The Parents' Role in a Bar/Bat Mitzvah Service
Traditionally, the
father recited one blessing during the service, but today, parents are often
much more involved.
By Rabbi Daniel Kohn
In a strictly traditional bar mitzvah celebration, the role
of the bar mitzvah boy's parents (usually, just the father) during the worship
service is to recite a blessing, baruch
she-p'tarani, declaring the child to be liable for his or her own actions,
according to Jewish law. (In traditional circles, girls do not participate
ritually in the service and hence do not usually receive this blessing.) In
liberal synagogues, parents often say only the shehecheyanu blessing, thanking God for being alive to celebrate
the occasion, and some are taking on new roles, like presenting a tallit (ritual prayer shawl) to their
child and leading parts of the service.
The Father Traditionally Recited a Single Blessing
The baruch
she-p'tarani blessing reads, "Praised are You, Adonai our God, ruler
of the universe who has excused me (from being liable) for this one (meaning,
the child)." The blessing was traditionally recited by the father, and
today is said by both parents in some liberal synagogues. The blessing has two
forms, one that mentions God's name and one that does not. Although this seems
like a rather strange and perplexing blessing for parents at their child's
coming of age ceremony, it is entirely consistent with the spiritual
significance of the event.
In traditional Judaism, children younger than bar/bat
mitzvah age are exempt from the spiritual obligations of observing the Jewish mitzvot, or commandments. This means
that children are not required to fast on Yom Kippur, observe Shabbat (Sabbath) prohibitions, or
perform other religious rituals, although in actuality children are slowly
educated about the commandments and inculcated into their eventual observance.
When children attain their Jewish legal majority, or adult
status (at age 12 for a girl and 13 for a boy), they become legally and morally
responsible for their own actions and religious observances in the eyes of God.
At the same time, the parents are no longer responsible for any sins committed
by the child. When parents recite baruch
she-p'tarani, they are publicly declaring their children to be both
ritually and legally responsible adults in the Jewish tradition.
For some rabbis in the liberal movements, the concept of
religious liability no longer resonates, and they have chosen to omit this
blessing. Yet others are either encouraging its use or offering it as an
option. These rabbis are re-visioning the meaning of the blessing in a more
modern context--as symbolizing a new stage in the child's life and in the
parent-child relationship. It is a form of "letting go," in which
children are becoming their own persons and must make their own moral
judgments. To make the blessing more palatable to the modern ear, some of these
rabbis have developed kavvanot (spiritual
preparations) to introduce it or new translations of the blessing itself.
In the liberal movements, most parents recite the shehecheyanu, which reads, "Praised
are You, Adonai our God, ruler of the universe, who has kept us in life,
sustained us, and brought us to this day." In fact, Jews recite this
blessing at every momentous occasion and holiday, thanking God for the
privilege of being alive to celebrate the event. Because of the joyous nature
of this blessing, it is a significant moment in many bar/bat mitzvah
celebrations in synagogues around the world.
Expanding the Parental Role With New Traditions
Over time, parents have taken on new roles in their
children's bar/bat mitzvah celebrations, which vary by synagogue and community.
1.
Presentation of a
tallit. The tallit is worn by adult Jews over the age of bar/bat mitzvah,
though some traditionalist Jews don't wear one until marriage. In some
synagogues, the parents publicly present their child with a tallit on the
occasion of his or her first worship service as an adult Jew, sometimes
accompanied by a few personal remarks to their child.
2.
Passing the Torah
through the generations. When the Torah is removed from the ark, many
communities invite the grandparents and parents of the child to the bimah (pulpit) and physically hand the
Torah from one generation to another, symbolizing the chain and continuity of
the Jewish tradition within families.
3.
Receiving aliyot to the Torah. Receiving an aliyah--that is, being called to the
Torah at a Shabbat morning service to recite the blessings before and after the
ritual chanting of the weekly Torah reading--is the essential ritual activity
of the bar/bat mitzvah at the worship service. To honor the parents and make it
possible for them to be at the reading table during their child's aliyah and
Torah reading, a custom has developed for the parents to receive an aliyah.
4.
Participating in
leading the worship services, along with other family members. While
nepotism is generally frowned on in the business world, the celebration of
bar/bat mitzvah is considered an ideal opportunity for other members of the
family to participate in the worship services. Family members, including
parents, brothers and sisters, and more extended family members may lead parts
of the worship service, chant other sections of the weekly Torah reading, or
lead English readings.
5.
Making speeches to the
bar/bat mitzvah child. At the end of worship services involving a bar/bat
mitzvah celebration, many communities invite the parents to the bimah to share
a few personal words of reflection and blessing with their child before the
entire community.
These rituals are merely custom and vary from one synagogue
to the next. Some are even considered controversial, as their inclusion
lengthens the worship services and turns a public, communal worship service
into a seemingly private event. Other communities value these customs as they
emphasize the transformation of children into fully participatory adults in the
Jewish community. In either case, the celebration of bar/bat mitzvah in modern
synagogue worship services continues to be a case of evolution, change, and
development.
Rabbi Daniel Kohn, a
native of St. Louis, Missouri, was ordained at the Jewish Theological Seminary
of America in 1991. He is the author of several books on Jewish education and
spirituality, and currently writes and teaches throughout the San Francisco Bay
area.