Comedian Sarah Silverman Supports Women Of The Wall At Hanukkah Menorah Lighting

Sarah Silverman Stops By Western Wall To Stand With Jewish Feminists
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JERUSALEM (RNS) Comedian Sarah Silverman made a rare appearance in the middle of a hot political dispute Thursday (Dec. 18) when she attended a Hanukkah menorah lighting alongside a group of Jewish feminists at the Western Wall, Judaism’s holiest site.

It was the first time women have lit the menorah at the site and it came after the rabbi in charge of the Western Wall refused a request from Women of the Wall to station a Hanukkah menorah in the women’s section.

For decades, the site’s sole menorah has been lit on the men’s side of the wall, a fact that has angered Israeli and American women’s rights activists.

Anat Hoffman, the leader of Women of the Wall, a prayer group that has advocated for greater equality at the site, said guards at the wall’s entrance initially refused to allow anyone with a menorah onto the plaza.

Later, the group called the police and was allowed to enter.

“We lit 28 menorahs placed on silver foil in the women’s section,” Hoffman said. “We sang and we danced around the menorahs. This was the very first time in the history of Israel that women have lit a menorah at the wall. It was very moving.”

Hoffman said Silverman, who is in Israel to attend the bar mitzvah of her nephew, the son of Women of the Wall activist Rabbi Susan Silverman, “joined us when I explained the absurdity of the rabbis’ position.”

“She’s such a public Jewish figure, a strong feminist who isn’t afraid to speak her mind,” said Shira Pruce, the group’s press liaison.

Women of the Wall is asking Jewish women around the world to take a photo of themselves lighting a Hanukkah menorah, upload it and send it to Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, the wall’s administrator, “to show him that women light candles all over the world.”

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Before You Go

Soferet: Jewish Female Scribes Write
(01 of14)
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The sages say if you participate in writing a Torah, it's as if you received it at Mt. Sinai. Everybody should participate in writing a Torah. There's something transformative about participating in it yourself.--Jen Taylor Friedman, the first woman to write a complete Torah scroll(Pictured: The final letters of the Women's Torah Project scroll have been outlined and are waiting to be completed.) (credit:Women's Torah Project)
(02 of14)
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"It puts me in a beautiful state of mind," Linda Coppleson, one of the scribes for the Women's Torah Project, says about writing a Torah. "The whole idea of creating something that is holy ... it's a tremendous joy for me.""We're taught that we should feel like we're standing at Sinai," she says about Shavuot. "Writing it makes me feel like that every day." (credit:Linda Coppleson)
(03 of14)
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Julie Seltzer writes a Torah scroll at the Contemporary Jewish Museum in San Francisco as part of the "As It Is Written: Project 304,805" exhibit. (Photo credit: Bruce Damonte, courtesy of the Contemporary Jewish Museum) (credit:Bruce Damonte, courtesy of the Contemporary Jewish Museum)
(04 of14)
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Nava Levine-Coren working on her piece for the "Women of the Book" project. She wrote out a parsha from the Torah and did artwork on top of it. (credit:Nava Levine-Coren)
(05 of14)
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"Sometimes it's the unplanned learning that's the best," Julie Seltzer says, before explaining an experience she had while learning with a community one Shavuot: We read the 613 commandments out loud with 15 other people. We went around in a circle, reading commandments. The commandment to write a Torah landed on me. I read it out loud. I was just starting to learn to write then.(Pictured: Julie Seltzer holds two pieces of parchment of the Songs of Songs.) (credit:Julie Seltzer)
(06 of14)
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"That dam has been broken," Wendy Graff, the Director of the Women's Torah Project, says about women becoming scribes. "In a few years, it'll just be what's happening."(Pictured: The scribes of the Women's Torah Project.) (credit:Women's Torah Project)
(07 of14)
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"There's a deep connection in writing," Nava Levine-Coren says.(Pictured: Levine-Coren's piece for the "Women of the Book" project.) (credit:Nava Levine-Coren)
(08 of14)
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"It comes from within, Coppleson says about officially becoming a soferet, "which can be difficult." (credit:Linda Coppleson)
(09 of14)
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"I find something romantic in the letters," Nava Levine-Coren says. (Pictured: A ketubah (marriage contract) she wrote on parchment.) (credit:Nava Levine-Coren)
(10 of14)
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"Every part of this experience makes me think of Shavuot," Linda Coppleson, a scribe for the Women's Torah Project, says. "While I'm writing, I think about how the text is expressed." (credit:Linda Coppleson)
(11 of14)
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"I feel like I'm in the story," Nava Levine-Coren says, "and I'm living the text as I write it."(Pictured: Nava Levine-Coren presents a megillah she wrote for a family. Each member of the family filled in a letter of the last word of the megillah.) (credit:Nava Levine-Coren)
(12 of14)
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"Scribing is an art that fuses so much of who I am and what I love: Torah, Hebrew, art, ritual, meditation," Julie Seltzer says. "There is also something so beautiful about the anonymity of it all." (Pictured: Seltzer with the Women's Torah Project scroll.) (credit:Women's Torah Project)
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A megillah written by Nava Levine-Coren is read at a women's megillah reading on Purim. (credit:Nava Levine-Coren)
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The Women's Torah Project scroll. (credit:Women's Torah Project)