned at these parties in 1767 in Prague. These rules were usually meant to avoid offending non-Jewish neighbours, and to maintain the rule that it be a smaller celebration than a wedding.
Bar and bat mitzvah parties among wealthy Jewish families in North America are often lavish affairs held at hotels and country clubs with hundreds of guests. The trend has been mocked, most notably in the movie Keeping Up with the Steins. These lavish parties were also heavily featured in the film You Are So Not Invited to My Bat Mitzvah. In the 1950s, Rabbi Harold Saperstein of New York described them as too often being "more bar than mitzvah". Rabbi Shmuley Boteach says that over-the-top bar mitzvah parties were already common when he was growing up in Miami in the 1970s.
In 1979, the Responsa Committee of the Central Conference of American Rabbis addressed the Reform attitude toward bat/bar mitzvah: "Every effort should be exerted to maintain the family festivities in the religious mood at the bar/bat mitzvah. Some of the efforts of early Reform in favor of confirmation against bar mitzvah were prompted by the extravagant celebration of bar mitzvah, which had removed its primary religious significance. We vigorously oppose such excesses, as they destroy the meaning of bar/bat mitzvah."
In May, 1992, the board of trustees of the Union of American Hebrew Congregations (now the Union for Reform Judaism), the synagogue arm of the Reform Movement, unanimously passed a resolution decrying "excesses of wasteful consumption...glitzy theme events, sophisticated entertainment...and expensive party favors", calling instead for "family cohesion, authentic friendship, acts of tzedakah (righteous giving), and parties suitable for children."
The cost of the party depends upon what the family is willing and able to spend. Some families spend tens, or even hundreds, of thousands of dollars on the party. Generally speaking, these celebrations are less costly and elaborate than a wedding in that family. In addition to food and drink for the guests, the money at an elaborate party is mostly spent on renting and decorating a venue and hiring staff, from the catering team to emcees, DJs, entertainers, and dancers (also called "motivators") to encourage the guests to dance or play games.
Bat mitzvah customs
Today many non-Orthodox Jews celebrate a girl's bat mitzvah in the same way as a boy's bar mitzvah. All Reform and Reconstructionist, and most Conservative synagogues have egalitarian participation, in which women read from the Torah and lead services. In Orthodox communities, a bat mitzvah is celebrated when a girl reaches the age of 12.
The majority of Orthodox and some Conservative Jews reject the idea that a woman can publicly read from the Torah or lead prayer services whenever there is a minyan (quorum of 10 males) available to do so. However, the public celebration of a girl becoming bat mitzvah in other ways has made strong inroads into Modern Orthodox Judaism and also into some elements of Haredi Judaism. In these congregations, women do not read from the Torah or lead prayer services, but they occasionally lecture on a Jewish topic to mark their coming of age, learn a book of Tanakh, recite verses from the Book of Esther or the Book of Psalms, or say prayers from the siddur. In some Modern Orthodox circles, bat mitzvah girls will read from the Torah and lead prayer services in a women's tefillah. Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, a prominent Orthodox posek, described the bat mitzvah celebration as "meaningless", and of no greater halakhic significance than a birthday party. However, he reluctantly permitted it in homes, but not synagogues, as the latter would be construed as imitating Reform and Conservative customs; in any case, they do not have the status of seudat mitzvah. Rabbi Ovadiah Yosef holds that it is a seudat mitzvah.
There were occasional attempts to recognize a girl's coming of age in eastern Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries, the former in Warsaw (1843) and the latter in Lemberg (1902). The occasion was marked by a party without any ritual in the synagogue.
There are documents that record an Italian rite for becoming bat mitzvah, known as an "entrance into the minyan" ceremony, in which boys of thirteen and girls of twelve recited a blessing, since the mid-19th century. There were also some bat mitzvah rituals held in the 19th century in Iraq. However, it was the American rabbi Mordecai M. Kaplan held the first public celebration of a bat mitzvah as we understand it in modern times for his daughter on March 18, 1922, at the Society for the Advancement of Judaism, his synagogue in New York City. Kaplan was unaware of the earlier Italian precedent and learned of them several months later, while on holiday in Italy. Judith Kaplan recited the preliminary blessing, read a portion of that week's Torah portion in Hebrew and English, and then intoned the closing blessing. Mordecai Kaplan, an Orthodox rabbi who joined Conservative Judaism and then became the founder of Reconstructionist Judaism, influenced Jews from all branches of non-Orthodox Judaism, through his position at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. At the time, most Orthodox rabbis strongly rejected the idea of a bat mitzvah ceremony.
