Today's Lavish Feasts Derive from Meals with Sacred
Status
Although the
bar/bat mitzvah meal is traditionally a seudat
mitzvah--a meal with sacred status--extravagance has been rife for hundreds
of years.
By Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin
Reprinted from
Putting God on the Guest List: How to Reclaim the Spiritual
Meaning of Your Child's Bar or Bat mitzvah (Jewish Lights Publishing).
The bar and bat mitzvah party has been much criticized over
the years, and for good reason. Yet most Jews do not know that the party is an
integral part of the bar and bat mitzvah ritual. The first mention of the bar
mitzvah party is in the Shulhan Arukh (the classic 16th-century code of Jewish
law), "It is the religious obligation of the father to tender a festive
meal in honor of his son's becoming bar mitzvah, just as he might do when the
boy marries."
A Long Tradition
From a halakhic
(Jewish legal) point of view, then, the party has a proud lineage. But
references to bar mitzvah parties go back even further. Scholars have a field
day in locating the genuine seed of the custom.
Some say it goes back to Isaac's weaning. Genesis 21:8 says
Abraham threw a feast to celebrate that event. One ancient source suggested
that Isaac was weaned at the age of 13 (Midrash, Bereshit Rabbah 53:10)!
Therefore, the party, and, therefore, the connection to the age of 13.
Elsewhere, the midrash
[interpretive tradition] suggests that Abraham regretted that he had rejoiced
and made others rejoice at the feast for Isaac, yet did not make an offering to
God. God said to him, "I know that even if I commanded you to offer your
only son to Me, you would not refuse" (Bereshit Rabbah 55:4). This midrash
teaches that the binding of Isaac was God's way of showing Abraham that he had
not lost the capacity to make an offering to God.
Some say the tradition of the bar mitzvah party goes back to
Rabbi Yosef in the Talmud (Kiddushin 31a). Rabbi Yosef was blind. In Jewish
law, the blind were exempt from doing mitzvot
(commandments). But Rabbi Yosef realized that he was already doing the mitzvot.
Why not get "credit" for doing so? He wanted to change his status
from someone who didn't have to do the mitzvot to someone who had to do the
mitzvot.
So Rabbi Yosef made an offer. If some skilled sage could
prove that a blind person had an obligation to do mitzvot, he would host a
great celebration to mark his change in status. A little more than 1,000 years
later, the 16th-century legal authority, Rabbi Solomon Luria, drew on his
knowledge of this talmudic discussion. He reasoned that if Rabbi Yosef could
celebrate that he was now obligated
to do the mitzvot, shouldn't we celebrate and give thanks to God that a bar
mitzvah was now obligated to fulfill the mitzvot?
Rabbi Luria ruled that the bar mitzvah meal is a seudat mitzvah (a religiously commanded
festive meal) on the same spiritual level as the wedding feast. The boy would
have to give a religious discourse during the banquet. In Poland, the bar
mitzvah discourse (drasha) became
part of the festive meal. This was probably the origin of the bar and bat
mitzvah speech, which, in the public imagination, became transformed into the
famous "Today, I am a fountain pen" speech of classic Jewish comedy.
The bar mitzvah feast occurred in the afternoon as the third
meal of the Sabbath. An hour before the afternoon service (Mincha), the lad would go to the homes of his guests to invite them
to the third meal. At the meal, the lad would discourse on the customs of bar
mitzvah, and he would lead the grace after the meal.
A Choice: Celebration or Conspicuous Consumption?
Modern American Jews are not the first Jews to confront the
ethical overtones of conspicuous consumption [at the bar mitzvah feasts]. Even
in medieval times, there were excesses in celebration. But in the 16th century,
Solomon Luria didn't like what he saw. In his commentary on the Talmud, he
condemned bar mitzvah parties as "occasions for wild levity, just for the
purpose of stuffing the gullet" (Yam Shel Shelomo, Baba Kama, 7:37).
The rabbis of the Middle Ages eventually enacted laws to limit
spending on festivities. They did this to protect the dignity of the less
wealthy.
Beyond this, I suspect that the rabbis worried about the
jealousy of gentile neighbors, who might use displays of Jewish opulence as an
excuse for a pogrom. Saul ha-Levi Morteira, a leading rabbi of 17th-century
Amsterdam (and the teacher of philosopher Baruch Spinoza), made this point in a
sermon he gave around the year 1622.
The first generation of our ancestors who left the
land of Canaan knew that they were resident aliens who had departed from their
own land and come to a land not theirs. They continued to think of themselves
as aliens, and they did not overreach. The Egyptians loved them and bore them
no envy. But after their death, the following generation thought of Egypt as
the land of their birth. They grew arrogant and became so provocative in their
behavior that they aroused the envy of the Egyptians, who decreed harsh laws
against them and enslaved them.
Finally, some historians suggest that these laws kept the
emerging nouveau riche in their
places so they did not threaten the status of the Jewish "old guard."
In the early decades of the 20th century, when Jews were
first becoming comfortable in America, bar mitzvah parties became especially
opulent. Soon, the bar mitzvah's social component would eclipse its ritual
function. The 1920s and 1930s saw the growth of the catering industry, which
encouraged the transformation of bar mitzvah from a ceremony to an
"affair." This era also saw the growth of gift giving in connection
with bar mitzvah.
Soon, the materialism that had become attached to bar
mitzvah was decried. In 1938, the noted Orthodox rabbi, H. Pereira Mendes,
insisted that the bar mitzvah "not be allowed to deteriorate into merely a
day for perfunctory observance or for merry-making or gifts."
Twenty-six years later, the Central Conference of American
Rabbis [the chief body of Reform rabbis] condemned the deterioration in the
character of the bar mitzvah "affair." The extravagant consumption,
the conspicuous waste, and the crudity of many of these affairs are rapidly
becoming a public Jewish scandal. The lowering of standards as reflected in
many bar mitzvah celebrations is in direct violation of the teaching of the
Torah. The trend toward the abandonment of aesthetic standards can lead to the
abandonment of ethical standards as well.
Jeffrey K. Salkin is
spiritual leader of The Community Synagogue in Port Washington, New York. He is
also the author of a companion bat/bat mitzvah book for children, For
Kids--Putting God on Your Guest List, and
Being God's Partner: How to Find the Hidden Link Between Spirituality and Your
Work.
Excerpted from
Putting God on the Guest List: How to Reclaim the Spiritual
Meaning of Your Child's Bar or Bat Mitzvah, 2nd
Edition (c) 1996, Jeffrey K.
Salkin. (Woodstock, VT: Jewish Lights Publishing) $16.95+3.75 s/h. Order by
mail or call 800-962-4544 or on-line at www.jewishlights.com.
Permission
granted by Jewish Lights Publishing, P.O. Box 237, Woodstock, VT 05091.