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Mikveh

Mikveh or mikvah (Hebrew: מִקְוֶה / מקווה, Modern: mīqve, Tiberian: mīqwe, pl. mikva'ot, mikvoth, mikvot, or (Yiddish) mikves,[1][2] lit., "a collection") is a bath used for the purpose of ritual immersion in Judaism[3] to achieve ritual purity.

A contemporary mikveh at the Temple Beth-El synagogue in Birmingham, Alabama
Pool of a medieval mikveh in Speyer, dating back to 1128

Most forms of ritual impurity can be purified through immersion in any natural collection of water. However, some impurities, such as a zav, require "living water",[4] such as springs or groundwater wells. Living water has the further advantage of being able to purify even while flowing, as opposed to rainwater which must be stationary to purify. The mikveh is designed to simplify this requirement, by providing a bathing facility that remains in contact with a natural source of water.

In Orthodox Judaism, these regulations are steadfastly adhered to; consequently, the mikveh is central to an Orthodox Jewish community. Conservative Judaism also formally holds to the regulations. The existence of a mikveh is considered so important that a Jewish community is required to construct a mikveh even before building a synagogue, and must go to the extreme of selling Torah scrolls, or even a synagogue if necessary, to provide funding for its construction.[5][6]

Etymology

Formed from the Semitic root ק-ו-ה (q-w-h, "collect"). In the Hebrew Bible, the word is employed in the sense of "collection", including in the phrase מקוה המים (miqwêh hammayim, "collection of water") in Gen. 1:10, Ex. 7:19, and Lev. 11:36.[7] Ben Sira is the earliest author to use מקוה as a word for "pool" (Ecclus 43:20, 48:17) and the Mishnah is the earliest text to use it in the sense of "ritual bath".

History

 
Excavated mikveh in Qumran

Before the beginning of the first century BC, neither written sources nor archaeology gives any indication about the existence of specific installations used for ritual cleansing.[8][9][10] Mikvoth appear at the beginning of the first century BC, and from then on, ancient mikvoth can be found throughout the land of Israel, as well as in historic communities of the Jewish diaspora.

In October 2020, a 2,000-year-old mikveh was found near Hannaton in northern Israel.[11]

Requirements

 
Modern mikveh – schematic illustration

The traditional rules regarding the construction of a mikveh are based on those specified in classical rabbinical literature. According to these rules, a mikveh must be connected to a natural spring or well of naturally occurring water, and thus can be supplied by rivers and lakes which have natural springs as their source.[12] A cistern filled by the rainwater is also permitted to act as a mikveh's water supply so long as the water is never collected in a vessel. Similarly snow, ice and hail are allowed to act as the supply of water to a mikveh no matter how they were transferred to the mikveh.[13] A river that dries up upon occasion cannot be used because it is presumed to be rainwater and not spring water, which cannot purify while in a flowing state. Oceans and seas for the most part have the status of natural springs.

A mikveh must, according to the classical regulations, contain enough water to cover the entire body of an average-sized person; based on a mikveh with the dimensions of 3 cubits deep, 1 cubit wide, and 1 cubit long, the necessary volume of water was estimated as being 40 seah of water.[14][15] The exact volume referred to by a seah is debated, and classical rabbinical literature specifies only that it is enough to fit 144 eggs;[16] most Orthodox Jews use the stringent ruling of the Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz, according to which one seah is 14.3 litres, and therefore a mikveh must contain approximately 575 litres.[17] This volume of water can later be topped up with water from any source,[18] but if there were less than 40 seahs of water in the mikveh, then the addition of 3 or more pints of water that was at any time intentionally collected in any vessel or transferred by a human, would render the mikveh unfit for use, regardless of whether water from a natural source was then added to make up 40 seahs from a natural source; a mikveh rendered unfit for use in this way would need to be completely drained away and refilled from scratch in the prescribed way.[7]

Although not commonly accepted, at least one American Orthodox rabbi advocated a home mikvah using tap water. As water flows through only pipes that open at both ends, the municipal and in-home plumbing would be construed as a non-vessel. So long as the pipes, hoses, and fittings are all freestanding and not held in the hand, they could be used to fill a mikvah receptacle that met all other requirements.[19]

There are also classical requirements for the manner in which the water can be stored and transported to the pool; the water must flow naturally to the mikveh from the source, which essentially means that it must be supplied by gravity or a natural pressure gradient, and the water cannot be pumped there by hand or carried. It was also forbidden for the water to pass through any vessel which could hold water within it or is capable of becoming impure (anything made of metal); however, pipes open to the air at both ends are fine so long as there is no significant curvature).[20] As a result, tap water could not be used as the primary water source for a mikveh, although it can be used to top the water up to a suitable level.[18] To avoid issues with these rules in large cities, various methods are employed to establish a valid mikveh. One is that tap water is made to flow into a kosher mikveh, and through a conduit into a larger pool. A second method is to create a mikveh in a deep pool, place a floor with holes over that and then fill the upper pool with tap water. In this way, it is considered as if the person dipping is actually "in" the pool of rain water.

Most contemporary mikvoth are indoor constructions involving rainwater collected from a cistern and passed through a duct by gravity into an ordinary bathing pool; the mikveh can be heated, taking into account certain rules, often resulting in an environment not unlike a spa.

A mikveh must be built into the ground or built as an essential part of a building. Portable receptacles, such as bathtubs, whirlpools or Jacuzzis, can therefore never function as mikvehs.[21]

Reasons for immersion in a mikveh

Halachic reasons

 
Medieval Mikveh room in the old Synagogue of Sopron, Hungary, which dates to the 14th century
 
A medieval mikveh in Besalú, Spain
 
A mikveh from Boskovice in the Czech Republic
 
Montpellier (France) mikveh in 2022.

Traditionally, the mikveh was used by both men and women to regain ritual purity after various events, according to regulations laid down in the Torah and in classical rabbinical literature.

