web analytics
May 21, 2013 /12 Sivan, 5773
At a Glance
Blogs
Sponsored Post
jumping Following a Passion for Sports to Israel

In Israel, a new five month scholarship program being offered to young aspiring athletes – one of them could be you.



Can Women say Kaddish?

I do not see this as a feminist issue at all. This is a human issue.
tell a friend
saying-Kadish1

When a parent dies one of the things done during the year long mourning period is to say Kaddish. This is usually done by a son. The idea behind that is to build up Zechuyos (merit) for the Niftar (the deceased).

The reason we do that is based on the idea that most people do not live a sin free life and before one merits his final place in Olam HaBa, the soul has to go through a ‘cleansing period’ whereby it pays for sins it committed during its brief stay in the body. By doing things in the merit of the Niftar it is hoped that the punishment it gets during this ‘cleansing period’ will be reduced.

This is a universal practice in Judaism. No matter how great – or not so great – the deceased parent was, assuming he was not a Rasha the practice is to say Kaddish for the same amount of time (11 months. Saying Kaddish for more than 11 months implies that the deceased was a Rasha). Why Kaddish was established as opposed to other ways of bringing merit to the deceased is beyond the scope of this post.

The question arises as to whether a woman can say Kaddish for a parent. There are differences of opinion about that. I am not here to Paskin. That is beyond my pay grade. But I believe there are Poskim that permit it.You would think that a woman saying Kaddish for a parent in Shul was tantamount to using profanity the way some people react to it. That is not OK. From a letter submitted to JOFA:

No, you can’t say kaddish because you’re a woman… Shh! Why can’t you keep your voice quiet!? We can hear you over the mechitza!… [The silence when no one says amen to my kaddish recitation]… You know, it doesn’t actually count when a daughter says kaddish… Couldn’t you get your husband or father to say kaddish instead?… It would be much more respectful if you didn’t say kaddish… Is there a man who is REALLY saying kaddish for your mom?

No one has a right to criticize any woman for saying Kaddish for a deceased parent. No matter what their opinion is about the permissibly or effectiveness of it. To say the things said to one such woman contained in this letter (reproduced above), is not only insensitive, but in my view a disgusting psychological abuse of another human being. An abuse of the type Chazal had some very harsh words for: Kol HaMelaben Pnei Chavero B’Rabim K’ilu Shofech Damo! Embarrassing some one publicly is tantamount to murder.

Kayla Jacobs submitted this letter as a reason for needing JOFA – the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance.

I submit that she does not need JOFA for that. I am not a member of JOFA and I am as outraged by such comments as she and any Orthodox Feminist is. Justifiably so. But do we really need a Feminist organization to protest this kind of insensitivity on the part of some ignorant people? Or do we need common sense?

Where is the empathy? Where is the Jewish Soul? Where is the brain?!

What kind of human being would insult a woman who is expressing the best way she knows how her mourning for a parent?

I do not see this as a feminist issue at all. This is a human issue. And if there are more than a few people in the religious world who are like this, the fault lies in the Chinuch they get. Either in the home or in the school. Or both.

Not that they aren’t entitled to their views with respect to who gets to say Kaddish and who doesn’t. Honorable people can disagree about that. But in how to treat a fellow human being. Especially one who is suffering the loss of a parent. The disgusting comments contained in that letter is not how that is done. Those kinds of statements can only lead down a different road. One that will require offspring to say Kaddish for more than 11 months.

Visit Emes Ve-Emunah.

tell a friend

About the Author: Harry Maryles runs the blog "Emes Ve-Emunah" which focuses on current events and issues that effect the Jewish world in general and Orthodoxy in particular. It discuses Hashkafa and news events of the day - from a Centrist perspctive and a philosphy of Torah U'Mada. He can be reached at hmaryles@yahoo.com.


You might also be interested in:


3 comments so far

You must log in to post a comment.

3 Responses to “Can Women say Kaddish?”

  1. Chaiya Eitan says:

    Why in the world not????

