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Parashat Tazria and Parashat Metzora

Created by the Hand of Heaven: A Jewish Approach to Intersexuality
by Rabbi Elliot Rose Kukla and Reuben Zellman on Saturday April 21, 2007
3 Iyyar 5767
Leviticus 12:1 - 15:33, Comment on this essay
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God spoke to Moses, saying: Speak to the Israelite people thus: When a woman at childbirth bears a male, she shall be unclean seven days . . .She shall remain in a state of blood purification for thirty-three days . . .If she bears a female, she shall be unclean two weeks as during her menstruation, and she shall remain in a state of blood purification for sixty-six days. On the completion of her period of purification, for either son or daughter, she shall bring to the priest, at the entrance of the Tent of Meeting, a lamb in its first year for a burnt offering, and a pigeon or a turtledove. . . Such are the rituals concerning her who bears a child, male or female. . .– Leviticus 12:1-7

Created by the Hand of Heaven: Making Space for Intersex Jews

After eighteen hours of labor, Devorah gave birth at 4:37 a.m. on the Tuesday before Shavuot. Over the baby’s piercing cries, Devorah tilted her head upward and strained to hear the most important news from the midwife. “Is it a boy or a girl?” The long months of pregnancy were finally over. Now, the midwife’s answer would mean everything. Devorah (like all new parents) knew that, from the moment of birth onward, most facets of her child’s life—the clothes it would be told to wear, the activities it would be anticipated to like, the careers and hobbies it would be encouraged to pursue, the loving relationships it would be expected to have—would be guided by the answer to this one crucial question.

The first of this week’s double parshiyot, Tazriya-Metzora, opens with instructions to the Israelites regarding the birth of a baby. There are two separate sets of instructions to expectant parents, and they must begin following one of them immediately after their child is born. How to proceed is dependent on one factor: whether the baby is a girl or a boy. In the world-view of the Bible, as in the twenty-first century, it is assumed that there are two possible answers to this one crucial question, and that answer is immediately apparent from our first moments on earth—every person has either one body or the other one.

It isn’t true.

The Intersex Society of North America states that one out of every one to two thousand infants are born intersex—they are born with physical traits that cannot be easily classified as male or female. Many more people discover at the onset of puberty that they have ambiguous hormonal or chromosomal status. Intersexuality is quite common. But the twenty-first century is structured to allow two, and only two, sexes. There are two locker rooms, two boxes to choose between on every form we fill out and two diagrams in the science book. So what do we do when someone doesn’t “fit”?

We fix it.

Modern medical science has provided a “solution” to this challenge. If visible anatomy does not identify the sex of a baby, a surgeon operates to transform the infant into an unambiguous boy or girl. If an individual’s body takes an alternate route to maturity at puberty, we offer hormone therapies, to stimulate conformity. We now (perhaps for the first time in history) have the know-how, as well as the will, to make real people fit into one of the two categories found in this week’s parashah.

Andie, an intersex teenager, says: “I have not suffered because of my birthright, which is really how I now feel about being intersex. I have suffered because of well intentioned intervention along the way that was meant to shape me into a person that someone else wanted me to be, that someone else believed I should be, that someone else thought was best for me. I was prodded and poked, photographed, examined and cut. I was six years old.”

This modern “solution” may seem like the only way to handle intersexuality in a strictly sexed and gendered society. But Jewish sacred tradition offers us a different approach. In the post-biblical era, rabbinic sages struggled to understand the sometimes abstract teachings of the Bible and make them “fit” with the complexity of the actual people that surrounded them. By the third century of the Common Era, a substantial section of Jewish civil and sacred law had been written that was dedicated to the question of how to integrate intersex people into the gendered society of Jewish Antiquity.

The Mishnah (Bikkurim 4: 1) explains: “The androgynos in some ways is like men, and in some ways is like women, and in some ways is like both men and women, and in some ways is like neither men nor women.” Among other things, we learn in this chapter of the Mishnah how the ritual laws of our parashah apply to the birth of an intersex infant. We also learn that intersex people are to be protected from physical harm and their lives sanctified, just like any other person. This chapter of the Mishnah is just one of many texts. The tumtum and androgynos (two intersex labels applied by the Sages) appear over 300 times in the Babylonian Talmud alone! The Mishnah, Talmud and the legal codes address questions about intersex people in every aspect of society: marriage, property, dress and conduct, inheritance, sex, conversion and religious duties.

Today, we confront those who don’t “fit” and endeavor to change them. In Antiquity, our rabbis took people as they really were and went on from there. There are many ways to read these texts, and the Sages’ approach is very far from perfect. They certainly do not advocate the overthrow of binary systems; they do not argue for sex and gender liberation, as some of us might wish that they had. But they also never question whether intersex people really exist, or whether these “conditions” were better eradicated. They do not advocate operations to transform an infant’s body to better fit a gender category. They understand that intersex people are created “al y’dei shamayim / by the hand of Heaven” (from the Maggid Mishneh’s commentary on Rambam’s Hilchot Shofar)—and that every Divine creation is entitled to be seen, considered and included.

