Bar and Bat Mitzvah
In Judaism, a Bar Mitzvah is a Jewish boy, and a Bat Mitzvah a Jewish girl, who has turned 13 years old (or for a girl in the Orthodox movement, 12 years old). They go through a rite of passage which symbolizes the young person's responsibility for themselves.
Before the bar mitzvah, the child's parents hold the responsibility for the child's actions. After this age, the boys and girls bear their own responsibility, and are able to participate in all areas of Jewish community life. It marks their coming of age. The terms are also used for the ceremony celebrating this event.
- Bar Mitzvah (pl. B'nai Mitzvah) comes from the Aramaic בר מצוה, "one (m.) to whom the commandments apply". (If it were Hebrew it would be בן (ben) not בר (bar). בר is "son" in Aramaic, and בן (ben) is son in Hebrew.).
- Bat Mitzvah (pl. B'not Mitzvah) is בת מצוה, "one (f.) to whom the commandments apply" (Ashkenazi: Bas Mitzvah).
According to Jewish law, when Jewish children reach the age of majority (generally thirteen years for boys and twelve for girls.) Then they become responsible for their actions, and "become a Bar or Bat Mitzvah". This is also the time when physical puberty[1] normally begins. Before this the child's parents have the responsibility that the child follows Jewish law and tradition and, after this age, children have their own responsibility for Jewish ritual law, tradition, and ethics and have the right to take part in all areas of Jewish community life.[2]
Bar And Bat Mitzvah Media
Bar Mitzvah in a Synagogue by Oscar Rex
An 1839 description of an upcoming Manhattan bar mitzvah reported in the New York Herald
Bar mitzvah at the Western Wall in Jerusalem
Bar mitzvah ceremony at a Reform synagogue
Bar mitzvah at the Western Wall in Jerusalem
A boy at his bar mitzvah participating in the traditional hora dance
A Conservative bat mitzvah in Israel
Reading from the Torah (Sephardi custom)
References
Further reading
Oppenheimer, Mark. Thirteen and a Day: The Bar and Bat Mitzvah across America. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2005.
Other websites
- Schauss, Hayyim. History of Bar Mitzvah Archived 2009-02-27 at the Wayback Machine
- "Bar Mitzvah, Bat Mitzvah and Confirmation"
- The Official Israeli Ministry of Tourism Website with information about celebrating Bar/Bat Mitzvah in Jerusalem Archived 2010-02-02 at the Wayback Machine
- Secular Humanistic Bar/Bat Mitzvah Archived 2009-06-01 at the Wayback Machine