Coming of Age: Adult Bat Mitzvah
Coming of Age: Adult Bat Mitzvah | |
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Directed by | Bonnie Burt |
Release dates |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Coming of Age: Adult Bat Mitzvah, is a documentary produced in 1989 and directed by Bonnie Burt.[1]
Summary
Bat mitzvahs are not only for pre-teens anymore. Exploring women’s place in Judaism, Coming of age: Adult Bat Mitzvah takes a candid look at this twist on a relatively new tradition and what it says about the push for equality of the sexes in synagogue life.
Coming of Age sits down with a group of women, aged 32 to 83, from different walks of life, to find out why, after all these years, they’ve decided to learn Hebrew and study to receive their bat mitzvahs. Sharing their excitement at being included in the less-than-century-old tradition, the women explain what their faith means to them.
Rabbis began to experiment with the idea of a bat mitzvah in the 1920s, but for decades it was still generally believed that men ran a synagogue — and a woman had no place on the bimah [synagogue podium]. It’s only with the recent feminist movement that girls have been invited to study Jewish texts and, in some sects, are encouraged to be active members of the synagogue.
Interestingly, as they prepare to be welcomed into their faith, many of the women interviewed reflect on their relationships with their fathers. Their bonds with the important male figures in their lives seem to represent many of these women’s connection to what has traditionally been a male-dominated faith.
In fact, many of the women have faced great perils that make their bat mitzvahs all the more meaningful and achievement. One woman says she’s grateful to be alive after her dramatic recovery from open-heart surgery, and with the bat mitzvah ceremony is celebrating her second chance at life. Another woman came from a family of seven sisters and was one of the few to survive the Holocaust. After making it through these trying experiences that tested their faith, these women value Judaism in a way they never could have at the age of twelve or thirteen.
Ultimately, the adult bat mitzvah is still a coming-of-age ceremony, but, at an older age, these women are coming at the milestone from a more self-aware and appreciative perspective.
Notes
- ↑ "Bonnie Burt". WOMEN MAKE MOVIES. March 2005. Retrieved June 27, 2008.
References
- "Coming of Age - Bonnie Burt Productions". Bonnie Burt Productions. June 2008. Retrieved July 1, 2008.