FROM HUFF'n POST  
In liberal Jewish synagogues across the country, women have achieved  feminist success. They wear ritual garments. They read from the Torah.  They are rabbis. But when you enter an Orthodox Jewish synagogue, you  enter a gender time warp.  Here, women do not count in a prayer quorum.  They are not permitted near the Torah. In many cases, you would be  hard-pressed even to figure out where the women are located, since they  may be seated behind a curtain or wall, or upstairs in a gallery, far  from the action. As Tevye the milkman would say, "Sounds crazy, no?"
In many synagogues, women cannot even hold a position of any meaningful  leadership: The National Council of Young Israel forbids its 140-member  Orthodox synagogues to elect a female president. 
If a female synagogue president can be prohibited, imagine the  Orthodox Jewish reaction to a female rabbi -- a woman with religious  authority. Two years ago, a prominent Orthodox rabbi in New York, Avi  Weiss of the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale, in consultation with Blu Greenberg, founder of the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance,  bravely broke with conventional Orthodox tradition and ordained Sara  Hurwitz. Since the mid-1990s, at least three other Orthodox rabbis had  followed their conscience and quietly ordained individual women. But  Weiss was the first to ordain a woman publicly.
Weiss never actually called Hurwitz "rabbi." Instead, Weiss coined a term, "maharat," an acronym of four Hebrew words -- manhigah, hilhatit, ruhanit and toranit  -- which means a "female leader in Jewish religious law, spiritual  matters and Torah."  The word is cumbersome; it requires detailed  explanation.  Everyone with a passing familiarity of Judaism has at  least some notion of the concept of "rabbi." But no one, not even those  steeped in Orthodox Jewish culture and tradition, not even those of us  immersed in the feminist world, can easily explain the definition or  derivation of "maharat." When asked about the term, I typically reel off  the Hebrew words that are its building blocks, then I translate them  into English. I inevitably forget one of the terms, get confused and  start again. The process is exhausting, confusing and off-putting. 
More troubling, "maharat" connotes a secondary status. For this  reason, I opposed the title the instant I heard it. Created for women  alone, and designed to differentiate women rabbis from "real" rabbis,  the title evokes the bridesmaid who is never the bride. 
Last year, Weiss announced that Hurwitz had a new title: "rabba"  (ra-BAH). This term, he said, would clarify that Hurtwitz is a full  member of the rabbinic staff.  A feminized version of the title "rabbi"  made sense; Hurwitz has the same credentials as a male rabbi. She  completed the same course of study required of male rabbis and works in  the same capacity, with the same pastoral obligations.
True, Hurwitz was not being called "rabbi," which Orthodox feminists  prefer, because the term conveys the same authority and respect that men  enjoy. But in the Orthodox Jewish world, change comes slowly. "Rabba"  was close enough -- and the implications obvious enough -- to make those  of us active in Orthodox feminism feel triumphant. Moreover, Weiss  announced that Hurwitz would head a new seminary for women, Yeshivat  Maharat, educating a future pool of women for the rabbinate, so that she  would not be the one and only "rabba."
So here you have a woman rabbi who cedes the status of rabbi to  respect right-wing members of the Orthodox world. How did that wing  react? By denouncing those with the audacity even to imagine that women  could approach religious leadership. A March 2010 statement from Agudath  Israel, an ultra-Orthodox organization of rabbis, threatened to expel  Hurwitz's synagogue from Orthodoxy. The Rabbinical Council of America, one of the world's largest and oldest organizations of Orthodox rabbis, likewise pressured Weiss.
After several weeks, Weiss retreated -- somewhat. He agreed not to  ordain women as rabbis at Yeshivat Maharat and not to confer the title  "rabba" upon the graduates. Turns out that Hurwitz is indeed the one and  only "rabba." 
Last month, the most liberal Orthodox rabbinic group in the United States, the International Rabbinic Fellowship,  which was founded three years ago by Weiss, together with Rabbi Marc  Angel, voted down its first proposal to accept women as members of the  organization. But at least the issue is on the agenda.  
The current state of affairs is immoral and shameful. There is no  halakhic (Jewish legal) prohibition against female rabbis. A "rabbi" is  simply a teacher and master of Jewish texts and law. Therefore, some of  us are taking matters into our own hands. We don't have the religious  authority to ordain anyone. But we recognize the rabbinic status of the  handful of women who have been ordained by Orthodox authorities. 
We are also involved in independent prayer groups in which women and  men lead together, even though they do not sit together. These groups  are not egalitarian: women may not lead every part of the service. But  women are encouraged to lead all parts for which there is no halakhic  prohibition.  In the independent prayer group I attend on the upper east side of Manhattan, Yavneh,  women recite Hallel, one of the most beautiful songs of praise in the  liturgy; women hold the Torah; women read from the Torah; women recite  the blessing over the wine.  
Like Tevye from Fiddler on the Roof, we struggle with the  concept that sacred tradition is fixed yet flexible.  Everyone involved  in religion -- any religion, in any level of observance -- knows that  the key is to find the balance between tradition and modernity. 
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1 comment:
Jews are going to be the downfall of America.
go back to you so called homeland in 'Israel'
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