The Next Wave of Jewish Feminism
Questions for an Unfinished
Revolution
By
Tamara Cohen
The movement to obtain
equal rights and opportunities for women in Jewish life emerged in the 1960s.
The Jewish feminist movement worked for changes in leadership (female rabbis
and cantors), liturgy (including gender-equitable language and gender-neutral
or female God imagery) and scholarship (the inclusion of Jewish women’s
voices/history in the canon). Tamara Cohen’s article suggests some of the
issues on the current Jewish feminist agenda. It is reprinted with permission
from the January 2000 issue of Sh’ma, A Journal of Jewish
Responsibility.
I didn't attend the First National Jewish Women's Conference
in New York in 1973. My mother wanted to bring me, her two year‑old
daughter, but the conference organizers asked her to either stay home with her
baby or attend the conference alone. Although she resented the choice, she went
to the conference without me.
Over the years, my two sisters and I have embraced a
feminism we feel takes my mother's feminist thinking to the next step. So it is
with a deep respect for her, and the feminism with which she raised me, that I
voice the following, somewhat critical, observations and questions.
Is Jewish feminism about finding new images for God,
ordaining women as rabbis, generating new midrash
and developing new ritual? Or is it about becoming partners with women of
color, protesting the human rights abuses in the West Bank, and demanding
changes in an unfair economy?
The answer to both of these questions must be yes. Jewish
feminists have made significant changes to thefabric of Judaism and the shape of the Jewish community. While we
continue that work, we must also acknowledge with equal creativity and energy
our responsibility to the broader questions of feminism, seeing other women's
issues as our own.
How many Jewish feminists are managing their increasingly
busy and over‑committed lives by relying on the labor of women of another
class and race, women who can't afford good care for their own children? What
is a community‑sponsored, feminist seder, if it is served on non‑recyclable
plastic plates, harmful to the environment and manufactured by underpaid Third
World women?
I want a Jewish feminism that lays claim both to the
heritage of [Jewish socialist] Bundist women-as well as the women who wrote tekhines (Yiddish petitionary prayers); that acknowledges both the women of
the Emma Lazarus Federation (secular American socialists) and the women of Ezrat nashim (who lobbied for
Conservative women's ordination). It’s time for Jewish feminists to refute the
dichotomies of secular and religious, insisting rather that feminism is always
political as well as spiritual. It's time to recognize that the liberation that
is central to Jewish feminism is seriously compromised if our commitment to our
own spiritual enrichment is not coupled with a commitment to societal change
specifically aimed at improving the lives of less privileged women.
How much is the socialization of Jewish boys and girls
changing? Are Jewish children being exposed tomultiple models of how to be Jewish men and women? Are school
children still paired into model heterosexual families for model celebrations
of shabbat? What do teacher's behaviors and ritual participation reflect about
Jewish families and society? I want Jewish feminists to support
children--including their own--as they explore their gender and sexual
identities.
I want every feminist to recognize the connection between
supporting the goals of Jewish feminism and supporting Jewish gays and
lesbians. If we honestly value women as much as we value men, then our
daughters can love whomever, as long as they are happy. These are feminist, not
just gay and lesbian, issues. Ezrat
Nashim demanded the right of all women to be Conservative rabbis, but only
heterosexual women now have that right.
Finally, I want Jewish feminists to be creating lives for
themselves that are more fulfilling, not more exhausting. This means that if
women are going to prepare additional seder readings, then men will have to
assume some of the traditionally female Pesach duties. It also means that we
need to balance a Jewish feminism of the head with one of the body. Like all
American women, Jewish feminists are deeply effected by society's messages
about what we should look like. Are we raising our daughters and sons with
healthy body images? Are we modeling a balanced life?
Tamara Cohen is a
Jewish feminist writer and educator currently living with her partner is
Gainesville, Florida. She is the spiritual leader of a community in Litchfield
County, CT and is on the board of Brit Tzedek V’Shalom: The Jewish Alliance for
Justice and Peace.