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Jewish religious clothing

Jewish religious clothing is apparel worn by Jews in connection with the practice of the Jewish religion. Jewish religious clothing has changed over time while maintaining the influences of biblical commandments and Jewish religious law regarding clothing and modesty (tzniut). Contemporary styles in the wider culture also have a bearing on Jewish religious clothing, although this extent is limited.

Hasidic men in Borough Park, Brooklyn. The man on the left is wearing a shtreimel and a tallit, and the other man traditional Hasidic garb: long suit, black hat, and gartel.

Historical background

The Torah set forth rules for dress that, following later rabbinical tradition, were interpreted as setting Jews apart from the communities in which they lived.[1]

Classical Greek and Roman sources, that often ridicule many aspects of Jewish life, do not remark on their clothing and subject it to caricature, as they do when touching on Celtic, Germanic, and Persian peoples, and mock their different modes of dress.[2] Cultural anthropologist Eric Silverman argues that Jews in the late antiquity period used clothes and hair-styles like the people around them.[3] At 2 Maccabees 4:12, it is said that the Maccabees slaughtered Jewish youths guilty of Hellenizing in wearing caps typical of Greek youths.[3]

In the Mishnaic period, as well as in many Islamic countries until the mid-20th century, Jewish men typically wore a tunic (Hebrew: חלוק, ḥalūk), instead of trousers.[4] In the same countries, many different local regulations emerged to make Christian and Jewish dhimmis look distinctive in their public appearance. In 1198, the Almohad emir Abu Yusuf Yaqub al-Mansur decreed that Jews must wear a dark blue garb, with very large sleeves and a grotesquely oversized hat;[5] his son altered the colour to yellow, a change that may have influenced Catholic ordinances some time later.[5] German ethnographer Erich Brauer (1895–1942) noted that in Yemen of his time, Jews were not allowed to wear clothing of any color besides blue.[6] Earlier, in Jacob Saphir's time (1859), they would wear outer garments that were "utterly black".[citation needed]

In France, during the Middle Ages, Jewish men typically wore trousers and a shirt (chemise), thought by Rashi to have been equivalent to the tunic worn by Jewish men of the east.[7]

Men's clothing

Many Jewish men historically wore a turban or a habit,[8] a tunic,[9] a tallit, and sandals in summer.[10] Oriental Jewish men in late-Ottoman and British Mandate Palestine would wear the tarbush on their heads.[11]

 
A Yemenite Jewish elder wearing a sudra with central hat

Tallit, tzitzit

The tallit is a Jewish prayer shawl worn while reciting morning prayers as well as in the synagogue on Shabbat and holidays. In Yemen, the wearing of such garments was not unique to prayer time alone but was worn the entire day.[12] In many Ashkenazi communities, a tallit is worn only after marriage. The tallit has special twined and knotted fringes known as tzitzit attached to its four corners. It is sometimes referred to as Arba kanfot (lit. 'four corners')[13] although the term is more common for a tallit katan, an undergarment with tzitzit. According to the Biblical commandments, tzitzit must be attached to any four-cornered garment, and a thread with a blue dye known as tekhelet was originally included in the tzitzit, although the missing blue thread does not impair the validness of the white.[14] Jewish tradition varies with respect to burial with or without a tallit. While all the deceased are buried in tachrichim (burial shrouds), some communities (Yemenite Jews) do not bury their dead in their tallit. The Shulhan Arukh and the Tur, however, following the legal opinion of the Ramban, require burying the dead with their tallit,[15] and which has become the general practice amongst most religious Jews. Among others, the matter is dependent upon custom.