Cases where the Torah or rabbinic law requires full immersion include:

  • one who wishes to become pure after Keri[22] — normal emissions of semen, whether from sexual activity, or from nocturnal emission. Bathing in a mikveh due to Keri is required by the Torah in order that one should be allowed to eat terumah or a sacrifice; Ezra instituted that one should also do so in order to be allowed to recite words of Torah.[23] The latter case is known as tevilath Ezra ("the immersion of Ezra"). In modern times it is no longer considered obligatory, but some perform it as a custom.
  • one who wishes to become pure after Zav/Zavah (abnormal discharges of body fluids) or niddah (menstruation), or one who has come into contact with such people or their clothes or articles;[24][25][26] In particular, a married woman must immerse in order to resume marital relations with her husband.
  • one who wishes to become pure after Tzaraath[27] (certain skin conditions, often referred to as "leprosy" though likely not the same as the modern medical form of leprosy)
  • a Kohen who is being consecrated;[28]
  • the Kohen Gadol on Yom Kippur, after sending away the goat to Azazel, and by the man who leads away the goat;[29]
  • the Kohen who performed the Red Heifer ritual;[30]
  • one who wishes to become pure after contact with a corpse or grave,[31] in addition to having the ashes of the Red Heifer ritual sprinkled upon them;
  • one who wishes to become pure after eating meat from an animal that died naturally.[32]
  • one who is converting to Judaism, regardless of gender
  • Immersion of vessels utensils acquired from a gentile and used for food
  • Although the Temple Mount is treated by many Orthodox Jewish authorities as being forbidden territory, a number of groups permit access, but require immersion before ascending the Mount as a precaution.

After the destruction of the Temple, the mikveh's main uses remained as follows:

Customs

It also became customary for Kohanim to fully immerse themselves before Jewish holidays, and the laity of many communities subsequently adopted this practice. Immersion in a mikveh is customary in the following circumstances:

  • By a bridegroom, on the day of his wedding, according to the custom of some communities
  • By a father, prior to the circumcision of his son, according to the custom of some communities[34]
  • By a kohen, prior to a service in which he will recite the priestly blessing, according to the custom of some communities
  • Before Yom Kippur,[35] according to the custom of some communities, sometimes including married women as well as men
  • Before Rosh Hashana, according to the custom of some communities[36]
  • Before a Jewish holiday, according to the custom of some communities[35]
  • Weekly before Shabbat, under Hasidic and Haredi customs
  • Every day, under Hasidic customs

Immersion for men is more common in Hasidic communities, and done rarely in others, like German Jewish communities, where it is generally done only before the High Holidays.

In Modern Judaism

Some Jewish funeral homes have a mikveh for immersing a body during the purification procedure (taharah) before burial.

Orthodox Judaism

 
Mikvah Mei Chaya Mushka in Crown Heights, Brooklyn

Orthodox Judaism generally adheres to the classical regulations and traditions, and consequently Orthodox Jewish women are obligated to immerse in a mikveh between niddah and sexual relations with their husbands. This includes brides before their marriage, and married women after their menstruation period or childbirth. In accordance with Orthodox rules concerning modesty, men and women are required to immerse in separate mikveh facilities in separate locations, or to use the mikveh at different designated times.

Recent Orthodox writings

Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan[37] connects the laws of impurity to the narrative in the beginning of Genesis. According to Genesis, by eating of the fruit, Adam and Eve had brought death into the world. Kaplan points out that most of the laws of impurity relate to some form of death (or in the case of Niddah the loss of a potential life). One who comes into contact with one of the forms of death must then immerse in water which is described in Genesis as flowing out of the Garden of Eden (the source of life) in order to cleanse oneself of this contact with death (and by extension of sin).

Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook offered an additional message for mikveh: By immersing ourselves in water, "we are forced to recognize our existential estrangement from the physical universe. How long can we survive under water? The experience of submerging drives home the realization that our existence in this world is transient, and we should strive towards more lasting goals."[38]

Conservative Judaism

In a series of responsa on the subject of Niddah in December 2006, the Committee on Jewish Law and Standards of Conservative Judaism reaffirmed a requirement that Conservative women use a mikveh monthly following the end of the niddah period following menstruation, while adopting certain leniencies including reducing the length of the nidda period. The three responsa adopted permit a range of approaches from an opinion reaffirming the traditional ritual to an opinion declaring the concept of ritual purity does not apply outside the Temple in Jerusalem, proposing a new theological basis for the ritual, adapting new terminology including renaming the observances related to menstruation from taharat hamishpacha family purity to kedushat hamishpaha [family holiness] to reflect the view that the concept of ritual purity is no longer considered applicable, and adopting certain leniencies including reducing the length of the niddah period.[39][40][41][42]

Isaac Klein's A Guide to Jewish Religious Practice, a comprehensive guide frequently used within Conservative Judaism, also addresses Conservative views on other uses of a mikveh, but because it predates the 2006 opinions, it describes an approach more closely resembling the Orthodox one, and does not address the leniencies and views those opinions reflected. Rabbi Miriam Berkowitz's recent book Taking the Plunge: A Practical and Spiritual Guide to the Mikveh (Jerusalem: Schechter Institute, 2007) offers a comprehensive discussion of contemporary issues and new mikveh uses along with traditional reasons for observance, details of how to prepare and what to expect, and how the laws developed. Conservative Judaism encourages, but does not require, immersion before Jewish Holidays (including Yom Kippur), nor the immersion of utensils purchased from non-Jews. New uses are being developed throughout the liberal world for healing (after rape, incest, divorce, etc.) or celebration (milestone birthdays, anniversaries, ordination, or reading Torah for the first time).

As in Orthodox Judaism, converts to Judaism through the Conservative movement are required to immerse themselves in a mikveh. Two Jews must witness the event, at least one of which must actually see the immersion. Immersion into a mikveh has been described as a very emotional, life-changing experience similar to a graduation.[43]

Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism

 
Restored mikveh in White Stork Synagogue, Wroclaw, Poland.

Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism do not hold the halachic requirements of mikveh the way Orthodox Judaism does. However, there are growing trends toward using mikveh for conversions, wedding preparation, and even before holidays.[44] In the 21st century the mikveh is experiencing a revival among progressive Jews who view immersion as a way to mark transitions in their lives. "Open" mikvoth welcome Jews to consider immersion for reasons not necessarily required by Jewish law; they might immerse following a divorce or medical treatment, to find closure after an abortion, or to celebrate a life transition, among other reasons.[45] Progressive Jews may also use the mikveh for conversion.[46]

During pregnancy

In some Jewish communities it is customary that at some point during the ninth month of pregnancy one should dip in a mikveh.[47]

Requirements during use

There is supposed to be no barrier between the person immersing and the water. The person should be wearing no clothes, jewelry, makeup, nail polish, fake nails, or grooming products on the hair or skin. For more observant Jewish women, an attendant will ensure these requirements are met.[48] Showering or bathing and carefully checking the whole body is, therefore, part of the religious requirements before entering the water of a Mikveh for a woman.[49]

