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Keren David

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Keren David,

Keren David

Opinion

It’s the new year and I want to hang up my hat

Hemlines and hats get Keren David hot under the collar

September 6, 2018 10:19
503025938
3 min read

Rosh Hashanah is a season of reflection, hope and honey cake. And, for anyone with a teenage daughter, a time for arguments that start with “That skirt is far too short to go clubbing in, let alone shul.”

Or, as my grandmother would say : “You can’t wear that; it’s cut up to your pupik!” I was never quite sure exactly which part of my anatomy the pupik was, but now I know: the belly-button. Oh, Grandma, you exaggerated. But only slightly.

It’s part of our tradition, in other words, that many Jewish women start off as rebellious girls, determined to flout the rules that demand modest dressing in shul, and end up enforcing those rules ourselves. We know just how we want our daughters to look as they sit next to us in shul. Modest, demure, serious and although beautiful completely unsexy. Make up, yes. Legs on show, no.

The question of modest dressing has gone mainstream recently, with a trend for covering up hitting the catwalks. This is excellent news for the more religious in our community, for whom modesty is a way of life, and also for the less religious Jewish mothers who can now take their daughters Yomtov shopping with some hope of finding a suitable outfit, something sufficiently stylish to please the girl, while not frightening the rabbi.

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