 
A Jewish woman praying with a tallit and tefillin

Since tzitzit are considered to be a time-bound commandment, only men are required to wear them.[16] Authorities have differed as to whether women are prohibited, permitted or encouraged to wear them. Medieval authorities tended toward leniency, with more prohibitive rulings gaining in precedence since the 16th century.[17] Conservative Judaism regards women as exempt from wearing tzitzit, not as prohibited,[18] and the tallit has become more common among Conservative women since the 1970s.[19][20] Some progressive Jewish women choose to take on the obligations of tzitzit and tefillin,[21] and it has become common for a girl to receive a tallit when she becomes bat mitzvah.[20][22][23]

Kippah

A kippah or yarmulke (also called a kappel or skull cap) is a thin, slightly-rounded skullcap traditionally worn at all times by Orthodox Jewish men, and sometimes by both men and women in Conservative and Reform communities. Its use is associated with demonstrating respect and reverence for God.[24] Jews in Arab lands did not traditionally wear yarmulkes, but rather larger, rounded, brimless hats, such as the kufi or tarboush.[citation needed]

Kittel

A kittel (Yiddish: קיטל) is a white, knee-length, cotton robe worn by Jewish prayer leaders and some Orthodox Jews on the High Holidays. In some families, the head of the household wears a kittel at the Passover seder,[25] while in other families all married men wear them.[25][26] In many Ashkenazi Orthodox circles, it is customary for the groom to wear a kittel under the chuppah (wedding canopy).[citation needed]

Women's clothing

 
Jewish Yemenite women and children in a refugee camp near Aden, Yemen in 1949. According to Jewish religious law, a married woman must cover her hair

Married observant Jewish women wear a scarf (tichel or mitpahat), snood, hat, beret, or sometimes a wig (sheitel) in order to conform with the requirement of Jewish religious law that married women cover their hair.[27][28]

Jewish women were distinguished from others in the western regions of the Roman Empire by their custom of veiling in public. The custom of veiling was shared by Jews with others in the eastern regions.[29] The custom petered out among Roman women, but was retained by Jewish women as a sign of their identification as Jews. The custom has been retained among Orthodox women.[30] Evidence drawn from the Talmud shows that pious Jewish women would wear shawls over their heads when they would leave their homes, but there was no practice of fully covering the face.[31] In the medieval era, Jewish women started veiling their faces under the influence of the Islamic societies they lived in.[32] In some Muslim regions such as in Baghdad, Jewish women veiled their faces until the 1930s. In the more lax Kurdish regions, Jewish women did not cover their faces.[33]

Jewish vs gentile customs

Based on the rabbinic traditions of the Talmud, the 12th century philosopher Maimonides forbade emulating gentile dress and apparel when those same items of clothing have immodest designs, or that they are connected somehow to an idolatrous practice, or are worn because of some superstitious practice (i. e., "the ways of an Amorite").[34]

A question was posed to 15th-century Rabbi Joseph Colon (Maharik) regarding "gentile clothing" and whether or not a Jew who wears such clothing transgresses a biblical prohibition that states, "You shall not walk in their precepts" (Leviticus 18:3). In a protracted responsum, Rabbi Colon wrote that any Jew who might be a practising physician is permitted to wear a physician's cape (traditionally worn by gentile physicians on account of their expertise in that particular field of science and their wanting to be recognized as such), and that the Jewish physician who wore it has not infringed upon any law in the Torah, even though Jews were not wont to wear such garments in former times.[35] He noted that there is nothing attributed to "superstitious" practice by their wearing such a garment, while, at the same time, there isn't anything promiscuous or immodest about wearing such a cape, neither is it worn out of haughtiness. Moreover, he has understood from Maimonides (Hilkhot Avodat Kokhavim 11:1) that there is no commandment requiring a fellow Jew to seek out and look for clothing which would make them stand out as "different" from what is worn by gentiles, but rather, only to make sure that what a Jew might wear is not an "exclusive" gentile item of clothing. He noted that wearing a physician's cape is not an exclusive gentile custom, noting, moreover, that since the custom to wear the cape varies from place to place, and that, in France, physicians do not have it as a custom to wear such capes, it cannot therefore be an exclusive Gentile custom.[35]