Hair

According to rabbinical tradition, the hair counts as part of the body, and therefore water is required to touch all parts of it, meaning that braids cannot be worn during immersion. This has resulted in debate between the various ethnic groups within Judaism, about whether hair combing is necessary before immersion. The Ashkenazi community generally supports the view that hair must be combed straight so that there are no knots, but some take issue with this stance, particularly when it comes to dreadlocks.[citation needed] A number of rabbinical rulings argue in support of dreadlocks, on the basis that

  • dreadlocks can sometimes be loose enough to become thoroughly saturated with water, particularly if the person had first showered
  • combing dreadlocked hair can be painful
  • although a particularly cautious individual would consider a single knotted hair as an obstruction, in most cases hair is loose enough for water to pass through it unless each hair is individually knotted[50]

Allegorical uses of the term mikveh

The word mikveh makes use of the same root letters in Hebrew as the word for "hope" and this has served as the basis for homiletical comparison of the two concepts in both biblical and rabbinic literature. For instance, in the Book of Jeremiah, the word mikveh is used in the sense of "hope", but at the same time also associated with "living water":

O Hashem, the Hope [mikveh] of Israel, all who forsake you will be ashamed... because they have forsaken Hashem, the fountain of living water[51]

Are there any of the worthless idols of the nations, that can cause rain? or can the heavens give showers? Is it not you, Hashem our God, and do we not hope [nekaveh] in you? For you have made all these things.[52]

In the Mishnah, following on from a discussion about Yom Kippur, immersion in a Mikveh is compared by Rabbi Akiva with the relationship between God and Israel. Akiva refers to the description of God in the Book of Jeremiah as the "Mikveh of Israel", and suggests that "just as a mikveh purifies the contaminated, so does the Holy One, blessed is he, purify Israel".[53]

A different allegory is used by many Jews adhering to a belief in resurrection as one of the Thirteen Principles of Faith. Since "living water" in a lifeless frozen state (as ice) is still likely to again become living water (after melting), it became customary in traditional Jewish bereavement rituals to read the seventh chapter of the Mikvaot tractate in the Mishnah, following a funeral; the Mikvaot tractate covers the laws of the mikveh, and the seventh chapter starts with a discussion of substances which can be used as valid water sources for a mikveh – snow, hail, frost, ice, salt, and pourable mud.

Controversies

Use by Reform and Conservative converts

The Reform Movement’s Israel Religious Action Center sued the state on behalf of the Reform and Conservative/Masorti movements to allow members to use publicly funded mikvoth. The case, which took ten years to resolve, resulted in the Israeli Supreme Court ruling that public ritual baths must accept all prospective converts to Judaism, including converts to Reform and Conservative Judaism. In his 2016 ruling, Supreme Court Justice Elyakim Rubinstein said barring certain converts amounts to discrimination. Until this ruling, Orthodox officials barred non-Orthodox converts from using any mikveh, claiming their traditions do not conform to Jewish law, and the people they convert are therefore not Jews. Rubinstein noted: "Once it established public mikvahs, and put them at the service of the public — including for the process of conversion — the State cannot but be even-handed in allowing their use." He also said. "The State of Israel is free to supervise the use of its mikvahs, so long as it does so in an egalitarian manner."[54]

Intrusive questions

In 2013, the Israeli Center for Women's Justice and Kolech, an organization committed to Orthodox Jewish feminism, petitioned the Supreme Court to forbid attendants from asking intrusive questions of women at state-funded and -operated mikvot. In response, the Chief Rabbinate said it would forbid questioning of women about their marital status before immersion. The complaint had charged that the practice represented unacceptable discrimination.[55] In 2015, however, the ITIM Advocacy Center filed a complaint with the Israeli Supreme Court on behalf of 13 Orthodox women against the Chief Rabbinate and the Jerusalem Religious Council, insisting that women be allowed to use the mikvah "according to their personal customs and without supervision, or with their own attendant if they wish". The complaint charged that the Chief Rabbinate is ignoring directives passed in 2013 that allow women to use the mikvah facilities without being asked intrusive questions by attendants.[56] In June 2016, the Chief Rabbinate agreed to allow women to use a mikveh without an attendant.[57]

Transgender people

Some transgender people have adopted the practice of mikveh immersion to mark a gender transition. However, many Orthodox authorities who control mikvaot only permit immersions that adhere with Jewish law. Therefore, other Jewish organizations strive to create mikvaot that allow for different uses, such as marking any important life transitions. Mayyim Hayyim, an organization in Newton, Massachusetts, collaborated with Keshet, one of Boston's LGBT Jewish organizations, to actively create a mikveh space that felt accessible to transgender people, including training mikveh guides on gender issues.[58]

There is some controversy within the Jewish transgender community about the use of mikvah to mark gender transitions. Some feel uncomfortable in a space that is traditionally so highly gendered and that requires complete nudity. Others still see mikveh as a place for married women to go after their periods, and therefore a transgender female would be exempt from these requirements as she does not menstruate.[58]

