Hats and Covering the Head: A Traditionalist View
How and when a Jew covers his or her head is a spiritual declaration and a
nuanced social statement.
By Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz
Rabbi Steinsaltz's
guide to Jewish head coverings is directed at the newly observant Jew in an
Orthodox setting who must decide what head covering he or she is going to wear,
and under what circumstances. In doing so, he offers a survey of the religious
and sociological significance of various practices, but only from a
traditionalist perspective. For example, outside the Orthodox communities, few
Jewish women regularly cover their hair in their daily lives. Reprinted with
permission from Teshuvah:
A Guide for the Newly Observant Jew (Jason Aronson).
For men, the primary question is whether or not to cover the
head. This practice has evolved from a minhag
(custom) of the very pious to an accepted norm, incumbent on all observant
males. Talmudic law does not require covering the head, through there are hints
there that doing so is to be regarded as a sign of reverence. But the practice
became more and more widespread, until by the Middle Ages Jewish legal
authorities everywhere were unanimous that sacred words (prayers, words of
Torah) could not be spoken, nor sacred precincts (synagogues, houses of study,
even cemeteries) entered bareheaded. Today, too, there is complete halakhic [Jewish legal] agreement on
this question.
Some Men Keep their Heads Covered Always, Everywhere
Covering the head at all times is a different matter. In
Europe, it was the universal custom among Orthodox Jews, except for some in
Germany, to do so indoors and out. The most orthodox even did it while
sleeping. In the Near East there was greater latitude in the matter, and many
religious Jews only covered their heads for sacred activities. Keeping the head
covered at all times has a kabbalistic [mystical] significance, leading some to
cover their heads twice--a hat over a kippah
(skullcap), or a tallit (prayer
shawl)over a kippah--while praying.
For various historical reasons--chiefly because most Jews no
longer wear a distinctly Jewish garb--the head covering has, for many, taken on
the significance of a badge. Once such a view takes hold, it acquires a certain
significance in the eyes of halakhah.
Even practices with no inherent meaning sometimes acquire real importance from
the way they are viewed in the popular mind, due to the notion of kiddush Hashem (glorifying God) and hillul hashem (sacrilege). When a given
act comes to be perceived by most people as one of hillul hashem, ipso facto, it is so, even though
intrinsically there may be nothing wrong with it.
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A woman wearing a hat (left), a man with a
yarmulke. Photo credit: Michelle Mason
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Male Head Covering: Religious Meaning from Social Consensus
It is for this reason that covering the head has become
significant and valuable, not because it has any inherent meaning but rather as
a conventional sign of belonging to a certain group of people and of commitment
to a certain way of life. The [newly observant Jew] must be aware of this
symbolism. On the one hand, if he does not cover his head, he will be regarded
by the Orthodox (particularly in Israel) as a deviant from the true path, no
matter how observant he is. On the other hand, if he is not fully observant, at
least in public, the fact that he covers his head may lead others to see him as
hypocritical. Indeed, it may cast a shadow of hypocrisy over the entire
observant community. Thus, [for a man] covering the head is an act fraught with
significance that must be weighed very seriously.
Because the male head covering is not explicitly a matter of
mitzvah [commandment], either in the
Torah or in the Talmud, there are no requirements as to how it should be made.
Presumably it should cover most of the head, but as to the shape or materials
to be used there are no limitations. Here too, halakhically meaningless details
can take on a certain significance in the public mind, so that various kinds of
kippot may signify very specific things to both religious and non-religious
people. Thus, to avoid confusing or misleading people, it is best to find out
what the various current significations are.
Women's Head Coverings: A Sign of Marital Status
In the case of women, too, there is, in addition to a
general requirement of modesty of dress, a specific one concerning covering the
head. Married women are required to cover their hair. This is an ancient law,
already hinted at in the Torah, that has been observed among Jews all through
the ages. In some communities, even unmarried women have been known to keep
their hair covered, though this custom never became widespread. The law is not
related to that requiring men to cover their heads, and it is even more
stringent. The fact that a married woman covers her hair whenever she leaves
the house is a sign of her special status.
The form in which this practice is observed varies from one
community to another. In the communities that were under kabbalistic
influence--in parts of Eastern Europe and the Arab world, and among the
Sephardim--the practice was observed more strictly, such that the hair would be
covered completely, with none at all showing, not only in the street but in the
home as well. In some countries, pious women go so far as to braid their hair
in addition to covering it. But in most areas of Eastern Europe and the Middle
East it was considered sufficient to cover the greater part of the hair, and
this in fact is all that halakhah requires. In any case, there is no doubt that
some covering of the hair, however
symbolic, is called for.
In recent times it has become customary for women to cover
their hair with wigs, and this can indeed be seen as fulfilling the
requirements of the halakhah. Married women are not, after all, expected to make
themselves "ugly." Nevertheless, there have been scholars who have
ruled that wigs too must be covered, particularly when they look so natural
that they cannot be recognized as head coverings and the women who wear them
are not recognizable as married. But this too is a matter of custom and not of
definitive halakhah.
Covering the Head as a Spiritual Statement
In Jewish tradition, and even in very old linguistic usage,
"an uncovered head" means unbridled license. By the same token,
covering the head, be it for prayer and study or at any other time, represents,
by general usage at least, the acceptance of Divine sovereignty, of the
"yoke of the kingdom of heaven."
Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz
is the author of a translation and commentary to the entire Babylonian Talmud
in modern Hebrew, in progress (parts of which have appeared in English
translation), and many other works bringing traditional Torah scholarship and
Hasidic thought to a contemporary audience. He lives in Jerusalem