Gender Roles and Smashing the Patriarchy

What are things you’ve been told you should or shouldn’t do because of your gender? This week at Makom Community we used the story of Leah and Rachel marrying Yaakov to help us unpack some gender role expectations, both in Torah text and in our own lives. During shulchanot avodah (learning centers), we looked at plot points from the story and recorded the expectations for men and women we could noticed in each one. Here’s the chart we filled out with those messages:

Text example

Messages about men

Messages about women

Yaakov went traveling to look for a wife

Men are responsible for finding wives for themselves

Women wait to be found by a man who wants to marry them

Rachel tends to her father’s flock of sheep

Men own flocks of sheep

Women help take care of sheep (that their fathers/other men own)

Yaakov moves the big rock on the well by himself

Men are strong; men provide help

It’s not a woman’s job to open the well.

Lavan greets Yaakov with hugs and kisses

Men love each other; men hug and kiss to show love; men can express their emotions

Women’s emotions don’t matter to the author (the text doesn’t tell us about them)

Yaakov asks for Rachel as payment for his work for Lavan

Men can pay for women like property

Women can get sold like property or money

Rachel is described as beautiful; Leah is described as having weak eyes

Men care about how women look; men judge women only by their appearance

Women are valued by their appearance rather than their inner-beauty

Lavan and Yaakov arrange for Yaakov to marry Rachel without talking to her

Men are in charge

Women don’t get a say in their marriages

Lavan brings Leah to marry Yaakov without talking to anyone involved about it

Sometimes men aren’t even honest with each other about what they’re doing

Women have to listen to the decisions men make for and about them

Lavan “gives” Rachel to Yaakov to marry

Men give women away like they are things

Women are treated like things

Yaakov marries both Leah and Rachel

Men can marry as many people as they want

Women just have to go along with their marriages whether or not they wanted them

Taking a step back from the text, we also brainstormed lists of the stereotypical expectations for boys and girls that we notice in our own lives. I am pleased to report that there was a healthy level of indignation and frustration from all of our students while we did this exercise. It’s heartening to see that these kiddos both notice lots of gender stereotypes and also think that they’re unfair and wrong. Here are the lists we made:

Boys

Girls

  • Play sports
  • Look pretty
  • Do crazy stuff
  • Have families
  • Be strong(er) than girls
  • Follow their dreams
  • Get away with worse behavior
  • Play with dolls
  • Supposed to be in charge (politics)
  • Should be like Barbies
  • Have jobs that use their brains and strength
  • Let other people be in charge
  • Never cry
  • Should be clean and neat
  • Wear suits
  • Wear dresses
  • Shouldn’t dress up as girls for Halloween
  • Jump rope
  • Can make lots of noise
  • Be quiet

 

  • Like pink, white, and purple (boys get to like all the other colors)

 

  • Can’t have important jobs or jobs like police officers, fire fighters, engineers, etc.

We concluded our conversation by noticing what we do at Makom Community to challenge those gender norms:

  • We get to be ourselves! [It’s on our brit, two-way promise, from the beginning of the year.]
  • You divide us by age instead of by boys and girls.
  • When you put us into groups, you don’t always pair boys with boys and girls with girls.
  • We’re all able to play with whomever we want.
  • We let boys and girls be equal. No one gets better stuff or special treatment because of their gender.

I’m happy about this list, and I also think it could be even longer. We’ll continue to look for ways to help everyone be themselves, help us all get what we need, and smash the patriarchy along the way.

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