See also

References

  1. ^ Sivan, Reuven; Edward A Levenston (1975). The New Bantam-Megiddo Hebrew & English dictionary. Toronto; New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 0-553-26387-0.
  2. ^ Lauden, Edna (2006). Multi Dictionary. Tel Aviv: Ad Publications. p. 397. ISBN 965-390-003-X.
  3. ^ "Concerning Ritual Purity and Cleanliness".
  4. ^ Leviticus 15:13
  5. ^ Rabbi Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin, Meshiv Dabar, 1:45
  6. ^ Rabbi Shneur Zalman Lesches. "understanding Mikvah" (PDF).
  7. ^ a b   Adler, Cyrus; Greenstone, Julius H. (1904). "MIḲWEH". In Singer, Isidore; et al. (eds.). The Jewish Encyclopedia. Vol. 8. New York: Funk & Wagnalls. p. 588. Retrieved Feb 23, 2016.
  8. ^ "Jewish Practices & Rituals: Mikveh. History and Archaeology". Encyclopaedia Judaica. Thomson Gale. 2008. Retrieved 14 December 2015. Although water purification is referred to in the Old Testament, in regard to rituals and the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem, with washing, sprinkling, and dipping in water, we do not hear of specific places or installations that people would constantly frequent for the purpose of ritually cleansing their flesh. The term mikveh was used in a very general sense in the Hebrew Bible to refer to a body of water of indeterminate extent (cf. Gen. 1:10; Ex. 7:19), or more specifically to waters gathered from a spring or within a cistern (Lev. 11:36) or waters designated for a large reservoir situated in Jerusalem (Isa. 22:11). None of these places are mentioned as having been used for ritual purification in any way. Hence, the concept of the mikveh as a hewn cave or constructed purification pool attached to one's dwelling or place of work is undoubtedly a later one.
  9. ^ Andrea M. Berlin (2013). Manifest Identity: From Ioudaios to Jew: Household Judaism as Anti-Hellenization in the Late Hasmonean Era (PDF). Between Cooperation and Hostility: Multiple Identities in Ancient Judaism and the Interaction with Foreign Powers. Journal of Ancient Judaism. Supplements – Band 011. Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. p. 169. ISBN 978-3-525-55051-9. Retrieved 14 December 2015. .... both mikva'ot and the new vessels.... "household Judaism".... specific behavior carried out via material objects. .... the specific objects are new, first appearing in the early years of the last century BC, but not before.
  10. ^ Henry Curtis Pelgrift (10 December 2015). "2,200-Year-Old Duck-Shaped Shovel Unearthed in Ancient Galilee". Bible History Daily. Biblical Archaeology Society. Retrieved 14 December 2015. "Archaeologically, it's very hard to tell who's a Jew in the third or second century BC.", excavation director Uzi Leibner explained to The Times of Israel, because the later indicators like mikvaot (Jewish ritual baths) and certain ritual objects were not present at that time.
  11. ^ "Israeli Archaeologists Unearth 2,000-Year-Old Ritual Bath". sci-news.com. 1 October 2020.
  12. ^ Sifra on Leviticus 11:36. ספרא על ויקרא יא  (in Hebrew) – via Wikisource.
  13. ^ Mikvaot 7:1. משנה מקואות ז א  (in Hebrew) – via Wikisource..
  14. ^ Eruvin 4b. עירובין ד ב  (in Hebrew) – via Wikisource.
  15. ^ Yoma 31a. יומא לא א  (in Hebrew) – via Wikisource.
  16. ^ Numbers Rabbah, 18:17
  17. ^ about 3 Koku, about 116 qafiz, about 126 Imperial Gallons, about 143 Burmese tins, and about 150 U.S. liquid gallons
  18. ^ a b Mikvaot 3. משנה מקואות ג  (in Hebrew) – via Wikisource..
  19. ^ מיללער, דוד; Miller (1930). The Secret of the Jew: His Life, His Family / סוד נצח ישראל. Vol. 1 / חלק א (Third ed.). 127 Sheridan Rd, Oakland, CA: Rabbi David Miller. Retrieved 2017-10-10.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  20. ^ Shulchan Aruch Yoreh Deah 201:36. שולחן ערוך יורה דעה רא לו  (in Hebrew) – via Wikisource.
  21. ^ "The Mikvah". Chabad.org.
  22. ^ Leviticus 15:16
  23. ^ Bava Kamma 82b. בבא קמא פב ב  (in Hebrew) – via Wikisource.
  24. ^ Leviticus 15:13
  25. ^ Leviticus 15:5–10
  26. ^ Leviticus 15:19–27
  27. ^ Leviticus 14:6–9
  28. ^ Exodus 29:4, Exodus 40:12
  29. ^ Leviticus 16:24, 16:26, 16:28
  30. ^ Numbers 19:7–8
  31. ^ Numbers 19:19
  32. ^ Leviticus 17:15
  33. ^ "Laws of Childbirth".
  34. ^ Dovid Zaklikowski. "Final Preparations Before the Circumcision – The day of the brit milah".
  35. ^ a b Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chayim, 581:4 and 606:4
  36. ^ "Hilchos U'Minhagei Rosh Hashanah Orthodox Union". OU.org Orthodox Union. 24 September 2014.
  37. ^ Waters of Eden by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan. ISBN 978-1-879016-08-8.
  38. ^ Morrison, Chanan; Kook, Abraham Isaac Kook (2006). Gold from the Land of Israel: A New Light on the Weekly Torah Portion – From the Writings of Rabbi Abraham Isaac HaKohen Kook'. Urim Publications. p. 188. ISBN 965-7108-92-6.
  39. ^ Rabbi Miriam Berkowitz, Mikveh and the Sanctity of Family Relations, Committee on Jewish Law and Standards, Rabbinical Assembly, December 6, 2006 March 20, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  40. ^
  41. ^
  42. ^
  43. ^ Freudenheim, Susan. "Becoming Jewish: Tales from the Mikveh." Jewish Journal. 8 May 2013. 8 May 2013.
  44. ^ . Reformjudaismmag.org. Archived from the original on 2012-11-22. Retrieved 2012-12-25.
  45. ^ What is the mikvah all about? The Washington Post, Nov 7, 2014
  46. ^ the New American Mikveh Tablet Magazine, Aug 13, 2012
  47. ^ "Are There Jewish Customs for Pregnancy and Birth?". www.chabad.org. Retrieved 2019-03-17.
  48. ^ What is the mikvah all about? The Washington Post, November 7, 2014,
  49. ^ "Shower before Mivah". 29 December 2015. If the entire bathing process is not being done in the mikvah, common custom is to take another quick shower and comb out the hair before the tevila
  50. ^ Kolel Menachem, Kitzur Dinei Taharah: A Digest of the Niddah Laws Following the Rulings of the Rebbes of Chabad (Brooklyn, New York: Kehot Publication Society, 2005).
  51. ^ Jeremiah 17:13
  52. ^ Jeremiah 14:22
  53. ^ Yoma 85b. יומא פה ב  (in Hebrew) – via Wikisource.
  54. ^ Israel’s Supreme Court: Public ritual baths must accept non-Orthodox, too Religion news, Feb 14, 2016
  55. ^ Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell; – the New Mikveh Policy haaretz, May 10, 2013
  56. ^ Israeli NGO asks Supreme Court to protect women’s rights at mikvah Times of Israel, July 20, 2015
  57. ^ Israeli Women to Be Allowed to Bathe in Mikvehs Without an Attendant Haaretz, June 23, 2016
  58. ^ a b Kristan, Ari (2006-08-01). "Opening Up the Mikvah". Tikkun. 21 (3): 55–57. doi:10.1215/08879982-2006-3020. ISSN 0887-9982. S2CID 184680530.

