This is much bigger than any one issue. But here is a small sampling of recent issues in which this dynamic is playing out.
A yeshiva school bus in Williamsburg, NY that has covered windows so the students shouldn't see anything happening on the street on their way to school.
Jewish women and girls wearing burkas, completely covering their entire bodies, including hands and faces, on the streets of Israel.
Photo Credit: www.rationalistjudaism.com |
An IKEA catalog with absolutely no pictures of women. By design.
Every
single time a new development appears, the arguments are the same.
Some people are horrified by what new rules/practices/restrictions are being imposed in the name of tzniut*.
"This is not Judaism! This is not Torah!" they decry. "This is exactly the sort of thing that drives young people away from Judaism!"
And the counter reaction, totally predictable, is always "Who are we to judge!?" or "It's not your community. Why do you care?" and my personal favorite, "How dare you cause a chillul Hashem** by judging them?"
Every. Single. Time.
Personally, I fall on the side of being horrified by what is being sold as an attempt to increase holiness. But this is not really about my personal opinion. I'm trying to make a larger point here.
Some people are horrified by what new rules/practices/restrictions are being imposed in the name of tzniut*.
"This is not Judaism! This is not Torah!" they decry. "This is exactly the sort of thing that drives young people away from Judaism!"
And the counter reaction, totally predictable, is always "Who are we to judge!?" or "It's not your community. Why do you care?" and my personal favorite, "How dare you cause a chillul Hashem** by judging them?"
Every. Single. Time.
Personally, I fall on the side of being horrified by what is being sold as an attempt to increase holiness. But this is not really about my personal opinion. I'm trying to make a larger point here.
Clearly, the Orthodox Jewish community is working something out. And it isn't pretty to watch.
There is a fundamental split between outlooks. Are these new stringencies good for the Jews? Do they make us more pious and closer to God? Do they show how much we value holiness and what we're willing to sacrifice for it?
Or are these new stringencies not good for the Jews? Do they take us away from the essence of Torah? Are they merely a reflection of an obsession with men separating themselves from women?
Further, do we have a right to rebuke other Jews when we feel they have lost their way? Are we obligated to speak up when we think a core Torah value is being perverted?
Or is it a higher value to live and let live, especially when one is not being required to comply?
One thing is certain. We are surely being tested.
And frankly, I don't think we're earning such a good grade.
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*generally translated as modesty, but actually more nuanced than that. Tzniut, in its fuller sense, is related to the spiritual practice of not calling attention to oneself and not being overly concerned with externality.
** a desecration of God's name
** a desecration of God's name
The Lakewood school doesn't belong with the other ones. The school never said that it's wrong or a sin to have longer hair. They just have an old dress code policy, going way back, that their students can't have waist length hair. They picked 4 inches below the shoulders as the cut-off point, which is pretty long for a little kid. In the summer they sent out a letter to parents to let them know that when the kids came in to have their heads checked for lice, the volunteers would also check to make sure their hair wasn't too long so there wouldn't be a problem for any kids when school started. They started using a ruler to be fair to all kids so that no parents would complain. That's it.
ReplyDeleteImportant distinction. They do not claim that it's about tznius.
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