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[personal profile] cellio
Very occasionally we have a bar or bat mitzvah at the Friday-night service. Perhaps ironically (given the d'var torah I just posted), this week was one of those. With a couple small exceptions, it was pretty much spot-on what such a service should be.

There were obviously some special circumstances in the family. I don't know what they were and I'm certainly not going to pry, but the boy's parents did not participate in the service (I don't know if they were present, nor am I certain they're alive). The boy, in his d'var torah, said something to the effect that a bar mitzvah was not at all a sure thing for him; he didn't know if he'd be allowed to have such a ceremony. (You are, of course, bar or bat mitzvah even without the ceremony, but few people use this language precisely. Just clarifying.) I don't know what that means; as I said, I don't know the family situation.

The boy led about as much of the service as I expected; he seemed to struggle in a few places, but he also seemed basically competent so I think it was nerves, not (say) a disability. He read three verses of torah, which is the minimum; some kids do more but not all. He did not read haftarah, and I'd love to know whether that was something about the circumstances or new policy. I'd love for it to be new policy for the Friday service, where we do not read haftarah on other nights. The meme should be that you fit a bar mitzvah into the existing service, not that you re-arrange the community's service completely to accommodate a desire to give the kid spotlight time. (We do read haftarah on Shabbat morning.)

There were three aliyot, which is the rabbi's compromise between our Friday norm of one and the Shabbat-morning norm of seven. On Saturday mornings, one of the issues that keep it from being a community service is that the family grabs all seven of those aliyot; if you're a regular congregant who just happens to go to the bar-mitzvah service, it's pretty clear you are aren't really considered part of the congregation there, which I feel is quite rude and contrary to what Shabbat is about. (It's not just that, of course; it's the whole beauty-pageant aspect of that service. I've written about this before.)

So, back to Friday night: I don't know if this was family circumstances or an attempt to be more open, but one of those three aliyot was given to someone who is not in the family. He might be a family friend; I wouldn't know. But he's, y'know, someone I've seen at services before, someone who's a member of our congregation. I've heard of him. That was nice.

The boy began his speech by saying "I'd like to thank everyone for coming". And then he gave his d'var, which did not include the phrase "my torah portion is $name, which is about...". That was refreshing. No tedious "and I'd like to thank Aunt Irma for baby-sitting me when I was four" etc, and he spent most of his time actually saying something. And it was something worth hearing. I'd like to thank whoever gave him that clue. (I complimented him Friday night at the oneg, but of course many people were trying to greet him so we didn't talk.)

One of the standard parts of our bar-mitzvah service that I've been hoping for years to kill is the "parental greeting", aka "long-winded kvell not accessible to the congregation". (Because, you know, we should really care deeply that he excelled on the swim team in middle school, or whatever.) I thought we might skip that this time, given the lack of parents, but the boy's grandmother was playing the parental role in the ceremony, and at the appointed time the rabbi invited her up. Sigh, I thought. And she said, roughly, "I'm very proud of you", hugged him, and sat down. Excellent. I'm assuming that this is extreme clue on the part of that grandmother rather than new dictate, but I'd love to be wrong. (In case you're wondering, the rabbi always addresses the bar mitzvah in a way that is both personalized and relevant to the congregation. So it's not like the service is devoid of individual acknowledgement. Therefore I think the parents should not get their own speech. It's not needed and they tend to do it badly.)

All in all, the right things happened at this service. If that was intentional rather than accidental, this service can serve as a model for other families that do their celebrations on Friday nights. And even if it was an accident, I hope we can find a way to make it a model for other families anyway. It was much more effective than the norm; the inclusion of a bar mitzvah did not alienate the congregation the way it usually does. It's a pity if it took special circumstances to make that happen, but it would be more of a pity if our congregation doesn't learn anything from the experience.

(no subject)

Date: 2008-02-11 03:20 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] dr4b
I wish I knew something constructive to say beyond "I'm glad you enjoyed this one". I guess the one thing I'm wondering is -- for most of the kids who have their bar/bat mitzvah ceremonies at your synagogue, are they actually members of the congregation in general who attend most weeks, or are they people who just come that one time for the ceremony? I'd kind of expect the former to be a lot less disruptive to routine than the latter, but who knows.
(deleted comment)

(no subject)

Date: 2008-02-12 08:24 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zahavalaska.blogspot.com (from livejournal.com)
I'm glad that one went well! It's one of the things I was thrilled to find when I got here. "Bnei Mitzvah Season" is in the summer because most kids' relatives only want to come in the summer. And even with the "drive by" Bat Mitzvahs (girls who go to our Orthodox neighbor and come to religious school for 2 years so they can have a public ceremony) there were still only 6 or 7 of them and they were incredible community events. I was brand new here, barely knew anyone, and I had a great time. It also probably helped that most kids didn't have enough relatives to do all 7 aliyot so "regular" congregants were pretty involved.
From: [identity profile] patsmor.livejournal.com
(Sorry, this has turned into a long ramble...)