According to Rabbi Colon, modesty was still a criterion for wearing gentile clothing, writing: "...even if Israel made it as their custom [to wear] a certain item of clothing, while the Gentiles [would wear] something different, if the Israelite garment should not measure up to [the standard established in] Judaism or of modesty more than what the Gentiles hold as their practice, there is no prohibition whatsoever for an Israelite to wear the garment that is practised among the Gentiles, seeing that it is in [keeping with] the way of fitness and modesty just as that of Israel."[35]

Rabbi Joseph Karo (1488–1575), following in the footsteps of Colon, ruled in accordance with Colon's teaching in his seminal work Beit Yosef on the Tur (Yoreh De'ah §178), and in his commentary Kessef Mishneh (on Maimonides' Mishne Torah, Hilkhot Avodat Kokhavim 11:1), making the wearing of gentile clothing contingent upon three factors: 1) that they not be promiscuous clothing; 2) not be clothing linked to an idolatrous practice; 3) not be clothing that was worn because of some superstitious practice (or "the way of the Amorites"). Rabbi Moses Isserles (1530–1572) opines that to these strictures can be added one additional prohibition of wearing clothes that are a "custom" for them (the gentiles) to wear, that is to say, an exclusive gentile custom where the clothing is immodest.[36] Rabbi and posek Moshe Feinstein (1895–1986) subscribed to the same strictures.[37]

