F eminism compatible Are they Orthodoxy ? LYNNE MEREDITH COHN Staff Writer Photographer DANIEL LIPPITT • S or most of her life, Blu Greenberg has davened in Orthodox synagogues where the mechitzah (partition separating men and women) cut straight down the middle of the sanctuary. She rarely strains to hear the chazzan chanting or to see the bimah. And that, says one of the most vociferous and respected Orthodox feminists in this country, is the way gender should be treated in Judaism: distinctive and equal. Not separate and equal, but distinctively male and female within the confines of Halachah (Jewish law). "Halachah has conditioned my psyche, not just the act, but also affected my deep inner areas of com- fort," Greenberg said. "As far as the mechitzah goes, I don't feel a depriva- tion sitting in the women's side. The mechitzah has to be constructed so it [encompasses that] notion of distinc- tive and equal, not distinctive and second class." At first glance, the concepts of feminism and Orthodox Judaism seem not only incompatible, but downright contradictory. Orthodox Judaism calls men to the Torah for aliyot, celebrates the bar mitzvah of a 13-year-old boy, allows men to sing in public and dress however they want to dress. 1111 12/12 1997 66 Women, on the other hand, are for- bidden to sing in public and must cover their knees and elbows at all times. So, can feminism co-exist with Judaism? Many women think it's a matter of time. For the past 30 years, the notion of Orthodox feminism has grown in popularity. In Riverdale, N.Y., and Skokie, Ill., women's tefillah (prayer) groups thrive; they provide a public forum for women to pray together, read from the Torah on the bimah and celebrate bat mitzvahs of 12- year-old girls. In congregations from Potomac, Md., to Los Angeles, women dance with the Torah on Simchat Torah. At a conference on women, Halachah and modernity last month at which Greenberg was a keynote speaker, hundreds of women came together, some from as far away as Jerusalem, to voice their hopes and to listen to others who are changing the role of women in Orthodox Judaism. The conference, held in Skokie, was an offshoot of a New York gathering last February on feminism and Four women, three hats: An issue of concern to some Orthodox feminists is hair covering. Orthodoxy, largely planned by Greenberg. Susann Codish, president and founder of the Oak Park-based Or Chadash Congregation, believes women should have as much access to Torah as men. Codish was one of about 15 women from the Detroit area who attended the conference. "One of the reasons we founded Or Chadash was precisely to allow women greater access to all aspects of synagogue life and inclusion in Torah, keeping within halachic guidelines," she said. "Certainly on Simchat Torah, the women took a sifrei Torah to dance with. People are going to say this is improper and unacceptable and blast the institu- lb tion for it, I'm well aware of it. On Shabbat I give a d'var Torah on the Haftorah, and I'm not the only one. Women here are free to get up and give a d'var Torah if they so desire." Codish considers herself to be a halachically-observant Jew and a fem- inist. "It means I live my life accordini, to Halachah and sometimes I corn- promise my feminist side to be halachically proper. I'm not davening with a group that counts me in a minyan; I'm not davening in a group that will call me to the Torah. As a feminist, I desire full participation and I am not getting it, and that's