Bibliography

  • Isaac Klein, A Guide to Jewish Religious Practice, JTS Press, New York, 1992
  • Kolel Menachem, Kitzur Dinei Taharah: A Digest of the Niddah Laws Following the Rulings of the Rebbes of Chabad, Kehot Publication Society, Brooklyn, New York, 2005

External links

  • Mikvah.org Global Directory
  • The Mikvah, by Rivkah Slonim (Chabad.org)
  • The Mikvah: A Spiritual Experience
  • Pathways to the Sacred video clip with Anita Diamant
  • Europe's Oldest Mikveh in Syracuse, Italy
  • Purification Rituals in Mediaeval Judaism – Videos made by scientists of the German Research Foundation for DFG Science TV

mikveh, mikva, redirects, here, representative, federal, judge, abner, mikva, mikvah, hebrew, מקווה, modern, mīqve, tiberian, mīqwe, mikva, mikvoth, mikvot, yiddish, mikves, collection, bath, used, purpose, ritual, immersion, judaism, achieve, ritual, purity, . Mikva redirects here For the U S Representative and federal judge see Abner J Mikva Mikveh or mikvah Hebrew מ ק ו ה מקווה Modern miqve Tiberian miqwe pl mikva ot mikvoth mikvot or Yiddish mikves 1 2 lit a collection is a bath used for the purpose of ritual immersion in Judaism 3 to achieve ritual purity A contemporary mikveh at the Temple Beth El synagogue in Birmingham AlabamaPool of a medieval mikveh in Speyer dating back to 1128 Most forms of ritual impurity can be purified through immersion in any natural collection of water However some impurities such as a zav require living water 4 such as springs or groundwater wells Living water has the further advantage of being able to purify even while flowing as opposed to rainwater which must be stationary to purify The mikveh is designed to simplify this requirement by providing a bathing facility that remains in contact with a natural source of water In Orthodox Judaism these regulations are steadfastly adhered to consequently the mikveh is central to an Orthodox Jewish community Conservative Judaism also formally holds to the regulations The existence of a mikveh is considered so important that a Jewish community is required to construct a mikveh even before building a synagogue and must go to the extreme of selling Torah scrolls or even a synagogue if necessary to provide funding for its construction 5 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Requirements 4 Reasons for immersion in a mikveh 4 1 Halachic reasons 4 2 Customs 4 3 In Modern Judaism 4 3 1 Orthodox Judaism 4 3 1 1 Recent Orthodox writings 4 3 2 Conservative Judaism 4 3 3 Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism 4 3 4 During pregnancy 5 Requirements during use 5 1 Hair 6 Allegorical uses of the term mikveh 7 Controversies 7 1 Use by Reform and Conservative converts 7 2 Intrusive questions 7 3 Transgender people 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEtymology EditFormed from the Semitic root ק ו ה q w h collect In the Hebrew Bible the word is employed in the sense of collection including in the phrase מקוה המים miqweh hammayim collection of water in Gen 1 10 Ex 7 19 and Lev 11 36 7 Ben Sira is the earliest author to use מקוה as a word for pool Ecclus 43 20 48 17 and the Mishnah is the earliest text to use it in the sense of ritual bath History Edit Excavated mikveh in Qumran Before the beginning of the first century BC neither written sources nor archaeology gives any indication about the existence of specific installations used for ritual cleansing 8 9 10 Mikvoth appear at the beginning of the first century BC and from then on ancient mikvoth can be found throughout the land of Israel as well as in historic communities of the Jewish diaspora In October 2020 a 2 000 year old mikveh was found near Hannaton in northern Israel 11 Requirements Edit Modern mikveh schematic illustration The traditional rules regarding the construction of a mikveh are based on those specified in classical rabbinical literature According to these rules a mikveh must be connected to a natural spring or well of naturally occurring water and thus can be supplied by rivers and lakes which have natural springs as their source 12 A cistern filled by the rainwater is also permitted to act as a mikveh s water supply so long as the water is never collected in a vessel Similarly snow ice and hail are allowed to act as the supply of water to a mikveh no matter how they were transferred to the mikveh 13 A river that dries up upon occasion cannot be used because it is presumed to be rainwater and not spring water which cannot purify while in a flowing state Oceans and seas for the most part have the status of natural springs A mikveh must according to the classical regulations contain enough water to cover the entire body of an average sized person based on a mikveh with the dimensions of 3 cubits deep 1 cubit wide and 1 cubit long the necessary volume of water was estimated as being 40 seah of water 14 15 The exact volume referred to by a seah is debated and classical rabbinical literature specifies only that it is enough to fit 144 eggs 16 most Orthodox Jews use the stringent ruling of the Avrohom Yeshaya Karelitz according to which one seah is 14 3 litres and therefore a mikveh must contain approximately 575 litres 17 This volume of water can later be topped up with water from any source 18 but if there were less than 40 seahs of water in the mikveh then the addition of 3 or more pints of water that was at any time intentionally collected in any vessel or transferred by a human would render the mikveh unfit for use regardless of whether water from a natural source was then added to make up 40 seahs from a natural source a mikveh rendered unfit for use in this way would need to be completely drained away and refilled from scratch in the prescribed way 7 Although not commonly accepted at least one American Orthodox rabbi advocated a home mikvah using tap water As water flows through only pipes that open at both ends the municipal and in home plumbing would be construed as a non vessel So long as the pipes hoses and fittings are all freestanding and not held in the hand they could be used to fill a mikvah receptacle that met all other requirements 19 There are also classical requirements for the manner in which the water can be stored and transported to the pool the water must flow naturally to the mikveh from the source which essentially means that it must be supplied by gravity or a natural pressure gradient and the water cannot be pumped there by hand or carried It was also forbidden for the water to pass through any vessel which could hold water within it or is capable of becoming impure anything made of metal however pipes open to the air at both ends are fine so long as there is no significant curvature 20 As a result tap water could not be used as the primary water source for a mikveh although it can be used to top the water up to a suitable level 18 To avoid issues with these rules in large cities various methods are employed to establish a valid mikveh One is that tap water is made to flow into a kosher mikveh and through a conduit into a larger pool A second method is to create a mikveh in a deep pool place a floor with holes over that and then fill the upper pool with tap water In this way it is considered as if the person dipping is actually in the pool of rain water Most contemporary mikvoth are indoor constructions involving rainwater collected from a cistern and passed through a duct by gravity into an ordinary bathing pool the mikveh can be heated taking into account certain rules often resulting in an environment not unlike a spa A mikveh must be built