New Ceremonies: Giving Birth
Women have been
creating new rituals that use traditional images and texts to reflect their
experiences of childbirth.
By Lori Hope Lefkovitz
Excerpted with
permission from Lifecycles Vol. 1: Jewish Women on Life Passages & Personal
Milestones (Jewish Lights Publishing).
Until very recently, few birth ceremonies were practiced.
Susan Weidman Schneider, in her now classic book, Jewish and Female, writes with reference to giving birth that
"there has been scant traditional ritual around the women in the
picture--whether as mothers or daughters." She echoes Blu Greenberg's
question: "Could it be that if men had been giving birth all these
centuries, some fantastic ritual would have developed by now?"
Instead… [books] that… identify
themselves as comprehensive of the stages of Jewish life… begin describing life
rituals not with fertility, conception, pregnancy, labor, or even birth itself.
[They] begin with brit milah
(covenant of circumcision ritual) and sometimes with the conferral of a name
for a daughter. Given high rates of infant mortality, Judaism may have
cautiously waited to celebrate birth at brit when one could be more confident
in the baby's viability.
Psalms and Blessings
The mandate of the tradition
around birth has been limited. Psalm 126 has long been associated with birth,
likely due to the verse "Those who sow in tears will reap in joy"
(Psalms 126:5). Psalm 118, which begins "Out of the narrow place I called
upon God, who answered me in spaciousness" has been paraphrased in Yiddish
and recast as a tkhine [prayer or
devotion for Jewish women] for childbirth. It tells of coming close to death,
but not succumbing, and of trusting in God.
Brief blessings of thanksgiving
at birth itself are increasingly usual in Orthodoxy: The birth of a son
commands the blessing Hatov Vehametiv (naming
God as good and doer of the good), and a daughter is greeted with the Sheheheyanu prayer, expressing gratitude
for sustaining the lives of the parents to this moment. Postpartum, a mother,
or her spouse on her behalf, bentshes
gomel (recites the prayer of thanksgiving for coming through danger in
safety) in the synagogue.
Traditions and Conception
While the legal mandate is small, folk traditions have been
sustained through the ages. Monthly ritual immersion can be understood as
signifying readiness for motherhood. In addition, Jewish mystical tradition
encourages lovemaking on Friday night, and considers a conception on the
Sabbath particularly blessed, since Shabbat
(Sabbath) is said to reunite the male and female aspects of God. From the
fervent prayers of the barren mothers of Scriptures, until our own century,
Jewish women have maintained traditions of petition to God for conception.
Women hopeful of fertility have long invoked the names of Rachel and Hannah,
the classic "barren mothers," and have wept beside Rachel's tomb in
Israel.
Women's Prayers Before the Enlightenment
Recent years have seen the
publication of women's prayers that focus on childbirth in its many stages:
Prayers for conception, for each of the months, for the beginning of labor, for
the stages of childbirth, and for the postpartum. [Other] books… have again
brought to light poetry and prayers which women shared for several centuries,
but which fell into virtual darkness during the Enlightenment. These prayers
have provided source material for recent efforts of Jewish women to sanctify
childbirth in ways authentic to both Judaism and women's history.
Chava Weissler, an expert on
tkhines,observes that the male
rabbinic tradition "collapses all women into Eve" and makes much of
the association between sin and childbirth. The tkhines that seem to be
authored by women, in contrast, plead for the health and safety of mother and
infant and address the question of suffering. As Weissler writes, attention is
paid to "the physical discomfort, pain, and danger women experience in
menstruation and childbirth. The authors of the tkhines want to know why women
suffer, not why they bleed."
Contemporary Liturgy and Ritual
Tkhineliterature
nourishes contemporary efforts to produce liturgy and rituals for childbirth….
Jane Litman's "M'ugelet: A Pregnancy
Ritual" uses a cord that had been wrapped around Rachel's tomb. A group of women recite adapted tkhines
and pass the pregnant woman around a circle, chanting personal blessings as she
becomes entwined by the cord to which she may later cling while giving birth.
This ceremony resonates with some older customs…. [For
example,] a woman in difficult labor was sometimes given the keys of the
synagogue to clutch or the cord that binds the Torah….
Women have also borrowed images from the Jewish wedding in
creating childbirth rituals. In Reconstructionist,
Shoshanah Zonderman describes a ritual that she designed for 12 women on
the last full moon of her pregnancy; it included a ceremony parallel to the
wedding and a document parallel to the ketubah
(wedding contract). The women used symbols and fruits, breathing exercises
and chanting, and they completed a Jewish mandala upon which the mother focused
during labor and which now has a permanent place in the family home."