As the ceremony became accepted for females as well as males, many women chose to celebrate the ceremony even though they were much older, as a way of formalizing and celebrating their place in the adult Jewish community.
Alternative ceremonies
Instead of reading from the Torah, some Humanist Jews prefer a research paper on a topic in Jewish history to mark their coming of age. Secular Jewish Sunday schools and communities—including those affiliated with the Congress of Secular Jewish Organizations and The Workers Circle—encourage the youngsters to select any topic that interests them and relates to the Jewish part of their identities.
The kibbutz movement in Israel also encouraged the celebration of the bar mitzvah. All those coming of age in the community for that year would take on a project and research in a topic of Jewish or Zionist interest. Today many kibbutz children are opting for a more traditional bar mitzvah celebration.
Among some Jews, a man who has reached the age of 83 will celebrate a second bar mitzvah, under the logic that in the Hebrew Bible it says that a normal lifespan is 70 years, so that an 83-year-old can be considered 13 in a second lifetime. This ritual is becoming more common as people live longer, healthier lives.
A bark mitzvah is a pseudo-traditional observance and celebration of a dog's coming of age, as in the Jewish traditional bar and bat mitzvahs. The term has been in use since at least 1958, when Beverly Hills couple Janet and Sonny Salter held a bark mitzvah for their 13 year old dog, Windy. Bark mitzvahs are sometimes held as an adjunct to the festival of Purim.
Gifts
Bar or bat mitzvah celebrations have become an occasion to give the celebrant a commemorative gift. Traditionally, common gifts include books with religious or educational value, religious items, writing implements, savings bonds (to be used for the child's college education), gift certificates, or money. Gifts of cash have become commonplace in recent times. As with charity and all other gifts, it has become common to give in multiples of 18, since the gematria, or numerical equivalent of the Hebrew word for "life", ("chai"), is the number 18. Monetary gifts in multiples of 18 are considered to be particularly auspicious and have become common for the bar and bat mitzvah. Many b'nai mitzvah also receive their first tallit from their parents to be used for the occasion and tefillin where this is appropriate. Jewelry is a common gift for girls at a bat mitzvah celebration. Another gift for the bat mitzvah girl is Shabbat candlesticks because it is the duty and honor of the woman to light the candles.
In adults
Main article: Adult bar and bat mitzvahWhile the traditional age to hold a bar or bat mitzvah is 13 for boys and 12 or 13 for girls, some adults choose to have a bar or bat mitzvah if they do not have them as children, alongside the previously mentioned non-traditional ceremony of having a second bar mitzvah when one turns 83.
See also
Notes
- Bar and bat meaning 'son of' and 'daughter of' respectively; mitzvah meaning 'commandment' or 'law'. The plural of bar mitzvah (Hebrew: בַּר מִצְוָה), used for both all-male and mixed-gender groups, is b'nai mitzvah, also transliterated b'nei mitzvah (בְּנֵי מִצְוָה). The plural of bat mitzvah (בַּת מִצְוָה; Ashkenazi pronunciation: bas mitzveh) is b'not mitzvah (בְּנוֹת מִצְוָה; Ashkenazi pronunciation: b'nos mitzvah). In English, b'nai mitzvah is also sometimes used in the singular as a gender-neutral term, including for nonbinary youth; other gender-neutral terms include simchat ('celebration of') mitzvah, kabbalat ('reception of') mitzvah, b'mitzvah (also bamitzvah or b-mitzvah, all meaning 'in' or 'subject to' mitzvah), and brit ('covenant of') mitzvah.
References
- ^ Perleberg, Ellen; Dy, Grace Elizabeth C. (May 25, 2022). "Growing Up on the Wrong Side of the Mechitza: A Case Study of Contemporary Queer Jewish Language". Journal of Jewish Languages. 10 (1): 120–139. doi:10.1163/22134638-bja10019.
- Dolsten, Josefin (March 1, 2018). "This teen had a gender neutral b'nei mitzvah". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved May 5, 2023.
- Krueger, Alyson (March 27, 2019). "Bar or Bat Mitzvah? Hey, What About a Both Mitzvah?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 18, 2024.
- "Celebrating the Age of Mitzvah: A Guide for all Genders". Keshet. Retrieved May 5, 2023.