Today, we’ve gone back to the more simplistic world-view of the Bible. We have forgotten the complexity and humanity of the approach of our classical thinkers towards intersex people. Modern medical science has created a world of intersex invisibility, perhaps more than any culture in any other era. Suzanne Kessler, a contemporary scholar who writes about intersexuality states: “Genital ambiguity is corrected not because it is threatening to an infant’s health, but because it is threatening to an infant’s culture.” As Jews, our sacred tradition provides us with both the resources and the mandate to begin to transform our culture to better reflect the diversity of real bodies. Our heritage asks us to speak out to stop the exclusion of intersex people and to challenge a culture of medical interventions on intersex people when they do not choose them for themselves. This approach would help to create more space in society for the uniqueness of all of our identities whether we are male, female, intersex or something else.

In the Mishnah, Rabbi Yosi makes the radical statement: “androgynos bria bifnei atzma hu / the androgynos he is a created being of her own.” This Hebrew phrase blends male and female pronouns to poetically express the complexity of the androgynos’ identity. The term bri’a b’ifnei atzmah is a classical Jewish legal term for exceptionality. This term is an acknowledgement that not all of creation can be understood within binary categories. It recognizes the possibility that uniqueness can burst through the walls that demarcate our society. The Hebrew word bria (created being) explicitly refers to divine formation; hence this term also reminds us that all bodies are created in the image of God. People can’t always be easily defined; they can only be seen and respected, and their lives made holy. This Jewish approach allows for genders beyond male and female. It opens up space in society for every body. And it protects those who live in the places in between.

To challenge the myth of binary sex is to ask our society to reconsider some of the fundamental things that we have all been taught since the day we were born. And yet this is exactly what Jewish sacred texts ask us to do. What if instead of asking “Is it a boy or a girl?” the moment an infant is born, we simply celebrated that a new person has been created in the image of God? What if, whenever we are asked if a new baby is a boy or a girl, we simply responded: “It’s a created being of its own?” Jewish tradition recognizes that intersexuality is part of the beauty of the created world. Like our Sages, we must insist upon telling the full truth about the diversity of God’s creation.

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Rabbi Elliot Rose Kukla (left) has been an activist, writer, organizer and educator for more than a decade. He has taught widely about sexual and gender diversity in Judaism in the US, Canada and Israel. His articles on the intersections between Judaism and justice appear in numerous magazines as well as in anthologies. For the last 2 years, Elliot served as the rabbi of the Danforth Jewish Circle, Toronto’s only queer-welcoming and social-justice oriented synagogue. He recently moved to San Francisco where he will be a resident in Clinical Pastoral Education at the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF) Medical Center. Elliot was ordained by Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in 2006.

Reuben Zellman (right) is a third-year rabbinical student at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, and received his BA in linguistics from the University of California at Berkeley. He worked in disability services before doing his post-baccalaureate work in music theory and classical voice at San Francisco State University. Reuben has been active in the transgender community since 1999, and has taught about gender, sexuality and Judaism at many congregations, conferences and universities around the U.S. He currently serves as the rabbinical intern at Congregation Sha’ar Zahav in San Francisco.

Elliot and Reuben are currently co-creating a Transgender resource Library for Jewish Mosaic which will be open to the public soon. They are also helping to launch a website (www.transtorah.org) in summer 2007 which will offer educational, pastoral and liturgical resources for Jewish communities to help them transform into welcoming sanctuaries for people of all genders.

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Comment on this essay

by Kailana Alaniz on October 14, 2008 04:22
thank you for providing understanding about people who are well just different. intersexed does not mean freakish, or shamefull. We are the way we are because that is who we are suppose to be. Doctors do not have a right to alter or change us, because they have some conception that we much fit what they believe in order for society to accept us as normal human beings. I hope others get the opportunity to understand and learn that having an intersexed conditon, does not give any other person the right to force surgery onto them. Our bodies are our own, and only God knows, what we truely are.
by wendy taumata on October 11, 2008 19:55
shalom greetings from nz,just wanted to say hi and encourage all who work with law changes concerning intersex politics,thankyou for putting yourselfs out there,one never shines as much as when the sky looks its blackist,never stop shineing,love and many blessings wendy
by wendy taumata on August 26, 2008 08:24
Shalom. I live in New Zealand. I'm intersexed and have [both an] ovary and teste internally. My problem, sad as it is, they will not tell me what my chromosomes are. I'm also in closure brackets, but tell [you] something, a person knows and usually finds out. Please tell intersex the truth, especially when they are seeking answers to why [their] body and life has been so difficult. Let's work hard to make the life of intersex humanity just [an] everyday part of humanity - Selah!
by Sorele on April 23, 2007 13:44
Yasher koyach! The statement from the intersexed teenager is powerful, and the context you give to it is fascinating. Thanks!
by Jhos Singer on April 21, 2007 02:30
Thanks for a great piece--surely the basis of all social health begins with the simple acceptance of what is, and I agree that our rabbis, z"l, seem to be eons ahead of us, how wonderfully paradoxic! Atem tzur!!!!
by sarita Groisser on April 20, 2007 20:32
love it. we all need more drashot like this one. thanks so much, eli and reuben.
by Biirtha Axcella Zelensky on April 20, 2007 18:52
okay that deals with intersex. but what about the transgender issue. when someone feels they are in the wrong body and feel comfortable as the sex opposite to what they are born with
by Kenny Altman on April 20, 2007 13:14
Yasher koach to both of you. Keep up the good work.
by Marisa Elana on April 20, 2007 12:13
Beautifully done. Kol ha'kavod!

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