into the ground or built as an essential part of a building Portable receptacles such as bathtubs whirlpools or Jacuzzis can therefore never function as mikvehs 21 Reasons for immersion in a mikveh EditHalachic reasons Edit Medieval Mikveh room in the old Synagogue of Sopron Hungary which dates to the 14th century A medieval mikveh in Besalu Spain A mikveh from Boskovice in the Czech Republic Montpellier France mikveh in 2022 Traditionally the mikveh was used by both men and women to regain ritual purity after various events according to regulations laid down in the Torah and in classical rabbinical literature Cases where the Torah or rabbinic law requires full immersion include one who wishes to become pure after Keri 22 normal emissions of semen whether from sexual activity or from nocturnal emission Bathing in a mikveh due to Keri is required by the Torah in order that one should be allowed to eat terumah or a sacrifice Ezra instituted that one should also do so in order to be allowed to recite words of Torah 23 The latter case is known as tevilath Ezra the immersion of Ezra In modern times it is no longer considered obligatory but some perform it as a custom one who wishes to become pure after Zav Zavah abnormal discharges of body fluids or niddah menstruation or one who has come into contact with such people or their clothes or articles 24 25 26 In particular a married woman must immerse in order to resume marital relations with her husband one who wishes to become pure after Tzaraath 27 certain skin conditions often referred to as leprosy though likely not the same as the modern medical form of leprosy a Kohen who is being consecrated 28 the Kohen Gadol on Yom Kippur after sending away the goat to Azazel and by the man who leads away the goat 29 the Kohen who performed the Red Heifer ritual 30 one who wishes to become pure after contact with a corpse or grave 31 in addition to having the ashes of the Red Heifer ritual sprinkled upon them one who wishes to become pure after eating meat from an animal that died naturally 32 one who is converting to Judaism regardless of gender Immersion of vessels utensils acquired from a gentile and used for food Although the Temple Mount is treated by many Orthodox Jewish authorities as being forbidden territory a number of groups permit access but require immersion before ascending the Mount as a precaution After the destruction of the Temple the mikveh s main uses remained as follows by Jewish women to achieve ritual purity after menstruation and childbirth 33 before they and their husbands may resume marital relations by Jewish men to achieve ritual purity after ejaculation as part of the traditional procedure for conversion to Judaism to immerse newly acquired metal and glass utensils used in serving and eating food to immerse a corpse as part of the preparation for burial taharah Customs Edit It also became customary for Kohanim to fully immerse themselves before Jewish holidays and the laity of many communities subsequently adopted this practice Immersion in a mikveh is customary in the following circumstances By a bridegroom on the day of his wedding according to the custom of some communities By a father prior to the circumcision of his son according to the custom of some communities 34 By a kohen prior to a service in which he will recite the priestly blessing according to the custom of some communities Before Yom Kippur 35 according to the custom of some communities sometimes including married women as well as men Before Rosh Hashana according to the custom of some communities 36 Before a Jewish holiday according to the custom of some communities 35 Weekly before Shabbat under Hasidic and Haredi customs Every day under Hasidic customsImmersion for men is more common in Hasidic communities and done rarely in others like German Jewish communities where it is generally done only before the High Holidays In Modern Judaism Edit Some Jewish funeral homes have a mikveh for immersing a body during the purification procedure taharah before burial Orthodox Judaism Edit Mikvah Mei Chaya Mushka in Crown Heights Brooklyn Orthodox Judaism generally adheres to the classical regulations and traditions and consequently Orthodox Jewish women are obligated to immerse in a mikveh between niddah and sexual relations with their husbands This includes brides before their marriage and married women after their menstruation period or childbirth In accordance with Orthodox rules concerning modesty men and women are required to immerse in separate mikveh facilities in separate locations or to use the mikveh at different designated times Recent Orthodox writings Edit Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan 37 connects the laws of impurity to the narrative in the beginning of Genesis According to Genesis by eating of the fruit Adam and Eve had brought death into the world Kaplan points out that most of the laws of impurity relate to some form of death or in the case of Niddah the loss of a potential life One who comes into contact with one of the forms of death must then immerse in water which is described in Genesis as flowing out of the Garden of Eden the source of life in order to cleanse oneself of this contact with death and by extension of sin Rabbi Abraham Isaac Kook offered an additional message for mikveh By immersing ourselves in water we are forced to recognize our existential estrangement from the physical universe How long can we survive under water The experience of submerging drives home the realization that our existence in this world is transient and we should strive towards more lasting goals 38 Conservative Judaism Edit The mikveh at the American Jewish University in Los Angeles California In a series of responsa on the subject of Niddah in December 2006 the Committee on Jewish Law and Standards of Conservative Judaism reaffirmed a requirement that Conservative women use a mikveh monthly following the end of the niddah period following menstruation while adopting certain leniencies including reducing the length of the nidda period The three responsa adopted permit a range of approaches from an opinion reaffirming the traditional ritual to an opinion declaring the concept of ritual purity does not apply outside the Temple in Jerusalem proposing a new theological basis for the ritual adapting new terminology including renaming the observances related to menstruation from taharat hamishpacha family purity to kedushat hamishpaha family holiness to reflect the view that the concept of ritual purity is no longer considered applicable and adopting certain leniencies including reducing the length of the niddah period 39 40 41 42 Isaac Klein s A Guide to Jewish Religious Practice a comprehensive guide frequently used within Conservative Judaism also addresses Conservative views on other uses of a mikveh but because it predates the 2006 opinions it describes an approach more closely resembling the Orthodox one and does not address the leniencies and views those opinions reflected Rabbi Miriam Berkowitz s recent book Taking the Plunge A Practical and Spiritual Guide to the Mikveh Jerusalem Schechter Institute 2007 offers a comprehensive discussion of contemporary issues and new mikveh uses along with traditional reasons for observance details of how to prepare and what to expect and how the laws developed Conservative Judaism encourages but does not require immersion before Jewish Holidays including Yom Kippur nor the immersion of utensils purchased from non Jews New uses are being developed throughout the liberal world