- "Origins of the Bar/Bat Mitzvah". ReformJudaism.org. October 19, 2012.
Today in almost all non-Orthodox congregations, all children mark symbolic entry into Jewish adulthood through b'nai mitzvah (bar or bat mitzvah) at age 13.
- ^ Genesis Rabbah 63:10 (commenting upon Genesis 25:27) בראשית רבה סג י (in Hebrew)
- Pirkei Avot, 5:21
- Niddah 45b
- ^ Olitsky, Kerry M. An Encyclopedia of American Synagogue Ritual, Greenwood Press, 2000. ISBN 0-313-30814-4 p. 7.
- "History of the Bar Mizvah". Jewish Encyclopedia. Retrieved April 13, 2013.
- Magen Avot on the Baraita on Avot 5:21
- Midrash Hashkem on Shemot; also Grünhut's "Sefer ha'Likkutim", i. 3a
- Orach Chayim 225:2, Magen Avraham 4
- Bazelon, Emily (May 19, 2005). "Saving the Bar Mitzvah". Slate. Archived from the original on October 13, 2007. Retrieved October 5, 2007.
- Machzor Vitri on Pirkei Avot, also found at Machzor Vitry מחזור ויטרי (in Hebrew). p. 549. Retrieved March 7, 2018.
- Pirkei Avot 5:21
- ^ Niddah 5:6
- Niddah 46a
- Abot de-Rabbi Natan A. 16, B. 30; Midrash Tehillim 9:2; Ecclesiastes Rabbah 9:15
- ^ Marcus Jastrow; Kaufmann Kohler (1906). "Bar Miẓwah". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. Retrieved February 4, 2018.
- Baba Metzia 96a
- Washofsky, Mark (2001). Jewish Living: A Guide to Contemporary Reform Practice. UAHC Press. ISBN 978-0-8074-0702-8.
- ^ Reform Judaism magazine, Winter 2012.
- Calling someone up to say the Torah blessings during a service is called an Aliyah, from the Hebrew: עֲלִיָּה, from the verb la'alot, לעלות, meaning, "to rise, to ascend; to go up"
- ^ "How the Bar/Bat Mitzvah Child Participates in the Service". My Jewish Learning. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
- Talmud Bavli. Vol. Megila. pp. 21a.
- "Chapter 4: The Baal Korei – Shulchanaruchharav.com". Retrieved May 20, 2022.
- "Great Doings in the Jewish Synagogue". New York Daily Herald. June 11, 1839. p. 2. Retrieved May 13, 2022.
- "Some Laws of Tefillin – The Basic Laws and the order of Putting on the Tefillin". Chabad.org. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
- ^ Doll, Jen (December 9, 2017). "The Bar Mitzvah Party Starters". Topic. Retrieved December 23, 2017.
- Cohen, Stefanie (April 18, 2010). "$1 Million Parties – Have NYC Bar Mitzvahs Gone Too Far?". New York Post. Archived from the original on April 20, 2010. Retrieved April 18, 2010.
- Al (January 18, 2011). "Saturday Night Live Mocks Over-The-Top Bar Mitzvah". Jewish Humor Central. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
- Allison Hoffman (December 9, 2007). "Big bucks and pink thrones". The Chicago Jewish News. Archived from the original on November 20, 2012. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
- Rabbi Shmuley Boteach (August 23, 2010). "Extravagant Weddings and Bar Mitzvahs Humiliate the Jewish Community". The Huffington Post.
- Eleff, Zev (2020). "Chapter 2: How Bat Mitzvah Became Orthodox". Authentically Orthodox: A Tradition-Bound Faith in American Life. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-4482-8.
- ^ Eleff, Zev; Butler, Menachem (January 2016). "How Bat Mitzvah Became Orthodox," Symposium on Masorah, May 2016 (TorahMusings.com)". Torahmusings.com.
- Iggros Moshe OC 1:104 and OC 2:97
- Yabia Omer 2:29
- Marcus, Ivan G. (2004). The Jewish Life Cycle: Rites of Passage from Biblical to Modern Times. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press. ISBN 0-295-98440-6, p. 105.
- Marcus, p. 106.
- Barkat, Amiram (May 27, 2003). "Coming of age a little later than usual". Haaretz. Retrieved April 13, 2013.
- ^ "The First American Bat Mitvah". Jewish Virtual Library. March 18, 1922. Retrieved April 13, 2013.
