New Ceremonies: Celebrating Aging
The author shares
the process of using Jewish texts and customs to celebrate a new stage of life.
By Savina J. Teubal
Reprinted with
permission of author from Four Centuries of Jewish Women's Spirituality: A
Sourcebook (Beacon Press).
Create a tradition? A tradition is based on accumulated
experience, handed down from ancestors to posterity. Well, I believe I did just
that! I created a ceremony, a rite of passage from adult to elder, to establish
my presence in the community as a functional and useful human being. The ritual
also served some personal needs: that of facing my mortality, for instance.
Calling my ritual a tradition may be a misnomer since my
ritual has not been "handed down to posterity." Nevertheless, I felt
that a crone ceremony [a ritual to celebrate aging] filled a significant need
in our society. Subsequently, others have created similar rites of passage
based on my own, and I have been asked to speak and write about this experience
on various occasions. I think I can consider that I have "handed
down" my experience.
Inspired by Genesis Stories
I decided to have a ritual on the occasion of my 60th
birthday. Sixty seemed to me an appropriate age because I had just begun to
feel the physical changes that come with age, changes that required a
modification of my lifestyle. However, the reason I was drawn to assume my new
status with a ceremony was inspired by the Genesis narratives I have been so
involved with for the past decade.
I came to realize that the biblical stories that dealt with
Sarah, Hagar, and Abraham were, in most cases, rituals. Each time a ritual was
performed, the life of the protagonist changed radically. Ostensibly, the main
theme dealt with in the Bible is succession: Sarah acquired a son; Hagar
acquired a son; and Abraham acquired two sons. But the overall theme is the
spiritual journey our ancestors set out on. Both Sarah and Abraham are advanced
in age at the time of their calling, so I thought that their summons was a
propitious one for us to follow. I therefore included in the ritual elements
from the Genesis narratives: a blessing, a change of name, a covenant, a
reconciliation with death, an affirmation of life.
Role of Community
A ritual must fulfill a communal need as well as a personal
one. That is the reason why I decided to have other women, whom I consider to
be a part of my spiritual community, create the ritual with me.
I have been asked on various occasions why I chose to have
the ceremony at temple instead of having it at my home. I did this for various
reasons: The temple symbolizes community, but, more than that, it symbolizes
Jewish community; it represents the substance of my roots; furthermore, I was
able to perform the liturgy denied me as an Orthodox Jewish woman.
I included portions of the Sabbath service because I
envisioned Simchat Hochmah
[literally, a "the joy of wisdom"] to be a truly Jewish ritual that
springs from specifically Jewish roots. The highlights of the Sabbath service
include carrying the scrolls and reading the weekly Torah portion. Carrying the
scrolls and reading from Torah were a deeply moving experience for someone who
had been allowed on the bimah [the
platform facing the Ark where the scrolls are kept] only on her wedding day. It
was as though I had been accepted as a full Jewish person for the first time in
my life!
Unlike the terse sentences that report the deaths of the
patriarchs, there is an entire chapter in Genesis dedicated to the death and
burial of the matriarch Sarah. One of the reasons for this exceptional
treatment is because of Sarah's status as mother of a people, of a life
reflected in death; but I think it was also symbolic of the magnitude of mortality
in the lifecycle. I believe that the detailed description of Sarah's death and
burial established her position in life, her mortality, and the wisdom of the
immortality of her essence. Genesis 23, then, teaches us the internalization of
death in the lifecycle.
Wearing White
How to face mortality in one's own ceremony is a difficult
proposition, to say the least. It was feminist scholar Drorah Setel's
inspiration that led me to consider wearing a kittel. The kittel is a white ceremonial robe worn by some
congregants on solemn occasions such as Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, during
one's lifetime, and serves in death as the shroud. In this way the body is
clothed in the same manner in the sanctity of life as… in the sanctity of
death. It is symbolic, in the larger scheme of things, of the cycle of life and
death in harmony with the cosmos.
I began the ceremony wearing an ancient robe, woven and made
by women of Macedonia, which I had bought some years ago in Yugoslavia. Halfway
into the ritual, I changed into a white linen galabie that I had brought with me from Jerusalem, where I had been
that summer. The galabie is a simple garment, like a long shirtdress, the
customary attire of Middle Eastern men and women. This garment was particularly
meaningful to me because my cultural background is Syrian and the galabie was
worn by my ancestors.
I think that anyone seriously considering taking part in a
Simhat Hochmah ritual should include the experience of wearing a kittel, the
garment they will be buried in. It is a sobering occurrence and was, perhaps,
the most moving part of the ritual.
Making a Covenant or Promise
Another element from the Sarah and Abraham story that I
chose to include in the ritual was a covenant or a promise. A covenant is a
solemn commitment that binds two parties to fulfill an agreement in which each
is rewarded by the action of the other. A promise is an assurance by one person
to fulfill an agreement, perhaps give a reward, but the rewarding is not
reciprocal.
God made covenants with Abraham and made promises to Sarah.
I elected to make a pledge in memory of the promises made to Sarah. I offered
my community a Beth Chayim Chadashim [the name of my synagogue] grant to anyone
who would continue my work in feminist Judaism.
I ended the ritual with the planting of a tree. Trees were a
significant spiritual symbol for our ancestors: Sarah lived in elonei mamre, a grove of sacred
terebinths at Mamre; Deborah, Rebekah's nurse, was buried under an oak in Beth
El; Abraham planted a tamarisk at Beer-sheva, etc.
Trees symbolized the connection between the depths of the
earth, where life is quickened, and the canopy above, where life becomes
visible. I brought a young tree (in a pot) to temple and symbolically planted
it with handfuls of earth and enjoined those who wished to partake in the
planting.
Savina J Teubal is the
author of the books: Sarah the Priestess: The First Matriarch of Genesis and Ancient Sisterhood: The Lost
Traditions of Hagar and Sarah, as well as
many essays and articles about biblical characters and eldering rituals.