I've been considering my friend Susan D's bat mitzvah (well, it was 40 years ago...), and dug out the little booklets they handed out. (I think half the attendees were her friends from other congregations and goyim like me -- so I don't know if a program is normal.)

Susan's was on Friday night at the reform synagogue, and our friend Sarah K's was on Sabbath morning at the conservative. From looking at the two programs, my recollection of time and extravagance is correct. Susan's was intimate and short. Before the ceremony there was a short "orientation" by some man from the congregation for those of us who were visitors about what was happening and the symbolism. I really appreciated that, and I know my mother did. (I went to schul with Susan almost every other Friday, so I knew more of the text, and this was the year when there was a bas/bat mitzvah for some friend or other nearly every weekend...)(Susan's grandparent's called it schul, so we all did, too.)

Susan's mother did a little speech, but in it she said something that surprised me (I wrote it on the pamphlet). She said that Susan's grandmother and grandfather had been big influences in Susan's spiritual life, and that she envied Susan her deeper understanding of her faith. She said something else, but it was short, and I don't remember what it was.

The reception afterward was pleasant and fun; Susan's mom had bought my favorite cookies, little sugar-cookie flowers with a Blue center of almond frosting. It was held downstairs; there was a lot of laughter and food and some traditional dances, and then many of us adjourned to Susan's house where there was more of food and fun.

Even though Sarah was a dear friend, too, and I spent almost as much time in her house as I did with Susan, I remember almost nothing about Sarah's ceremony. It was at the big Conservative congregation downtown. Even though the sanctuary was no bigger than the one the night before, and there were black-out curtains on the windows so it, too, was gleaming with candlelight, it was terribly long-winded. About the only thing I can remember is that Susan's mother went on and on about her experience during World War II (not in a concentration camp, but her mother was a "servant" to a German officer in Italy), and how she never thought she'd live to see a child come of age.

The reception was a the country club. The food was more posh, but I remember nothing much about that party, except that Sarah's mom remembered the cookies, too. (What self-centered children we are at age 13!!)

Amusingly enough, Sarah married a rabbi, and Susan married a Baptist, but Chip goes to temple with Susan almost every week. She goes to the Unitarian service with him on Sunday nights about once a month (he promised his mother, apparently ;-) ).

Since they had no children, I doubt they had a service for the dogs. Susan did tell me that she got an invitation to Sarah's son's. It's rather a long hike from NC to Chicago, so she sent a gift, instead.
From: [identity profile] zevabe.livejournal.com
The penultimate paragraph seems to change the whole story, at least to me. In a sense, it seems irrelevant, or at least I'd like to believe that it is. Otherwise, the conclusion is that a meaningful bat mitzva leads to intermarrage while a meaningless party keeps people in the fold. However, I live in a world where intermarriage is seen as a failure.
From: [identity profile] patsmor.livejournal.com
My apologies -- there was no intent to lead there, actually. I do understand how intermarriage is considered a failure. It is, probably, irrelevant, but it is true that Susan and Chip see her Jewish faith as the heart of their home, even though they attend the UU services. That's so integral to her that I didn't even think to mention it.

Again, my apologies. In retrospect, I just rambled on too far.
From: [identity profile] patsmor.livejournal.com
Have you seen Keeping up with the Steins? It's hilarious as it talks about who gets the most exciting party -- rent a cruise liner, or Dodger Stadium? Get Emeril to cook, or ??? and so on. I loved the ending, as the values of simplicity and family are endorsed, of course. But the way they did it was sweet.
Edited Date: 2008-02-13 02:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] patsmor.livejournal.com
It's certainly worth renting ;-)
From: [identity profile] patsmor.livejournal.com
I should also say that this was in Greensboro, NC, where it was very interesting growing up in a very Southern Christian community and being as close or closer to the Jewish families than many in my own church.

I just remembered(rambling a bit) that the closest Kosher butcher/groceries were 125 miles away (I remember helping drive to the store and loading frozen food into coolers). It was interesting in Susan's family -- her paternal grandparents lived in the "mother-in-law" quarters downstairs and kept kosher, which Susan's family in general did not. Her grandmother threw a fork I'd used on a plate with cheese and then fish out the window at one Seder...

By the way -- do you want a copy of an Ashkenazi Haggadah? A deceased friend of mine's library is being sold to help support the kids, and this is one of the books in it...

Re: haggadah

Date: 2008-02-14 03:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] patsmor.livejournal.com
I'll have to check. I'll get back to you soon.
From: [identity profile] patsmor.livejournal.com
OOps! make that Susan's mother went on and on a

Sarah's mother went on and on.
Edited Date: 2008-02-13 02:46 am (UTC)

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