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   Party 
	Jewish: Food, Music, and More• 
		FoodReform Perspective
	
	by Rivka C. Berman
 • Party Planning
 • Why Party
 • Historic Overspending
 • Music
 • People of the Book 
		Centerpieces
 • Tzedaka Centerpieces
 
Food A bar or bat mitzvah meal is a seudat mitzvah, a mitzvah meal, and every 
effort should be made to ensure the meal meets kosher standards.  However, 
even if you choose a non-kosher caterer, skip the obviously non-kosher food. You 
don’t have to go the bagels and lox route, but cross shrimp scampi off the menu. 
A bar mitzvah and bat mitzvah meal is a seudat mitzvah, a mitzvah meal, and to 
have out and out non-kosher food is contrary to the spirit of the day.  
This may not be a classical Reform position, but neither is the bar mitzvah 
celebration. (Confirmation was favored instead.)  A kosher caterer would 
also be a big hit with your kosher observing friends.  (Though not 
prevalent, there are reform Jews who adhere to a kosher diet.)
 
 Party Planning
 Sensibly plan a party that keeps the bat mitzvah’s meaning intact. There are 
Sweet Sixteens and other teen years birthdays to celebrate what it means to be a 
teenager. Bar mitzvahs are distinguished by their focus on what it means to be a 
Jew. Which Jewish values are important to you? Whatever they are, the most 
meaningful bnei mitzvah parties are built upon these ideals.
 
 Judaism does not regard physical pleasure as a contradiction to spiritual 
growth. How many times has your rabbi reminded your congregation that Judaism 
does not end at the synagogue door? What he or she means is food, music, dance 
and good times are a part of Judaism. The trick is to plan the party – and life 
– to be an extension of Jewish values.
 
 Why Party?
 Around the 16th century celebrating a bar mitzvah became a standard Jewish 
rite of passage celebration. At that time, Rabbi Solomon Luria, a well-respected 
Torah authority, wrote that a bar mitzvah party’s seudat mitzvah, mitzvah meal, 
is on the lofty spiritual level of a marriage ceremony and deserved a 
celebration befitting this spiritually auspicious occasion.
 
 Bar mitzvah and Bat Mitzvah parties celebrate the person a child has and is 
becoming. Babies and small children have their parents’ identities and goals 
foisted upon them, and there’s no telling how much each child will accept or 
reject. By the time the bar mitzvah year is reached, personality, integrity, 
humor, likes, loves and hates have begun to take shape – and (we hope) the 
adulthood a child is growing into is reason to rejoice.
 
 Bar mitzvah parties have grown in importance for several reasons. People tend to 
get married and have children at later ages than the generations before. This 
lessens the chance that earlier generations will live to see a grandchild’s 
wedding. Bar mitzvahs, then, become a way to really savor the good times, when 
everyone can still be together.
 
 More influential than that touching sentiment is the pressure parents feel to 
give their children a party that is on par with the rest of the community – or 
outshines it. Hand-engraved invitations are a way for parents to show they are 
financially successful. Hiring the “right” caterer can be one way to display 
gourmand palettes.
 
 Kids feel the pressure too. Adolescence is distinguished by the dominance of a 
looming behemoth – peer pressure. This force demands regular feedings of what 
everyone else does, has or wears. Great strength is needed to create a bat 
mitzvah that does not completely bow to the routine of personalized party favors 
and balloon arches. There isn’t anything wrong with these things, per se, but it 
takes effort to not get lost in materialism without meaning.
 
 Historic Overspending
 Extravagance is not a modern problem. When Jewish communal authorities held 
greater sway, they legislated sumptuary laws to limit bar mitzvah celebrations. 
In 1595, Polish rabbis placed a communal tax on bar mitzvah parties. A portion 
of the celebration budget had to be donated to the community. Reducing party 
expenditures was the goal. Apparently, this didn’t work because in 1659 a new 
law was enacted to regulate party size. Aside from family members, only ten 
friends were to be invited to the bar mitzvah feast. One of the ten had to be a 
poor person.
 
 Before the bar mitzvah experience hit full stride in the prosperous 1950’s, a 
celebration was likely to be quite simple. A typical Ashkenazic bar mitzvah in 
the 1920’s consisted a bit of schnapps, some herring, and maybe some cake after 
services. (The Depression played a role in restricting expenditures.) Less was 
expected of the bar mitzvah boy as well. It was acceptable for a boy to learn 
the Torah blessings for his aliyah and not much else.
 
 Music
 Even the DJ. your son wants to hire may be familiar with the funky new takes on 
old Jewish songs. Klezmer, rollicking Jewish music, has made a big comeback in 
recent years. There is Jewish music beyond “Hava Nagila.”
 
People 
of the Book CenterpiecesInstead of or in addition to the themed centerpieces, put a stack of new 
prayer books on each table. Aside from being a symbol of the study and spiritual 
maturity, dedicating books to a synagogue is a nice way to honor the event. 
(It’s also exciting to open a siddur and read: “This siddur was dedicated by 
Josh and Johanna Cohen in honor of Danielle’s Bat Mitzvah.”) Books with Jewish 
subjects – history, law, and literature - can also be used as centerpieces and 
later donated to the synagogue’s library.
 
 Tzedakah Centerpieces
 Use centerpieces to display your commitment to doing good. Build 
centerpieces around posters, ads or brochures from charities who will benefit 
from the bat mitzvah celebration. On a card describe a donation of time or money 
that has been made to the organization (or a pledge based on expected bar 
mitzvah booty.)
 
 Jewish charities abound. Each one has a different focus and serves a special 
need from infant health networks to Jewish teen crisis lines to meals on wheels 
for the elderly. Choose organizations with missions that mean the most to you.
 
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