Traditional Sources on Female Homosexuality
The Torah does not
address lesbianism, but later rabbinic commentators frowned upon it.
By Elizabeth Sarah
Reprinted with
permission from The Jewish
Quarterly, Autumn 1993 (40:3).
Interestingly, sexual intimacy between women was not
mentioned at all in Jewish texts until 1,500 years ago. When we turn to the
first source of Jewish teaching, the Torah, the Five Books of Moses, redacted
either as early as the tenth century or as late as the fifth century BCE, we
find that the sections which outline prohibited sexual unions (Leviticus 18 and
20) do not include a single word about lesbianism. Leviticus 18:22, addressing
the individual male, states clearly: “You shall not lie with a male as with a
woman. It is an abhorrence” (to’evah).
And Leviticus 20:13 adds: “And a man who lies with a male as with a woman, both
of them have committed an abhorrence: They shall surely be put to death; their
blood shall be upon them.”
The context of each verse is a
lengthy statement detailing prohibited sexual unions; the operating rationale
is the separation of Israel from the peoples around them, and their
consecration to God. And it is here, right at the beginning of the story of
homosexuality and Judaism, that we find a clue to the assumptions underlying
Jewish teaching on lesbianism which emerged centuries later: women are included
in the texts of Leviticus 18 and 20, of course, but with the exception of the
case of bestiality (Lev. 18:23), women are the objects, not the subjects,
of the different types of sexual union, and there is no mention at all of women
in relation to one another.
The first fleeting allusion to
sexual contact between women is made by the rabbinic sages in Sifra (Acharei
Mot 9:8), a work of halakhic midrash (that is, rabbinic exegesis of legal
biblical material) which comments on the book of Leviticus and was edited no
earlier than the end of the fourth century CE (when the Jerusalem Talmud was
completed). Here, referring to the “laws” of Egypt and Canaan which the
Israelites are prohibited from following (Lev. 18:3), the text cites as an
example that “a man would marry [nosei]
a man, and a woman a woman”—a clear reference not only to same-sex intimate acts, but also to on‑going relationships between same‑sex
partners.
The next brief comments are found
in the Babylonian Talmud—edited about 100 years later in two different
tractates: Shabbat and Yevamot. Shabbat 65a/b refers to the father of Samuel
(Samuel being the pre‑eminent authority among Babylonian Jewry in the
middle of the third century) not permitting his daughters “to sleep together”.
The text offers two explanations for his position: one view links it to a
teaching of Rav Huna (a disciple of Samuel’s principal colleague and sparring
partner Rav): “For R. Huna said: ‘Women that play around [hamesolelot] with one another are unfit [pesulot] for the priesthood [i.e. to marry a High Priest].’” The majority of the sages, however, reached
a different conclusion: “No: it was in order that they should not become
accustomed to an alien body [gufa
nuchra’ah].”
Yevamot 76a makes it clear why the law does not follow
Rav Huna. After quoting his teaching the text adds:
“And even
according to Rav Eleazar, who stated that an unmarried man who cohabited with
an unmarried woman with no matrimonial intention renders her therefore a
prostitute [zona], this
disqualification ensues only in the case of a man, but when [the case] is that
of a woman [playing around with another woman] the action is regarded as mere
obscenity.”
Rav Huna’s teaching is rejected
because, unlike heterosexual cohabitation, sexual intimacy between women does
not render the individual women concerned “unfit”; it is peritzuta, “obscenity”, not zenut,
“unchastity” or “harlotry”. And if the women’s behavior does not render them
“unfit”, they are not thereby debarred from marrying a High Priest (who must
only marry a virgin—that is, a woman who is “fit”). Interestingly, the
expression “play[ing] around”, hamesolelot,
is a rabbinic euphemism for sexual behavior (sometimes translated as “making
sport” or “committing lewdness”) and is only used of women who engage in
intimate acts with each other or with their “little sons”. While the term is
very dismissive (in its simple form, the root letters, Samech Lamed Lamed, means to “swing”, to “be light”),
it is not at all ambiguous.
After the completion of the
Babylonian Talmud at the beginning of the sixth century, there were no further
textual references to lesbian behavior until Moses ben Maimon (1135‑1204)
(known as Maimonides or Rambam) clarified the halakhic position in his code,
the Mishneh Torah (Hilchot Issurei Bi’ah 21:8). He wrote:
“For women to play around with one another is
forbidden and belongs to ‘the practices of the Egyptians’ concerning which we
have been warned, ‘You shall not copy the practices of the land of Egypt’…But
though such conduct is forbidden, it is not punishable by lashing since there
is no specific prohibition against it and in any case no sexual intercourse
takes place at all. Consequently, such women are not forbidden to the
priesthood on account of unchastity, nor is a woman prohibited to her husband
because of it, since this does not constitute unchastity. But it is appropriate
to flog such women since they have done a forbidden thing. A man should be
particularly strict with his wife in this matter, and should prevent women
known to indulge in such practices from visiting her, and her from going to
visit them.”
Maimonides’ formulation of the halakha was upheld by Jacob ben Asher (1270?‑1340) in his
Arba’ah Turim a century later (Even haEzer 24), and by Joseph Caro (1488‑1575),
whose Shulchan Arukh (Even ha‑Ezer 24), published in 1563, became the
authoritative guide to halakha throughout the Jewish world—a status it still
occupies within Orthodox Jewry today. The Shulchan Arukh was the “final word”
on the subject for 400 years.
Rabbi Elizabeth Sarah
is a writer, editor, and part-time lecturer in Hebrew and Spirituality at the
Leo Baeck College (UK). She was appointed as part-time minister of the Brighton
and Hove Progressive Synagogue in December 2000.