  2. SJ Cottrell says:

    Kaddish, Ohio?

  3. Chaiya Eitan says:

    There’s a Kaddish, Ohio???

  4. I share the concern and also agree that a halachic opinion is above my pay grade. Liked the expression. I do know that the idea of kaddish is having offspring who learn Torah and do mitzvot to give their parents or other relatives merit in the next world. Maybe people need to lower the profile of Kaddish a little bit.

  5. Fred, why is it my concern? Because there are people who feel bad because they are discouraged from saying Kaddish, usually single women, etc. who don't have anyone male willing to go to shul and do it. I understand these people and feel their pain. When a parent dies, you don't always know how to deal with it. The solution should be between you and your local rabbi, if you have one. Sometimes that's the problem, too.

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Binyamin and Chaya Maryles, uncle and aunt of Emes Ve-Emunah author Harry Maryles.
Current Top Story
Ultra Orthodox Jewish youths studying religious texts at a Yeshiva in Jerusalem
Haredi Tycoons Raising $100 Million to Replace Lapid’s Budget Cuts
Latest Blogs Stories
Mourners at the funeral for the victims of Monday's shooting in Toulouse in Jerusalem, March 21, 2012.

You can’t blame the French for wanting to minimize their made-in-Europe Islamic terror problem. The problem is with how reality keeps messing with comfortable theories.

Rabbi Moshe Grylak

What is really being gained by continuing to force Haredim to stay in the beis medrash full time via a draft that exempts Haredim?

"The relationship between Islam and the West includes centuries of co-existence and cooperation."

The video story was part of a theme that has run through Obama’s presidency from the beginning.

Goldstein 485x300

An interview with Penny Sansevieri, founder and head of Author Marketing Experts.

The Guardian took the hideous claim that the IDF fired mercilessly at a young boy until he was dead at face value, without even a hint of journalistic skepticism.

Two people have reported snow in the late May-early June, though in both cases, it was hearsay.

It seems Russia has decided that the “strong horse” in the Middle East is Iran and the Shiites.

Ouni Abed Botrous Hadaddeen compares the Jordanian king to Yasser Arafat, claiming that Abdullah to is two faced.

If Shas does agree to allow a secular core curriculum in their schools, that will put Ashkenazi Haredi leaders between a rock and a hard place.

What Rav Soloveitchik said in 1974 is truer than ever: normative Judaism is on the defensive in the modern world.

The Ruth story demonstrates how all Jews should treat the strangers among us.

Shavuot reflects the centrality of ‘seven’ in Judaism.

The Egyptian ambassador warned against allowing Jews to pray at the Temple Mount even under a time-share system.

A response to Ahmadinejad’s vitriol from a Jew of Persian descent.

the title rabbi (or its equivalent) is more than about recognition of achievement.

By agreeing with said gangsters that ‘Palestine’ is a state, Google is in effect agreeing that the Jewish people do not have a legitimate state.

More Articles from Harry Maryles
Rabbi Moshe Grylak

What is really being gained by continuing to force Haredim to stay in the beis medrash full time via a draft that exempts Haredim?

Haredi Protesting gzeiras

If Shas does agree to allow a secular core curriculum in their schools, that will put Ashkenazi Haredi leaders between a rock and a hard place.

the title rabbi (or its equivalent) is more than about recognition of achievement.

The issue is not our obligation to listen to our rabbinic leaders. It is about whether we should listen to the rabbinic leaders of others.

With all the good intention of Israel’s rabbinic leaders, how could they not see that this was going to happen?

What I do not understand is the harshness of his condemnation.

We are a people whose mandate is Torah observance in all matters – between man and God as well as between man and his fellow man.

There is only one word that can explain the over the top reaction by Haredi establishment to this: Paranoia.

    Latest Poll

    Which is the most beautiful location in Jerusalem?









    View Results

    Loading ... Loading ...

Printed from: http://www.jewishpress.com/blogs/haemtza/can-women-say-kaddish/2012/12/06/

Scan this QR code to visit this page online:

Close