See also

References

  1. ^ Silverman, Eric (2013). A Cultural History of Jewish Dress. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic. p. XV. ISBN 978-1-84520-513-3. Jews dressed differently as God's outcasts. But Jews also dressed differently in premodern Europe because their rabbis understood any emulation of non-Jews as a violation of the divine Law as revealed by God to Moses atop Mount Sinai. The Five Books of Moses, after all, together called the Torah, clearly specify that Jews must adhere to a particular dress code-modesty, for example, and fringes. The very structure of the cosmos demanded nothing less. Clothing, too, served as a "fence" that protected Jews from the profanities and pollutions of the non-Jewish societies in which they dwelled. From this angle, Jews dressed distinctively as God's elect.
  2. ^ Silverman, Eric (2013). A Cultural History of Jewish Dress. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. XV, 24. ISBN 978-1-84520-513-3.
  3. ^ a b Silverman, Eric (2013). A Cultural History of Jewish Dress. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 24–26. ISBN 978-1-84520-513-3.
  4. ^ Mishnah (Shabbat 10:3; Shabbat 15:2; Me'ilah 6:4), Tosefta (Kil'ayim 5:12), Babylonian Talmud (Mo'ed Katan 14a; Abodah Zarah 34a, et al.)
  5. ^ a b Silverman, Eric (2013). A Cultural History of Jewish Dress. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 47–48. ISBN 978-1-84520-513-3.
  6. ^ Brauer, Erich (1934). Ethnologie der Jemenitischen Juden. Vol. 7. Heidelberg: Carl Winters Kulturgeschichte Bibliothek, I. Reihe: Ethnologische bibliothek., p. 79.
  7. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Shabbat 120a, s.v. חלוק‎)
  8. ^ Babylonian Talmud, Kiddushin 29b; Yosef Qafih, Halikhot Teman, Ben-Zvi Institute: Jerusalem 1982, p. 186
  9. ^ Erich Brauer, Ethnologie der jemenitischen Juden, Heidelberg 1934, p. 81 (German). Quote (translation): "A blue tunic that has a split that extends down to the waistline and that is closed at neck level is worn over the maizar (i.e. undergarment). If the tunic is multicolored and striped, it is called [in Arabic] taḥtāni, meaning, the lower. If it is monochrome, it is called [in Arabic] ‘antari. Finally, the outer layer of clothing, worn over the maizar and ‘antari, is a dark-blue cotton kuftān. The kuftān is a coat-like garment that extends down to the knees, that is fully open in the front and is closed with a single button in the neck."
  10. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Baba Bathra 57b)
  11. ^ Kahlenberg, Caroline R. (Feb 2018). "The Tarbush Transformation: Oriental Jewish Men and the Significance of Headgear in Ottoman and British Mandate Palestine". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 25 June 2019. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ Yehuda Ratzaby, Ancient Customs of the Yemenite Jewish Community (ed. Shalom Seri and Israel Kessar), Tel-Aviv 2005, p. 30 (Hebrew)
  13. ^ Deuteronomy 22:12
  14. ^ Mishnah (1977). Herbert Danby (ed.). The Mishnah (12th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 496. ISBN 0-19-815402-X., s.v. Menahot 4:1
  15. ^ Shulhan Arukh, Yoreh De'ah § 351:2
  16. ^ Babylonian Talmud (Kiddushin 29a): "Every affirmative biblical command that is contingent upon time (e. g., residing in a Sukkah on the 15th day of the lunar month Tishri, or donning Tefillin during the day but not at night), men are obligated to perform them, but women are exempt from doing them." This teaching has been the common practice among Jews in all places for ages, and is forever perpetuated in the legal codes known to the Jewish nation, such as in Maimonides' Code of Jewish Law, the Mishne Torah (Hil. Avodah Zarah 12:3). The same Posek (decisor) has, however, cited its leniency, where women are permitted to wear them if they wish to do so.
  17. ^ Brody, Shlomo (October 15, 2010). "Why Do Orthodox Women Not Wear Tefillin or Tallit?". The Jerusalem Post.
  18. ^ Signs and Symbols
  19. ^ Rebecca Shulman Herz (2003). "The Transformation of Tallitot: How Jewish Prayer Shawls Have Changed Since Women Began Wearing Them". Women in Judaism: Contemporary Writings. University of Toronto. 3 (2). from the original on 2012-03-17. Retrieved 2019-03-08.
  20. ^ a b Gordan, Rachel (2013). Leonard Jay Greenspoon (ed.). Fashioning Jews: Clothing, Culture, and Commerce. Purdue University Press. pp. 167–176. ISBN 978-1-55753-657-0.
  21. ^ Halpern, Avigayil (22 January 2014). "Women, Tefillin, and Double Standards". My Jewish Learning. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  22. ^ Carin Davis (25 May 2010). Life, Love, Lox: Real-World Advice for the Modern Jewish Girl. Running Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-7624-4041-2.
  23. ^ Debra Nussbaum Cohen (2001). Celebrating Your New Jewish Daughter: Creating Jewish Ways to Welcome Baby Girls Into the Covenant : New and Traditional Ceremonies. Jewish Lights Publishing. p. 134. ISBN 978-1-58023-090-2.
  24. ^ Kippah
  25. ^ a b Eider, Shimon (1998). Halachos of Pesach. Feldheim publishers. ISBN 0-87306-864-5.
  26. ^ Pesach - The Kittel, Four Cups, And Afikomen (PDF), Teaneck, New Jersey: Kof-K
  27. ^ Sherman, Julia (November 17, 2010). "She goes covered".
  28. ^ Schiller, Mayer (1995). "The Obligation of Married Women to Cover Their Hair" (PDF). The Journal of Halacha (30 ed.). pp. 81–108. Retrieved June 26, 2016.
  29. ^ Shaye J. D. Cohen (17 January 2001). The Beginnings of Jewishness: Boundaries, Varieties, Uncertainties. University of California Press. pp. 31–. ISBN 978-0-520-22693-7.
  30. ^ Judith Lynn Sebesta; Larissa Bonfante (2001). The World of Roman Costume. Univ of Wisconsin Press. pp. 188–. ISBN 978-0-299-13854-7.
  31. ^ James B. Hurley (3 July 2002). Man and Woman in Biblical Perspective. Wipf and Stock Publishers. pp. 270–. ISBN 978-1-57910-284-5.
  32. ^ Mary Ellen Snodgrass (17 March 2015). World Clothing and Fashion: An Encyclopedia of History, Culture, and Social Influence. Routledge. pp. 337–. ISBN 978-1-317-45167-9.
  33. ^ Reeva Spector Simon; Michael Laskier; Sara Reguer (8 March 2003). The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa in Modern Times. Columbia University Press. pp. 212–. ISBN 978-0-231-50759-2.
  34. ^ Maimonides, Mishne Torah (Hilkhot Avodat Kokhavim 11:1)
  35. ^ a b c Questions & Responsa of Rabbi Joseph Colon, responsum # 88
  36. ^ Yoreh De'ah §178:1
  37. ^ Igrot Moshe (Epistles of Moshe), Yoreh De'ah I, responsum # 81

