Menstruation and "Family Purity" (Tohorat ha-Mishpacha)
An act of will is required to turn our thoughts back to the sacred after a
bodily event has focused our attention on the very physical here-and-now.
By Rabbi Alana Suskin
Traditional Judaism views no part of human behavior as
outside the purview of religious law. Sexual activity, so full of complex moral
decisions and interactions, is certainly no exception. Like all human
behaviors, one's sexual life can be lived in a holy way, and Jewish law provides
instruction regarding how one can bring kedushah
(holiness) into relationships.
Biblical Sources
The basic rules for tohorat
ha-mishpacha, or family taharah,
usually translated "ritual purity"--this term and its opposite, tum'ah will be explained below--come
from three chapters of Leviticus.
In Leviticus 15:19 and 24, we are told: “If a woman has an
emission, and her emission in her flesh is blood, she shall be seven days in
her [menstrual] separation, and anyone who touches her shall be tamei [a bearer of tum'ah] until evening...And if any man lie with her at all and her
[menstrual] separation will be upon him, he will be tamei for seven days…."
Next, Leviticus 18:19 warns: "Also you shall not
approach a woman in the tum'ah of her
[menstrual] separation, to uncover her nakedness."
Finally, Leviticus 20:18 states: "And if a man lie with
a menstruating woman and reveal her nakedness, and she revealed the fountain of
her blood, both of them will be cut off from among their people."
The first of these passages is a list of that which makes
one ritually tamei, the second and
third a list of forbidden sexual unions. The first takes a much less stringent
view of sexual relations during the week after the onset of menstruation. Quite
likely this is because this list is part of a longer enumeration of bodily
emissions of both men and women which render one tamei.
For both men and women, there are normal and abnormal
emissions, and for both men and women, one renders oneself again tahor (non-tamei) after some time has elapsed, by immersing in the mikveh. It is only when we find the
topic of menstruation embedded in the list of sexual improprieties that it
takes on the additional force of a punishable offense. Note that the punishment
of being "cut off" in the third passage is applicable only upon
actually having sexual relations.
There is also a special case in biblical culture for a
woman’s separation from others that occurs after giving birth: for a daughter,
the mother is separated from others for fourteen days, and then is fully t'horah (in a state of tohorah) after sixty-six days, and she
may then bring a sacrifice to the Temple. For a son, she is separated for seven
days, and then waits thirty-three days. One suggestion that has been made for
the doubled time for a daughter is that the daughter herself bears a "fountain
of blood" and so the additional separation period reflects the presence of
the daughter's body.
Interpreting "Family Purity" Laws
The concepts tahor
and tamei (or, again, the abstract
nouns tohorah and tum'ah) are often translated as
"clean" and "unclean," or "pure" and
"impure." But examining the other places in which these concepts
appear, it becomes clear that tum'ah
and tohorah are best understood as
contrasting states in which one is a vessel either for the sacred (tohorah) or for the secular or everyday
(tum'ah).
Blood is holy. It symbolically carries the soul of animate
creatures. That is why it is spilled out for sacrifices, and why meat, in order
to be kosher, is salted so that all the blood is removed. It is also why niddah (separation of the menstruant)
occurs not just during blood flow, but instead extends until she goes to the mikveh and consciously changes her
status. One's self is occupied with the things of the world, and one's touch
can transmit that mundane outlook to others.
In other words, when things happen that focus one's
attention on the world, such as death or sex or birth--often things over which
one has no control--then when one has the opportunity to turn one's mind back
to the holy when the event is over, it takes an act of will to do so, and that
act of will is to go immerse oneself in the mikveh.
This understanding of the pair of concepts, not often
advanced in Jewish legal literature, can be derived from a number of passages
in classical Jewish literature, including a comment made by the
eleventh-century Bible and Talmud commentator Rashi in one of his responsa
about the laws of niddah (no. 336,
ed. Elfenbein) and Maimonides' Guide of
the Perplexed III: 47.
The law of family tohorah
as it is commonly understood proscribes all sorts of physical contact when a
woman is in niddah (separation). The
word “niddah” is actually a
functional term whose application is not limited to women, but can include
anyone who is exempted from society for a short period of time. This exemption
can be either positive or negative; in itself it does not have any value
connotations.
The origin of this requirement of complete physical
separation comes from the Temple era, during which one could not enter into the
precincts of the Temple while tamei.
Today, because there is no standing Temple, having the status of tamei is not especially problematic.
Indeed, all Jews are in this state to some extent, because for some categories
of tum'ah, one needs to undergo
rituals that we no longer have the ability to carry out, for lack of the Temple
and its priests.
In fact, in the Babylonian Talmud (Berakhot 21b –22a), an
extended discussion shows that the closest male equivalent to female niddah is severely restrictive--a ba'al keri (a man who has a normal
seminal emission) may not utter words of Torah, and may not even enter the
house of study. While a woman would not be subject to the punishment of being
"cut off" from the community for having sex with him, his punishment
is nearly equivalent to that, since the house of study was considered the
primary location of importance, and if he was not permitted to utter certain
blessings, it would make his life quite unworkable until he went to the mikveh. Those laws are mostly no longer
observed, although there are communities in which men do regularly attend the mikveh, and men who copy holy texts
(such as Torah scrolls) for ritual use often visit daily
Niddah and Tohorat Ha-mishpacha Today
The Torah requires a minimum seven days of sexual abstinence
for women and their husbands, from the onset of blood flow. The rabbis in the
Talmud (BT Niddah 66a) claim that women took upon themselves to extend the time
during which couples are to refrain from sexual relations from the biblical
minimum of seven days to at least twelve by waiting until the end of her flow,
as described above--five or more days--and then waiting an additional seven
days in which there is no flow or spotting.
In practice, then, a woman needs to anticipate the beginning
of menstruation to avoid accidents, and if she has an irregular cycle, to check
regularly. The woman then checks herself toward the end of her flow to
ascertain when the blood flow stops. On the last day of spotting, she begins to
count seven additional days. At the end of that time period, the woman visits
the mikveh.
At the mikveh the
woman prepares herself by bathing, brushing her teeth, cleaning under her
nails, removing all jewelry, and so forth, to make sure that her body is
perfectly clean before entering the waters. She then goes into the water and
immerses, and recites a prescribed blessing. The procedure is similar for a
woman who has given birth. Until the woman returns from the mikveh, Jewish law bans all sexual
contact, and mandates that the couple should refrain from any contact that
might stir sexual feelings.
Today, observance of the traditional strictures and the
post-menstrual immersion in a mikveh
are common among Orthodox Jews, much less common (but growing) among
Conservative Jews, and quite unusual in the more liberal religious communities.
Rabbi Alana Suskin was
ordained by the Ziegler School of Rabbinical Studies at the University of
Judaism, in Los Angeles.