- Waskow, Arthur Ocean and Phyllis Ocean Berman. Excerpt from A Time for Every Purpose Under Heaven Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC at "History of Bat Mizvah". Archived from the original on October 13, 2007. Retrieved October 10, 2007.
- Marcus, pg 112.
- Peiser, Jaclyn; Lyons, Eve; Chafetz, Marisa (April 27, 2019). "Becoming a Woman Before Their Eyes". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 27, 2019.
- Eleff, Zev (2020). "Chapter 2: How Bat Mitzvah Became Orthodox". Authentically Orthodox: A Tradition-Bound Faith in American Life. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8143-4482-8.
...the rabbinate in the United States had already decided on the halakhic impropriety of the Bat Mitzvah ritual...
- Eleff, Zev; Schacter, Jacob J. (2016). "Chapter 9: The Orthodox Synagogue and Rabbinate. Section 1: Rites of Passage". Modern Orthodox Judaism: A Documentary History. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8276-1289-1.
...Orthodox leaders resisted the "innovation" and impulse to be "with it." In fact, as late as the 1970s, only the most accommodating Orthodox rabbis permitted bat mitzvah ceremonies, and they allowed just the most modest sort of occasions...
- Maag, Christopher (March 22, 2009). "Having a Bat Mitzvah in Their 90s Because It's a Hoot". The New York Times. Retrieved March 31, 2010.
- Arking, Linda (June 1, 2000). "Molly's Unforgettable Bat Mitzvah". Sh'ma, A Journal of Jewish Ideas. Retrieved August 15, 2011.
- "Bar/Bat Mitzvah Program". City Congregation for Humanistic Judaism. Archived from the original on April 20, 2008.
- Carolyn Slutsky (July 15, 2009). "At This Bar Mitzvah, Dylan's The Only Prophet". The Jewish Week. New York. Archived from the original on July 20, 2009.
- "LifeCycle Events: Bar and Bat Mitzvah".
- Amy Oringel (October 19, 2017). "Why 83 Is The New 13 For Bar Mitzvahs". Forward.com. Retrieved January 31, 2018.
- Lily Koppel (December 20, 2004). "Today He Is a Dog; Actually He Always Was". The New York Times.
- Shari Cohen and Marcelo Gindlin. Alfie's Bark Mitzvah. Chandler, Arizona: Five Star Publications, 2007. Book with audio CD. ISBN 1-58985-055-6, 978-1589850552.
- Salter, Janet; Salter, Sonny (2009). Beverly Hills Gothic. Beverly Hills: Salter Lipsky Press. p. 290. Retrieved July 25, 2021.
- Rabbi Charles A. Kroloff (January 19, 1997). "A Rabbi's View Of a 'Bark Mitzvah'". The New York Times.
- Maryann Mott (October 6, 2006). "Pets Gaining Recognition in Places of Worship". National Geographic News. Archived from the original on October 18, 2006.
- "Bat Mitzvah: What It Is and How to Celebrate". Retrieved May 16, 2020.
Further reading
- Goldberg, Harvey E. "Rites of Passage: Jewish Rites". Encyclopedia of Religion. Ed. Lindsay Jones. 2nd ed. Vol. 11. Detroit: Macmillan Reference, 2005. pp. 7818–7824. Gale Virtual Reference Library.
- Golding, Nora. Bat Mitzvahs in America. Lulu, 2015. ISBN 978-1-312-92108-5.
- Hilton, Michael. Bar Mitzvah: A History. University of Nebraska Press, 2014.
- Kaplan, Zvi, and Norma Baumel Joseph. "Bar Mitzvah, Bat Mitzvah". Encyclopaedia Judaica. Ed. Michael Berenbaum and Fred Skolnik. 2nd ed. Vol. 3. Detroit: Macmillan Reference, 2007. pp. 164–167. Gale Virtual Reference Library.
- Oppenheimer, Mark. Thirteen and a Day: The Bar and Bat Mitzvah across America. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2005.
- Vinick, Barbara and Shulamit Reinharz. Today I Am a Woman: Stories of Bat Mitzvah around the World. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0253356932.
External links
Bar mitzvah
- Media related to Bar mitzvah at Wikimedia Commons
- Chabad's Bar Mitzvah
- My Jewish Learning – What Does Bar Mitzvah Mean?
Bat mitzvah
- Media related to Bat mitzvah at Wikimedia Commons
- Chabad's Becoming a Bat Mitzvah
- My Jewish Learning – History of Bat Mitzvah
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