Further reading

External links

  •   Media related to Jewish clothing at Wikimedia Commons

jewish, religious, clothing, apparel, worn, jews, connection, with, practice, jewish, religion, changed, over, time, while, maintaining, influences, biblical, commandments, jewish, religious, regarding, clothing, modesty, tzniut, contemporary, styles, wider, c. Jewish religious clothing is apparel worn by Jews in connection with the practice of the Jewish religion Jewish religious clothing has changed over time while maintaining the influences of biblical commandments and Jewish religious law regarding clothing and modesty tzniut Contemporary styles in the wider culture also have a bearing on Jewish religious clothing although this extent is limited Hasidic men in Borough Park Brooklyn The man on the left is wearing a shtreimel and a tallit and the other man traditional Hasidic garb long suit black hat and gartel Contents 1 Historical background 2 Men s clothing 2 1 Tallit tzitzit 2 2 Kippah 2 3 Kittel 3 Women s clothing 4 Jewish vs gentile customs 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistorical background EditThe Torah set forth rules for dress that following later rabbinical tradition were interpreted as setting Jews apart from the communities in which they lived 1 Classical Greek and Roman sources that often ridicule many aspects of Jewish life do not remark on their clothing and subject it to caricature as they do when touching on Celtic Germanic and Persian peoples and mock their different modes of dress 2 Cultural anthropologist Eric Silverman argues that Jews in the late antiquity period used clothes and hair styles like the people around them 3 At 2 Maccabees 4 12 it is said that the Maccabees slaughtered Jewish youths guilty of Hellenizing in wearing caps typical of Greek youths 3 In the Mishnaic period as well as in many Islamic countries until the mid 20th century Jewish men typically wore a tunic Hebrew חלוק ḥaluk instead of trousers 4 In the same countries many different local regulations emerged to make Christian and Jewish dhimmis look distinctive in their public appearance In 1198 the Almohad emir Abu Yusuf Yaqub al Mansur decreed that Jews must wear a dark blue garb with very large sleeves and a grotesquely oversized hat 5 his son altered the colour to yellow a change that may have influenced Catholic ordinances some time later 5 German ethnographer Erich Brauer 1895 1942 noted that in Yemen of his time Jews were not allowed to wear clothing of any color besides blue 6 Earlier in Jacob Saphir s time 1859 they would wear outer garments that were utterly black citation needed In France during the Middle Ages Jewish men typically wore trousers and a shirt chemise thought by Rashi to have been equivalent to the tunic worn by Jewish men of the east 7 Men s clothing EditMany Jewish men historically wore a turban or a habit 8 a tunic 9 a tallit and sandals in summer 10 Oriental Jewish men in late Ottoman and British Mandate Palestine would wear the tarbush on their heads 11 A Yemenite Jewish elder wearing a sudra with central hat Tallit tzitzit Edit The tallit is a Jewish prayer shawl worn while reciting morning prayers as well as in the synagogue on Shabbat and holidays In Yemen the wearing of such garments was not unique to prayer time alone but was worn the entire day 12 In many Ashkenazi communities a tallit is worn only after marriage The tallit has special twined and knotted fringes known as tzitzit attached to its four corners It is sometimes referred to as Arba kanfot lit four corners 13 although the term is more common for a tallit katan an undergarment with tzitzit According to the Biblical commandments tzitzit must be attached to any four cornered garment and a thread with a blue dye known as tekhelet was originally included in the tzitzit although the missing blue thread does not impair the validness of the white 14 Jewish tradition varies with respect to burial with or without a tallit While all the deceased are buried in tachrichim burial shrouds some communities Yemenite Jews do not bury their dead in their tallit The Shulhan Arukh and the Tur however following the legal opinion of the