for healing after rape incest divorce etc or celebration milestone birthdays anniversaries ordination or reading Torah for the first time As in Orthodox Judaism converts to Judaism through the Conservative movement are required to immerse themselves in a mikveh Two Jews must witness the event at least one of which must actually see the immersion Immersion into a mikveh has been described as a very emotional life changing experience similar to a graduation 43 Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism Edit Restored mikveh in White Stork Synagogue Wroclaw Poland Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism do not hold the halachic requirements of mikveh the way Orthodox Judaism does However there are growing trends toward using mikveh for conversions wedding preparation and even before holidays 44 In the 21st century the mikveh is experiencing a revival among progressive Jews who view immersion as a way to mark transitions in their lives Open mikvoth welcome Jews to consider immersion for reasons not necessarily required by Jewish law they might immerse following a divorce or medical treatment to find closure after an abortion or to celebrate a life transition among other reasons 45 Progressive Jews may also use the mikveh for conversion 46 During pregnancy Edit In some Jewish communities it is customary that at some point during the ninth month of pregnancy one should dip in a mikveh 47 Requirements during use EditThere is supposed to be no barrier between the person immersing and the water The person should be wearing no clothes jewelry makeup nail polish fake nails or grooming products on the hair or skin For more observant Jewish women an attendant will ensure these requirements are met 48 Showering or bathing and carefully checking the whole body is therefore part of the religious requirements before entering the water of a Mikveh for a woman 49 Hair Edit According to rabbinical tradition the hair counts as part of the body and therefore water is required to touch all parts of it meaning that braids cannot be worn during immersion This has resulted in debate between the various ethnic groups within Judaism about whether hair combing is necessary before immersion The Ashkenazi community generally supports the view that hair must be combed straight so that there are no knots but some take issue with this stance particularly when it comes to dreadlocks citation needed A number of rabbinical rulings argue in support of dreadlocks on the basis that dreadlocks can sometimes be loose enough to become thoroughly saturated with water particularly if the person had first showered combing dreadlocked hair can be painful although a particularly cautious individual would consider a single knotted hair as an obstruction in most cases hair is loose enough for water to pass through it unless each hair is individually knotted 50 Allegorical uses of the term mikveh EditThe word mikveh makes use of the same root letters in Hebrew as the word for hope and this has served as the basis for homiletical comparison of the two concepts in both biblical and rabbinic literature For instance in the Book of Jeremiah the word mikveh is used in the sense of hope but at the same time also associated with living water O Hashem the Hope mikveh of Israel all who forsake you will be ashamed because they have forsaken Hashem the fountain of living water 51 Are there any of the worthless idols of the nations that can cause rain or can the heavens give showers Is it not you Hashem our God and do we not hope nekaveh in you For you have made all these things 52 In the Mishnah following on from a discussion about Yom Kippur immersion in a Mikveh is compared by Rabbi Akiva with the relationship between God and Israel Akiva refers to the description of God in the Book of Jeremiah as the Mikveh of Israel and suggests that just as a mikveh purifies the contaminated so does the Holy One blessed is he purify Israel 53 A different allegory is used by many Jews adhering to a belief in resurrection as one of the Thirteen Principles of Faith Since living water in a lifeless frozen state as ice is still likely to again become living water after melting it became customary in traditional Jewish bereavement rituals to read the seventh chapter of the Mikvaot tractate in the Mishnah following a funeral the Mikvaot tractate covers the laws of the mikveh and the seventh chapter starts with a discussion of substances which can be used as valid water sources for a mikveh snow hail frost ice salt and pourable mud Controversies EditUse by Reform and Conservative converts Edit The Reform Movement s Israel Religious Action Center sued the state on behalf of the Reform and Conservative Masorti movements to allow members to use publicly funded mikvoth The case which took ten years to resolve resulted in the Israeli Supreme Court ruling that public ritual baths must accept all prospective converts to Judaism including converts to Reform and Conservative Judaism In his 2016 ruling Supreme Court Justice Elyakim Rubinstein said barring certain converts amounts to discrimination Until this ruling Orthodox officials barred non Orthodox converts from using any mikveh claiming their traditions do not conform to Jewish law and the people they convert are therefore not Jews Rubinstein noted Once it established public mikvahs and put them at the service of the public including for the process of conversion the State cannot but be even handed in allowing their use He also said The State of Israel is free to supervise the use of its mikvahs so long as it does so in an egalitarian manner 54 Intrusive questions Edit In 2013 the Israeli Center for Women s Justice and Kolech an organization committed to Orthodox Jewish feminism petitioned the Supreme Court to forbid attendants from asking intrusive questions of women at state funded and operated mikvot In response the Chief Rabbinate said it would forbid questioning of women about their marital status before immersion The complaint had charged that the practice represented unacceptable discrimination 55 In 2015 however the ITIM Advocacy Center filed a complaint with the Israeli Supreme Court on behalf of 13 Orthodox women against the Chief Rabbinate and the Jerusalem Religious Council insisting that women be allowed to use the mikvah according to their personal customs and without supervision or with their own attendant if they wish The complaint charged that the Chief Rabbinate is ignoring directives passed in 2013 that allow women to use the mikvah facilities without being asked intrusive questions by attendants 56 In June 2016 the Chief Rabbinate agreed to allow women to use a mikveh without an attendant 57 Transgender people Edit Some transgender people have adopted the practice of mikveh immersion to mark a gender transition However many Orthodox authorities who control mikvaot only permit immersions that adhere with Jewish law Therefore other Jewish organizations strive to create mikvaot that allow for different uses such as marking any important life transitions Mayyim Hayyim an organization in Newton Massachusetts collaborated with Keshet one of Boston s LGBT Jewish organizations to actively create a mikveh space that felt accessible to transgender people including training mikveh guides on gender issues 58 There is some controversy within the Jewish transgender community about the use of mikvah to mark gender transitions Some feel uncomfortable in a space that is traditionally so highly gendered and that requires complete nudity Others still see mikveh