"Blessed be He who made me woman"

Published: Jan. 14, 2015, 12:14 p.m.

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Blessed be He who made me woman

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created of nothing!

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Blessed be He who hasn\'t made me man

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who never dies

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and is not born.

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So began the mornings of Shin Shifra, born in Bnei Brak in 1931, who turns the traditional Jewish Orthodox morning prayer up-side-down.\\xa0

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Shin Shifra\\u2019s poetry is steeped in Orthodox religious practice, befitting her home life and background. But it portrays a feminine and feminist focus, as in the poem \'Sabbath Prayer,\' translated by Tsipi Keller and\\xa0read by host Marcela Sulak:

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"Let there be in the house a troop of toddlers... Let them bring in mud / from the garden and I will yell at them / let them quarrel and call each other names / and they will give me strength / like the angels of the recitation of\\xa0Shema\\xa0/ and my forefathers will be named in them."

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Text:

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Poets on the Edge. An Anthology of Contemporary Hebrew Poetry. Selected and translated by Tsipi Keller. SUNY Press (2008).

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Music:

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Hagar Kadima - \'Stop\' (2011),\\xa0lyrics\\xa0by Shin Shifra, performed by Etty BenZaken.

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Gil Shohat - \'Songs of Bathsheba\' (2005), lyrics by Shin Shifra.

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