Dr. Tikva Frymer-Kensky has drawn on a variety of ancient
traditions--Jewish and non-Jewish--in creating liturgical poems for pregnancy
and childbirth. Schneider in Jewish and
Female includes Nechama Liss-Levenson and her husband's simple ritual for
conception: The couple marked their decision to stop using contraception by
making Kiddush (blessing over wine on
Sabbath or holidays) and reciting the Sheva
Berakhot (seven marital blessings) to reestablish the traditional
connection between marriage and childbirth, and to sanctify their choice to
wait until they were ready to conceive.
Several women who have created
new prayer and ritual shift focus from the birth of the baby to the birth of a
"mother." Zonderman writes that she "thought of her advancing
pregnancy as a passage through a constricting tunnel to emergence with a
revitalized, fuller identity as a Jewish mother--a birth image. This is also
the metaphor of the Exodus from Egypt--mitzrayim
(Egypt) being a narrow (tzar) place
of oppression--when the Israelites passed through the (birthing) waters of the
Red Sea to accept new ethico-religious obligations at Mt. Sinai. In becoming a
mother, I was accepting new responsibilities and a commitment to the future of
the Jewish people."
The Trends in New Rituals
These new religious expressions
of gratitude are particularly effective in their appropriation of feminine
biblical metaphors. The Exodus from Egypt through the parted Red Sea is the
central moment in the drama of the Israelite past, and it remains the central
metaphor for Jewish redemption. Only recently have we stressed that it is a
birth metaphor, the passage of people into a new life of trials and triumphs
through parted waters, after which nourishment in the form of manna [food that God provided to the
Israelites in the desert] is bestowed like mother's milk, various in its taste,
and supply generated by demand.
The practice of ritual immersion
might be reimagined in analogous ways by invoking, for example, Miriam's well,
the source of water for the Israelites in the desert. Amniotic waters can be
seen as analogous to the tohu vavohu (hurly
burly) out of which God labored in birthing the world. The bringing of first
fruits to the Temple also finds a new vitality as a feminine image of birth per se when it is brought back to the
experience of childbirth in new rituals and prayers. New as these compositions
are, they can be especially poignant when they speak with the force of
tradition.
For example, in many Jewish
families, including my own, it is customary to add a candle to one's Sabbath
candelabrum for each new family member. A
yahrzeit (anniversary of a death) candle is burned when a Jew dies and
annually on the anniversary of a family member's death. A ner neshamah (soul candle) is often lit at brit and naming
ceremonies. Recognizing the candle as a Jewish symbol for the soul, a group of
contemporary women liturgists has suggested a rite of conception in which an
unlit candle is introduced to the Sabbath candelabrum. In the unfortunate event
of a failed pregnancy, this candle would be ritually burned, like a yahrzeitcandle, as an act of mourning. An
abortion is marked by submerging the lit candle in water. Under happier
circumstances, on the first Sabbath following the birth of the baby, the unlit
candle becomes a light among its companions and its place is permanently filled
on the candelabrum….
Reclaiming "The Body" of Tradition
Contemplating how childbirth can connect us to our foremothers
has reminded me of one of the few details that I know about my paternal
grandmother, who gave birth to eight children. My father, who was second
oldest, recalls that the older children were made to leave the house when his
mother delivered. Still, she screamed loudly enough that the frightened boy
could hear.
I screamed my heart out when Samara was born and hoped at
that moment that my grandmother's screaming may have been like my own:
Liberated, defiant of pain, awe-struck, thrilled. I have come to think of my
screams as my foremothers' and my Judaism's presence in the delivery room. The
work of naturalizing and assimilating women's responses to childbirth is in
progress. And there is much work still to do--to honor the laughter of Sarah,
to sanctify the screams of our mothers, and to bequeath powers of articulation
to our daughters as they labor in the creation of worlds to come.
Lori Hope Lefkovitz is
Gottesman Kolot Professor of Gender and Judaism at the Reconstructionist
Rabbinical College and Academic Director of Kolot--Center for Jewish Women's
and Gender Studies. She is also a fellow of the Institute of Philadelphia
Association for Psychoanalysis; author of The Character of Beauty in the
Victorian Novel; editor of Textual
Bodies: Changing Boundaries of Literary Representation; and co-editor of Shaping Losses: Cultural Memory and the
Holocaust.
Excerpted from Lifecycles
Vol. 1: Jewish Women on Life Passages & Personal Milestones © Debra Orenstein (Woodstock, VT.: Jewish
Lights Publishing). $19.95 + $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.