Ramban require burying the dead with their tallit 15 and which has become the general practice amongst most religious Jews Among others the matter is dependent upon custom A Jewish woman praying with a tallit and tefillin Since tzitzit are considered to be a time bound commandment only men are required to wear them 16 Authorities have differed as to whether women are prohibited permitted or encouraged to wear them Medieval authorities tended toward leniency with more prohibitive rulings gaining in precedence since the 16th century 17 Conservative Judaism regards women as exempt from wearing tzitzit not as prohibited 18 and the tallit has become more common among Conservative women since the 1970s 19 20 Some progressive Jewish women choose to take on the obligations of tzitzit and tefillin 21 and it has become common for a girl to receive a tallit when she becomes bat mitzvah 20 22 23 Kippah Edit A kippah or yarmulke also called a kappel or skull cap is a thin slightly rounded skullcap traditionally worn at all times by Orthodox Jewish men and sometimes by both men and women in Conservative and Reform communities Its use is associated with demonstrating respect and reverence for God 24 Jews in Arab lands did not traditionally wear yarmulkes but rather larger rounded brimless hats such as the kufi or tarboush citation needed Kittel Edit A kittel Yiddish קיטל is a white knee length cotton robe worn by Jewish prayer leaders and some Orthodox Jews on the High Holidays In some families the head of the household wears a kittel at the Passover seder 25 while in other families all married men wear them 25 26 In many Ashkenazi Orthodox circles it is customary for the groom to wear a kittel under the chuppah wedding canopy citation needed Women s clothing Edit Jewish Yemenite women and children in a refugee camp near Aden Yemen in 1949 According to Jewish religious law a married woman must cover her hair Married observant Jewish women wear a scarf tichel or mitpahat snood hat beret or sometimes a wig sheitel in order to conform with the requirement of Jewish religious law that married women cover their hair 27 28 Jewish women were distinguished from others in the western regions of the Roman Empire by their custom of veiling in public The custom of veiling was shared by Jews with others in the eastern regions 29 The custom petered out among Roman women but was retained by Jewish women as a sign of their identification as Jews The custom has been retained among Orthodox women 30 Evidence drawn from the Talmud shows that pious Jewish women would wear shawls over their heads when they would leave their homes but there was no practice of fully covering the face 31 In the medieval era Jewish women started veiling their faces under the influence of the Islamic societies they lived in 32 In some Muslim regions such as in Baghdad Jewish women veiled their faces until the 1930s In the more lax Kurdish regions Jewish women did not cover their faces 33 Jewish vs gentile customs EditBased on the rabbinic traditions of the Talmud the 12th century philosopher Maimonides forbade emulating gentile dress and apparel when those same items of clothing have immodest designs or that they are connected somehow to an idolatrous practice or are worn because of some superstitious practice i e the ways of an Amorite 34 A question was posed to 15th century Rabbi Joseph Colon Maharik regarding gentile clothing and whether or not a Jew who wears such clothing transgresses a biblical prohibition that states You shall not walk in their precepts Leviticus 18 3 In a protracted responsum Rabbi Colon wrote that any Jew who might be a practising physician is permitted to wear a physician s cape traditionally worn by gentile physicians on account of their expertise in that particular field of science and their wanting to be recognized as such and that the Jewish physician who wore it has not infringed upon any law in the Torah even though Jews were not wont to wear such garments in former times 35 He noted that there is nothing attributed to superstitious practice by their wearing such a garment while at the same time there isn t anything promiscuous or immodest