How to Raise a
Jewish Feminist
Some useful tips
for raising children in a religion--and world--that still tends to privilege
what is male.
By Yosef I. Abramowitz
Reprinted with permission from JewishFamily.com.
For the past year or so, my wife and I have been referring
to God as "she" in order to counter in our children's minds the male
God imagery that abounds. And every once in a while, Aliza, our four-and-a-half
year old tells us that it is wrong to call God a "he" or a
"she" because God is not a person. She doesn't use the word
"gender" yet, but her imaging of God has an innocent and insightful
non-gender purity about it.
Raising girls in a world that is still dominated by boys is
a challenge. Raising religious girls in a world that overwhelmingly affirms the
image of God as male is even more difficult. As a father, I want Aliza and
Hallel to dream and be able to accomplish their dreams without the barriers of
gender. As a Jewish father, I want my daughters to feel as if they have every
right to spirituality, leadership and innovation within Judaism. I would love
for them to follow in the footsteps of their rabbi mother, but not feel her
pains of alienation from tradition.
Raising girls to be Jewish feminists is probably easier than
raising boys to be feminists. Yet the task for our generation of parents is
aided by the fact that our children will be part of the first American Jewish
generation that will have a critical mass of women rabbis, thinkers, writers,
and leaders to serve as role models. Indeed, it is somewhat of a novelty for
our children to meet male rabbis.
I want our daughters to be raised as Jewish feminists not
only because I want their religious self-esteem to be high, but because Judaism
itself needs this corrective after 4,000 years of development. By including the
voices of the other half of the Jewish world, I suspect Judaism would become
far more dynamic and relevant.
Here are some ideas to help you raise Jewish feminists:
1)
God talk. If we teach our children that we are all made
in God's image, we can't then tell them that God sits in a chair in Heaven,
stroking his beard, and decides who shall live and who shall die. The first
images we plant in those fertile, spiritual minds is likely to stick and it
should not be of a male God. The second commandment tells us not to erect
idols. Creating God as a male God is a form of idolatry and can potentially
disempower girls spiritually.
2)
Draw. Have your children draw things in our world that
show aspects and attributes of God. Encourage them to conceptualize situations
when God exists in our lives, like when we help a friend or do a mitzvah. That
way they see that God exists in everyone.
3)
Role Modeling. Jewish feminism is not only about
religion, but also sociology. How do you and your partner relate to each other
in front of your children? The dynamics of your relationships will teach your
children about the roles they can play as they grow up. In our home, I do the
cooking and shopping and Susan does the cleaning and laundry. We strive for our
decision making to be fair. And when it is time for Friday night kiddush, the
eyes of my children gravitate to my wife, who leads most of our rituals.
4)
Books. So many of the videos and books in our homes
send messages that are unhelpful, whether it is Cinderella or even The
Cat in the Hat. For younger children, read In
God's Name by Sandy Sasso. All older kids should receive at their bar
and bat mitzvah a copy of Judith Plaskow's Standing
Again At Sinai. And teens and parents should check out a wonderful new
anthology and study guide by Hadassah, Jewish
Women: Living the Challenge.
5)
Rituals and holidays. Don't just dress up for Purim,
but make sure the story is told since it is one of the few Jewish holiday
stories with a female lead. Passover has already several feminist rituals, like
a cup for the prophetess Miriam and the placement of an orange on the seder
plate. With your daughters, start participating in monthly Rosh Hodesh (new
moon) groups, which are filled with creative energy.
I know my daughters will not live their lives free of sexism
in the general society or in the Jewish community. But by raising them to be
proud female Jews, I hope they will have the confidence and tools to deal with
the bigots they will encounter and the barriers they will inevitably face. And
perhaps, in their journeys, they will have the chutzpah to smash a couple of
idols along the way.
Yosef I.
Abramowitz is the CEO of Jewish Family & Life! and co-author with his wife,
Rabbi Susan Silverman, of Jewish
Family & Life: Traditions, Holidays and Values for Today's Parents and
Children (Golden Books).