as a place for married women to go after their periods and therefore a transgender female would be exempt from these requirements as she does not menstruate 58 See also EditBaptism Bath unit Conversion to Judaism Ghusl full body washing ablution in Islam Mikva ot section of the Mishnah discussing the laws pertaining to the building and maintenance of a mikveh Misogi Niddah Ritual washing in Judaism Ritual Washing in Mandaeism TamashaReferences Edit Sivan Reuven Edward A Levenston 1975 The New Bantam Megiddo Hebrew amp English dictionary Toronto New York Bantam Books ISBN 0 553 26387 0 Lauden Edna 2006 Multi Dictionary Tel Aviv Ad Publications p 397 ISBN 965 390 003 X Concerning Ritual Purity and Cleanliness Leviticus 15 13 Rabbi Naftali Tzvi Yehuda Berlin Meshiv Dabar 1 45 Rabbi Shneur Zalman Lesches understanding Mikvah PDF a b Adler Cyrus Greenstone Julius H 1904 MIḲWEH In Singer Isidore et al eds The Jewish Encyclopedia Vol 8 New York Funk amp Wagnalls p 588 Retrieved Feb 23 2016 Jewish Practices amp Rituals Mikveh History and Archaeology Encyclopaedia Judaica Thomson Gale 2008 Retrieved 14 December 2015 Although water purification is referred to in the Old Testament in regard to rituals and the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem with washing sprinkling and dipping in water we do not hear of specific places or installations that people would constantly frequent for the purpose of ritually cleansing their flesh The term mikveh was used in a very general sense in the Hebrew Bible to refer to a body of water of indeterminate extent cf Gen 1 10 Ex 7 19 or more specifically to waters gathered from a spring or within a cistern Lev 11 36 or waters designated for a large reservoir situated in Jerusalem Isa 22 11 None of these places are mentioned as having been used for ritual purification in any way Hence the concept of the mikveh as a hewn cave or constructed purification pool attached to one s dwelling or place of work is undoubtedly a later one Andrea M Berlin 2013 Manifest Identity FromIoudaiosto Jew Household Judaism as Anti Hellenization in the Late Hasmonean Era PDF Between Cooperation and Hostility Multiple Identities in Ancient Judaism and the Interaction with Foreign Powers Journal of Ancient Judaism Supplements Band 011 Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht p 169 ISBN 978 3 525 55051 9 Retrieved 14 December 2015 both mikva ot and the new vessels household Judaism specific behavior carried out via material objects the specific objects are new first appearing in the early years of the last century BC but not before Henry Curtis Pelgrift 10 December 2015 2 200 Year Old Duck Shaped Shovel Unearthed in Ancient Galilee Bible History Daily Biblical Archaeology Society Retrieved 14 December 2015 Archaeologically it s very hard to tell who s a Jew in the third or second century BC excavation director Uzi Leibner explained to The Times of Israel because the later indicators like mikvaot Jewish ritual baths and certain ritual objects were not present at that time Israeli Archaeologists Unearth 2 000 Year Old Ritual Bath sci news com 1 October 2020 Sifra on Leviticus 11 36 ספרא על ויקרא יא in Hebrew via Wikisource Mikvaot 7 1 משנה מקואות ז א in Hebrew via Wikisource Eruvin 4b עירובין ד ב in Hebrew via Wikisource Yoma 31a יומא לא א in Hebrew via Wikisource Numbers Rabbah 18 17 about 3 Koku about 116 qafiz about 126 Imperial Gallons about 143 Burmese tins and about 150 U S liquid gallons a b Mikvaot 3 משנה מקואות ג in Hebrew via Wikisource מיללער דוד Miller 1930 The Secret of the Jew His Life His Family סוד נצח ישראל Vol 1 חלק א Third ed 127 Sheridan Rd Oakland CA Rabbi David Miller Retrieved 2017 10 10 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Shulchan Aruch Yoreh Deah 201 36 שולחן ערוך יורה דעה רא לו in Hebrew via Wikisource The Mikvah Chabad org Leviticus 15 16 Bava Kamma 82b בבא קמא פב ב in Hebrew via Wikisource Leviticus 15 13 Leviticus 15 5 10 Leviticus 15 19 27 Leviticus 14 6 9 Exodus 29 4 Exodus 40 12 Leviticus 16 24 16 26 16 28 Numbers 19 7 8 Numbers 19 19 Leviticus 17 15 Laws of Childbirth Dovid Zaklikowski Final Preparations Before the Circumcision The day of the brit milah a b Shulchan Aruch Orach Chayim 581 4 and 606 4 Hilchos U Minhagei Rosh Hashanah Orthodox Union OU org Orthodox Union 24 September 2014 Waters of Eden by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan ISBN 978 1 879016 08 8 Morrison Chanan Kook Abraham Isaac Kook 2006 Gold from the Land of Israel A New Light on the Weekly Torah Portion From the Writings of Rabbi Abraham Isaac HaKohen Kook Urim Publications p 188 ISBN 965 7108 92 6 Rabbi Miriam Berkowitz Mikveh and the Sanctity of Family Relations Committee on Jewish Law and Standards Rabbinical Assembly December 6 2006 Archived March 20 2009 at the Wayback Machine Rabbi Susan Grossman Mikveh And The Sanctity Of Being Created Human Committee on Jewish Law and Standards Rabbinical Assembly December 6 2006 Rabbi Avram Reisner Observing Niddah In Our Day An Inquiry On The Status Of Purity And The Prohibition Of Sexual Activity With A Menstruant Committee on Jewish Law and Standards Rabbinical Assembly December 6 2006 Rabbi Miriam Berkowitz RESHAPING THE LAWS OF FAMILY PURITY FOR THE MODERN WORLD Committee on Jewish Law and Standards Rabbinical Assembly December 6 2006 Freudenheim Susan Becoming Jewish Tales from the Mikveh Jewish Journal 8 May 2013 8 May 2013 Sue Fishkoff Reimagining the Mikveh Reform Judaism Magazine Fall 2008 Reformjudaismmag org Archived from the original on 2012 11 22 Retrieved 2012 12 25 What is the mikvah all about The Washington Post Nov 7 2014 the New American Mikveh Tablet Magazine Aug 13 2012 Are There Jewish Customs for Pregnancy and Birth www chabad org Retrieved 2019 03 17 What is the mikvah all about The Washington Post November 7 2014 Shower before Mivah 29 December 2015 If the entire bathing process is not being done in the mikvah common custom is to take another quick shower and comb out the hair before the tevila Kolel Menachem Kitzur Dinei Taharah A Digest of the Niddah Laws Following the Rulings of the Rebbes of Chabad Brooklyn New York Kehot Publication Society 2005 Jeremiah 17 13 Jeremiah 14 22 Yoma 85b יומא פה ב in Hebrew via Wikisource Israel s Supreme Court Public ritual baths must accept non Orthodox too Religion news Feb 14 2016 Don t Ask Don t Tell the New Mikveh Policy haaretz May 10 2013 Israeli NGO asks Supreme Court to protect women s rights at mikvah Times of Israel July 20 2015 Israeli Women to Be Allowed to Bathe in Mikvehs Without an Attendant Haaretz June 23 2016 a b Kristan Ari 2006 08 01 Opening Up the Mikvah Tikkun 21 3 55 57 doi 10 1215 08879982 2006 3020 ISSN 0887 9982 S2CID 184680530 Bibliography EditIsaac Klein A Guide to Jewish Religious Practice JTS Press New York 1992 Kolel Menachem Kitzur Dinei Taharah A Digest of the Niddah Laws Following the Rulings of the Rebbes of Chabad Kehot Publication Society Brooklyn New York 2005External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mikvaot Mikvah org Global Directory The Mikvah by Rivkah Slonim Chabad org The Mikvah A Spiritual Experience Pathways to the Sacred video clip with Anita Diamant Mikvahs Mikveh Immersion in the Bible Europe s Oldest Mikveh in Syracuse Italy 1 Purification Rituals in Mediaeval Judaism Videos made by scientists of the German Research Foundation for DFG Science TV Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mikveh amp oldid 1128144863, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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