about wearing such a cape neither is it worn out of haughtiness Moreover he has understood from Maimonides Hilkhot Avodat Kokhavim 11 1 that there is no commandment requiring a fellow Jew to seek out and look for clothing which would make them stand out as different from what is worn by gentiles but rather only to make sure that what a Jew might wear is not an exclusive gentile item of clothing He noted that wearing a physician s cape is not an exclusive gentile custom noting moreover that since the custom to wear the cape varies from place to place and that in France physicians do not have it as a custom to wear such capes it cannot therefore be an exclusive Gentile custom 35 According to Rabbi Colon modesty was still a criterion for wearing gentile clothing writing even if Israel made it as their custom to wear a certain item of clothing while the Gentiles would wear something different if the Israelite garment should not measure up to the standard established in Judaism or of modesty more than what the Gentiles hold as their practice there is no prohibition whatsoever for an Israelite to wear the garment that is practised among the Gentiles seeing that it is in keeping with the way of fitness and modesty just as that of Israel 35 Rabbi Joseph Karo 1488 1575 following in the footsteps of Colon ruled in accordance with Colon s teaching in his seminal work Beit Yosef on the Tur Yoreh De ah 178 and in his commentary Kessef Mishneh on Maimonides Mishne Torah Hilkhot Avodat Kokhavim 11 1 making the wearing of gentile clothing contingent upon three factors 1 that they not be promiscuous clothing 2 not be clothing linked to an idolatrous practice 3 not be clothing that was worn because of some superstitious practice or the way of the Amorites Rabbi Moses Isserles 1530 1572 opines that to these strictures can be added one additional prohibition of wearing clothes that are a custom for them the gentiles to wear that is to say an exclusive gentile custom where the clothing is immodest 36 Rabbi and posek Moshe Feinstein 1895 1986 subscribed to the same strictures 37 See also Edit Judaism portalBiblical clothing Israeli fashion Jewish hat Kaftan Religious clothingReferences Edit Silverman Eric 2013 A Cultural History of Jewish Dress London and New York Bloomsbury Academic p XV ISBN 978 1 84520 513 3 Jews dressed differently as God s outcasts But Jews also dressed differently in premodern Europe because their rabbis understood any emulation of non Jews as a violation of the divine Law as revealed by God to Moses atop Mount Sinai The Five Books of Moses after all together called the Torah clearly specify that Jews must adhere to a particular dress code modesty for example and fringes The very structure of the cosmos demanded nothing less Clothing too served as a fence that protected Jews from the profanities and pollutions of the non Jewish societies in which they dwelled From this angle Jews dressed distinctively as God s elect Silverman Eric 2013 A Cultural History of Jewish Dress London and New York Bloomsbury Academic pp XV 24 ISBN 978 1 84520 513 3 a b Silverman Eric 2013 A Cultural History of Jewish Dress London and New York Bloomsbury Academic pp 24 26 ISBN 978 1 84520 513 3 Mishnah Shabbat 10 3 Shabbat 15 2 Me ilah 6 4 Tosefta Kil ayim 5 12 Babylonian Talmud Mo ed Katan 14a Abodah Zarah 34a et al a b Silverman Eric 2013 A Cultural History of Jewish Dress London and New York Bloomsbury Academic pp 47 48 ISBN 978 1 84520 513 3 Brauer Erich 1934 Ethnologie der Jemenitischen Juden Vol 7 Heidelberg Carl Winters Kulturgeschichte Bibliothek I Reihe Ethnologische bibliothek p 79 Babylonian Talmud Shabbat 120a s v חלוק Babylonian Talmud Kiddushin 29b Yosef Qafih Halikhot Teman Ben Zvi Institute Jerusalem 1982 p 186 Erich Brauer Ethnologie der jemenitischen Juden Heidelberg 1934 p 81 German Quote translation A blue tunic that has a split that extends down to the waistline and that is closed at neck level is worn over the maizar i e undergarment If the tunic is multicolored and striped it is called in Arabic taḥtani meaning the lower If it is monochrome it is called in Arabic antari Finally the outer layer of clothing worn over the