Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Javier Navarro, in Mar. 2017
In the Judaism it is considered that an individual of the sex male he stops being a boy and becomes a man when he turns 13. This age is not chosen for a whimsical reason, but there are references written in the Torah in which it is indicated that 13 years represent the beginning of adulthood for males. To celebrate the passing of the childhood into adolescence, Jews carry out a festival, the Pub Mitzva or Bar Mitzvah.
Understanding the meaning and value of the Bar Mitzva
When a boy becomes a man this implies that he is an adult person and that he must assume the responsibility of their actions. Therefore, before the age of 13, those responsible for a child are his parents and from this age the young man must begin his journey as an adult man, with his duties and obligations.
According to him calendar Hebrew, the day begins on the previous night and this reference is what determines the celebration of the Bar Mitzva. This means that the day of the young man's thirteenth birthday is based on the indications of the Jewish calendar.
Before the Bar Mitzva, the young man from religion Jewish woman must prepare spiritually and practice the ritual of her coming of age ceremony. From this day on, it can be integrated into the established liturgical acts, for example the reading of the Torah in the synagogue.
A transition ritual
With the Bar Mitzva a 13-year-old is declaring that the Torah is going to become his spiritual guide. It could be said that with this ritual each young person begins their journey as an adult and all that this implies.
In some communities it is customary to cover the head with the kippah and after the reading of a biblical passage there is a party among those attending the event and the young person receives congratulations and gifts for becoming an adult member of the community bean.
In most cultural traditions there is some ritual in which the passage from childhood to adulthood is expressed
Australian Aboriginal youth are sent for several months to the desert so that they survive by their own means and when they pass this test they are considered as men.
In the western world, some young women celebrate a coming-out in society at the age of fifteen, and this festival is intended to symbolize their incorporation into the female adult world.
Photos: Fotolia - ungvar
Themes in Bar Mitzva