Tip Front Brit. Hold The Milah JULIE WIENER Staff Writer L a blessing for entrance into the covenant, this first ceremony included variations of the seven blessings said at weddings. Some proponents of girls' covenant ceremonies have intro- duced physical acts, such as feet washing and immersion, to parallel the act of circumcision. In the 1970s, one Jewish feminist even sug- gested creating a ritual act of break- ing the girl's hymen. Jewish families develop rituals to welcome newborn daughters into the covenant. ast Sunday, Rabbi Aaron and Ruth Bergman hosted a pub- lic ceremony at Beth Abraham Hillel Moses to welcome their newborn child into the covenant of Abraham. It was similar to a brit milah, but there were two key differences: no blood and the child was a girl. • For thousands of years, Jewish boys have been offi- cially welcomed into the community at a brit milah (covenant of circumcision) with the act of circumci- sion, a traditional welcome — 'As he has entered into the covenant, so may he enter into Torah, chuppah and a life of good deeds" — and a celebratory meal. But naming ceremonies for baby girls have tradi- tionally been much smaller affairs, with no mention made of the covenant. Instead, the father is called for an aliyah at the first Torah-reading after the birth and receives a blessing in which the child's name is given. A healing prayer is said for the mother, whose presence is not required. No mention is made of the covenant. Although most Conservative and Reform congregations have adapted Ruth and Rabbi Aaron Bergman start the simchat bat ceremony with a blessing over the wine. this ceremony by calling the whole family to the Torah However, Detroit parents who have need for a ritual act beyond that, for on a convenient date after the birth hosted covenant ceremonies for their having something physical 'done," said and giving them an opportunity to daughters say they have not felt the Bergman. "[Circumcision] is some- speak about the child's name, full- thing God told Abraham to do. For us need to include a physical act in the blown simchat bat ceremonies, such as to make up a physical act didn't hold ceremony. the Bergmans' event for their daugh- "We didn't want immersion any meaning for us." ter, Rivka, are relatively rare in the because it smacked less of mikvah Adat Shalom Rabbi Daniel Nevins Detroit Jewish community. and more of baptism," said Ruth and his 'wife have hosted simchat bat Over the past 25 years, a small Bergman. Parents of four daughters, ceremonies for both their daughters group of Jews around the country has the Bergmans have developed their and congregants. Their ceremony, opted to develop new ceremonies to which involves "a lot of singing," starts own "Bergman family simchat bat": a welcome daughters into the covenant. blessing over wine, an official wel- with a public entrance of the child, a According to Lifegcles: Jewish Women song related to the girl's Hebrew coming of the baby into the commu- on Life Passages and Personal nity, the presentation of gifts symbol- name, a blessing over the wine, the Milestones, a book edited by Rabbi izing Torah, chuppah and good naming paragraph used in the brit, a Debra Orenstein, one of the first public announcement of the girl's deeds, and a celebratory meal. descriptions of covenant rituals for "We personally didn't feel a real name, a welcoming into the covenant girls appeared in 1973. In addition to and wrapping the girl in a tallit (prayer shawl). They, lso include a Torah discus- sion using passages that are relevant to the girl's name, publicly give tzedakah and host a celebratory meal. "We use some elements of the brit and some elements of the tradi- tional baby naming," said Nevins. While simchat bat ceremonies are "increasingly common," he said only about six occur each year at Adat Shalom. Rabbi Arnie Sleutelberg of Congregation Shir Tikvah encourages his 6: congregants to make a family occasion of what he calls a "brit ha bat." "It's very much mod- eled after the brit milah. It follows all the exact components — every- thing except for the surgery," he said. While Sleutelberg's ceremonies do not usually include physical acts, he says he has attended ones in which the baby's feet were washed. Although a brit must occur eight days after a boy is born, timing for the simchat bat is flexi- ble. Sleutelberg encour- ages people to schedule the ceremony whenever it is convenient. The Bergmans have tried vir- tually every option: Their first daughter's ceremony was eight days following birth, their second and third had ceremonies at the month mark and Rivka's ceremony on Sunday occurred when she was almost three months old. Nevins opted for the month mark. "Some people want to do it on the eighth day, but we say it's not a brit, it doesn't have to be exactly the same. We did it after a month because that's the point of viability in ancient tradition, and since our family lives out of town, it's nice to give people a few weeks to get cheap airfares." DI 21.20 1998 9