Become a Member
Keren David

ByKeren David, Keren David

Opinion

At last, women's brains are valued over their baking

'Many women are only too happy to avoid the potential ordeal of having to sing in public, or indeed, perform in any way.'

September 26, 2019 10:31
Chief Rabbi Mirvis with graduates from the Ma'ayan scheme
3 min read

Last month I was in New York for the joyous occasion of my nephew’s wedding. At the lunch after the aufruf, his friends from yeshivah made heartfelt speeches, poking fun at his English accent and sharing their Jewish knowledge.

The bride wasn’t present —the tradition in their Modern Orthodox community — but several of the yeshivah friends’ wives were there, young women, some already with babies. One of them got up to speak. Her dress was modest, her hair hidden under a sheitel, but her speech was the most accomplished and confident of all, fizzing with knowledge and insight, and happy to challenge the men who giggled at a reference to the happy couple’s love life.

Back in the UK, the battle over women’s equality in Orthodox synagogues is generally played out over our role in synagogue services. Why can’t women play a more active role, what is the problem with women leading services and being called up alongside men? Male power is about visibility and space, women reduced to mere spectators at our services yet not allowed to hold equal services of our own.

For many, this is the issue that leads them to join more progressive communities where they can take a more active role. Often they regard the women left behind in the ladies’ galleries or behind mechitzahs with utter bafflement. Why do they stay, when they are so clearly treated as second class citizens?