debka_notion: (Default)
debka_notion ([personal profile] debka_notion) wrote2004-10-03 12:05 pm

How Egalitarian is Egalitarian?

So in the last big-Jewish-post (on counting non-egal women in an egal minyan, where egal is gender-egalitarian, for my pickier readers), I remembered that Egal here also has an interesting attitude (which has been changing and vacillating: it's definitely an in-process thing) on people who don't use certain ritualwear. A lot of it is based on long-term social norms from the larger (read: Orthodox) community, certainly. But it certainly isn't gender-egalitarian in its assumptions there.

The particular issue I'm thinking of is divided into 2 areas, and I freely admit that I'm often as guilty of both as the next person. But I'm working on it.

Part 1: If a man shows up to the minyan, especially say, on a weekday morning, when people tend to assume that it's only people who are strongly committed to observance in an egalitarian setting who show up (little else will get a college student up to be somewhere at 7:45 when it isn't absolutely required), someone will dig up a spare kippah and offer it to him- and get offended if he declines (this has all happened). So for a man to be there with his head uncovered comes across as offensive or unacceptable at the very least. But there are generally several women there, often women who do wear a tallit or even tfillin at the appropriate times who don't cover their head in any way, and no one objects at all. No one offers them a kippah or other headcovering (and Egal is the only egalitarian minyan I've seen without a supply of the lace-doily-things. Kippot can pretty easily be seen as beged ish, even though I don't see them that way, especially the sorts that hand around in public-kippah-bins. Maybe minyanim (pl. of minyan) ought to keep a supply of cocktail hats*?). I know head covering is only minhag- but then why make such a fuss if a man chooses not to wear one?

Part 2: Both men and women are given assorted honors in the community, and with the exceptions of hagbah (lifting the torah) and candle lighting, these are given quite gender-neutrally. (I see another piece of writing coming up- but that is Off Topic For Now.) But when a man is given an honor and he is not wearing a tallit, he is often offered someone's for the period that he is specifically in public sight, and he will rarely refuse. There are men who don't wear a tallit customarily because they don't have one or think it is not necessary, and there are men who don't wear one because they wear a tallit-katan (a 4--cournered undergarment with the knotted fringes on each corner that fulfill the mitzvah-requirement that the tallit fulfills in a more decorative and prayer-time specific way), and don't believe that unmarried men should wear a tallit except when actively participating in a service. Either way, the offer is made, and usually accepted. Women (who yes, are less likely to wear a tallit: some folks feel like it's men's clothing, and therefore forbidden, or they jsut aren't interested in wearing one.) are less likely to be offered a tallit. I've noticed this even at mincha (the afternoon prayer) where no one besides the people actively participating wear a tallit. So a woman who normally wears a tallit in the morning will have an honor and not be offered a tallit when a man who doesn't wear one except when asked to will be offered one and accept. Here the folks at the minyan are getting better about offering- but it's an interesting statement that they/we have to think consciously to do so, when with men it's an assumption.


*Preferably the ones without veiling over the eyes: religious head coverings ought not to send sexual signals. I've swapped into footnotes here because I was stacking entirely too many parentheses.

[identity profile] doodah.livejournal.com 2004-10-03 11:16 am (UTC)(link)
That's so interesting...I guess since I dress tzniusly anyhow (and since a few girls always show up in short sleeves, pants, short skirts, see-through shirts, low-cut shirts, etc.) and always sit in the same place (in the front, where I have no idea who is looking at me) and know most of the people in the room (whose opinions about my appearance don't mean a thing to me), davening with BOO is not a big deal for me. At other ortho shuls, women rarely come, so I also feel comfortable.

I feel so claustrophobic when other people are within touching distance during davening. I just want it to be me and Hashem and to be able to forget about everyone else in the room for those few minutes. Perhaps I'm not cut out for community davening. :) That being said, I am still going to try to come to Egal, just once, to see what it's like.

[identity profile] debka-notion.livejournal.com 2004-10-03 12:04 pm (UTC)(link)
I usually like to have some space when I'm davening, and more so if I'm in an insecure mood. But there are times when knowing that there are people right near me is a comfort and contributes rather than injures my prayer experience. There are some sorts of prayers where it really is a community affair, or where having a community there makes it more powerful. Sometimes I do have a more powerful/personal experience praying on my own, but not always, by far.