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Written by Doctor Simcha
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Kippots for Women!- The Doc, a true feminist, believes women should get kippots favors just as men get kippots for men. Why not? But anyway, it is a matter of the rules of your shul.
- If your temple provides head coverings for women, this is one option. Otherwise, you can be a little fancier and prepare women kippots on your own for the Bar/Bat Mitzvah. Look for tulle circles at a good price. Get a piece of it, fold it in half and then in half again. Decorate it with a ribbon
and maybe also an artificial silk flower. Tada!
- Online shops offer additional alternatives. Lovely bat mitzvah lace head covers (that come with an attached comb and a decorative bow) are offered at Judaism.com. There are smaller lace head covers, finished with a satin bow, which are also great for simchas. The Doc prefers the white ones. Why wear black on a simcha?
Lace Headcovers (Judaism.com) Hair Covering for Women in Judaism
- Halacha (Jewish law) requires married women to cover their hair. This custom stem from ideas of modesty.
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Veil Headcoverings by ZaraMart Conservative and Reform Judaism do not generally require women to wear head-coverings. However, some liberal Conservative synagogues suggest that women, married or not, wear kippots similar to those worn by men, and some require it, not for modesty, but as a feminist gesture of egalitarianism.
- Virtually all married Modern Orthodox women wear a head or hair covering in synagogue. The most common head / hair covering for Modern Orthodox women is a hat or beret; younger married Modern Orthodox women will wear baseball caps and bandanas when dressed casually.
- Modern Orthodox women whose clothes are somewhat "hippyish" wear bright and colorful scarves tied in a number of ways. A style of half wig known as a "fall" has become increasingly common in many segments of Modern and Haredi Orthodox communities. It is usually worn either with a hat or headband.
- The most common hair coverings in the Haredi community are the snood, the tichel (scarf), and the sheitel (wig); some Haredi women cover their hair with hats or berets. Some married Modern Orthodox women cover their heads, some cover their hair (except for a few inches at the hairline), and some do not cover their heads or hair at all, though this arguably contradicts the Halacha.
- Rashi, famed as the author of the first comprehensive commentaries on the Talmud, Torah and Tanakh, also comments that in the procedure regarding a woman who is suspected of adultery, the kohen uncovers her hair, and from this we learn that it is shameful for Jewish women to have their hair uncovered.
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