maizar and antari is a dark blue cotton kuftan The kuftan is a coat like garment that extends down to the knees that is fully open in the front and is closed with a single button in the neck Babylonian Talmud Baba Bathra 57b Kahlenberg Caroline R Feb 2018 The Tarbush Transformation Oriental Jewish Men and the Significance of Headgear in Ottoman and British Mandate Palestine Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press Retrieved 25 June 2019 Subscription or UK public library membership required Yehuda Ratzaby Ancient Customs of the Yemenite Jewish Community ed Shalom Seri and Israel Kessar Tel Aviv 2005 p 30 Hebrew Deuteronomy 22 12 Mishnah 1977 Herbert Danby ed The Mishnah 12th ed Oxford Oxford University Press p 496 ISBN 0 19 815402 X s v Menahot 4 1 Shulhan Arukh Yoreh De ah 351 2 Babylonian Talmud Kiddushin 29a Every affirmative biblical command that is contingent upon time e g residing in a Sukkah on the 15th day of the lunar month Tishri or donning Tefillin during the day but not at night men are obligated to perform them but women are exempt from doing them This teaching has been the common practice among Jews in all places for ages and is forever perpetuated in the legal codes known to the Jewish nation such as in Maimonides Code of Jewish Law the Mishne Torah Hil Avodah Zarah 12 3 The same Posek decisor has however cited its leniency where women are permitted to wear them if they wish to do so Brody Shlomo October 15 2010 Why Do Orthodox Women Not Wear Tefillin or Tallit The Jerusalem Post Signs and Symbols Rebecca Shulman Herz 2003 The Transformation of Tallitot How Jewish Prayer Shawls Have Changed Since Women Began Wearing Them Women in Judaism Contemporary Writings University of Toronto 3 2 Archived from the original on 2012 03 17 Retrieved 2019 03 08 a b Gordan Rachel 2013 Leonard Jay Greenspoon ed Fashioning Jews Clothing Culture and Commerce Purdue University Press pp 167 176 ISBN 978 1 55753 657 0 Halpern Avigayil 22 January 2014 Women Tefillin and Double Standards My Jewish Learning Retrieved 2 October 2018 Carin Davis 25 May 2010 Life Love Lox Real World Advice for the Modern Jewish Girl Running Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 7624 4041 2 Debra Nussbaum Cohen 2001 Celebrating Your New Jewish Daughter Creating Jewish Ways to Welcome Baby Girls Into the Covenant New and Traditional Ceremonies Jewish Lights Publishing p 134 ISBN 978 1 58023 090 2 Kippah a b Eider Shimon 1998 Halachos of Pesach Feldheim publishers ISBN 0 87306 864 5 Pesach The Kittel Four Cups And Afikomen PDF Teaneck New Jersey Kof K Sherman Julia November 17 2010 She goes covered Schiller Mayer 1995 The Obligation of Married Women to Cover Their Hair PDF The Journal of Halacha 30 ed pp 81 108 Retrieved June 26 2016 Shaye J D Cohen 17 January 2001 The Beginnings of Jewishness Boundaries Varieties Uncertainties University of California Press pp 31 ISBN 978 0 520 22693 7 Judith Lynn Sebesta Larissa Bonfante 2001 The World of Roman Costume Univ of Wisconsin Press pp 188 ISBN 978 0 299 13854 7 James B Hurley 3 July 2002 Man and Woman in Biblical Perspective Wipf and Stock Publishers pp 270 ISBN 978 1 57910 284 5 Mary Ellen Snodgrass 17 March 2015 World Clothing and Fashion An Encyclopedia of History Culture and Social Influence Routledge pp 337 ISBN 978 1 317 45167 9 Reeva Spector Simon Michael Laskier Sara Reguer 8 March 2003 The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa in Modern Times Columbia University Press pp 212 ISBN 978 0 231 50759 2 Maimonides Mishne Torah Hilkhot Avodat Kokhavim 11 1 a b c Questions amp Responsa of Rabbi Joseph Colon responsum 88 Yoreh De ah 178 1 Igrot Moshe Epistles of Moshe Yoreh De ah I responsum 81Further reading EditRubens Alfred 1973 A History of Jewish Costume ISBN 0 297 76593 0 Silverman Eric 2013 A Cultural History of Jewish Dress London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 84788 286 8 External links Edit Media related to Jewish clothing at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jewish religious clothing amp oldid 1140294015, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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