'I wanted to be more me': Teens propel a trend toward gender-neutral mitzvah ceremonies
Like many Jewish teens, Ash Brave was nervous for their bnai mitzvah. Memorizing the Torah portion, sending invitations, planning a party: Its a lot for a 13-year-old to think about during what can already be an anxiety-filled age.
Despite the typical stress involved with preparing to enter the adult Jewish community, Brave cheerfully described their gender-neutral bnai mitzvah last summer, recalling feeling really supported [by] the whole synagogue. For teens like Brave, an eighth grader from Boulder, Colorado who uses he and they pronouns interchangeably, gender-inclusive bnai mitzvahs (often termed bmitzvahs) offer an opportunity to come of age as their full selves.
Across the country, there is an expanding list of Jewish community centers, day schools, Hillels, organizations and more that include and celebrate LGBTQ+ identities. Many synagogues are following suit with the ceremonies they offer and the language they use. Some congregations are initiating these changes on their own; in other cases, the teens themselves are propelling the shifts.
Traditionally, most synagogues hold gendered bnai mitzvah, with bar mitzvahs for boys and bat mitzvahs for girls (bnai is the Hebrew plural form meanings sons and daughters, although it is technically masculine). Increasingly, many Jewish congregations are moving towards gender-inclusive bnai mitzvah ceremonies. Synagogues like Har Hashem, a Reform synagogue in Boulder, have been offering these ceremonies for years at the request of their congregants. Because of these shifts, many gender nonconforming Jewish teens feel a deeper sense of belonging in their religious communities.
https://www.jta.org/2023/04/04/religion/i-wanted-to-be-more-me-teens-propel-a-trend-toward-gender-neutral-mitzvah-ceremonies