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B"H
A Modern Mikvah Enriching the Metrowest Jewish
Community and Beyond
Welcoming to Everyone from Across the Spectrum of Jewish Life Under the Auspices of the
Chabad Center of Natick
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A mikvah is a ritual bath for specific mitzvot - commandments. Intricate laws and specifications govern its construction. Unlike an ordinary bathtub or swimming pool, a Mikvah must contain a certain quantity of "Mayim Chayim" (living waters) - gathered rainwater. Modern day mikvahs are equipped with filtration and purification systems; they are chlorinated and kept at a comfortably warm temperature. The mikvah creates a transformation from the every day world to the realm of the holy and spiritual. In the times of the ancient Temple, the High Priest had to immerse in a Mikvah prior to performing sacred services. Mikvah is an integral part of Judiasm, and it is used to immerse new pots, dishes and utensils before use. A man might choose to go to a Mikvah on his wedding day and prior to Yom Kippur, but the most important and general use of the Mikvah is by brides and married women.
For thousands of years, Jewish marriages have been strengthened through the sanctity and holiness inherent in Taharat Mishpahah - the laws of family purity. To keep these mitzvot, a husband and wife must refrain from intimate contact while the woman is menstruating and for seven days thereafter. At the end of this time, the wife immerses in the mikvah and returns to her husband as his bride. The mitzvot of Taharat Mishpahah reveal Judaism's view that the intimate relationship between a husband and a wife is sacred and essential to marital harmony. By observing these laws, a couple can become passionate lovers as well as best friends. By immersing in the Mikvah, a woman links herself to an ongoing tradition that has spanned generations, to Jewish women around the world and throughout time. As she brings herself in immediate contact with the source of life, purity, and holiness - with G-d who surrounds her and is within her always.
Myth #1: Immersion in a Mikvah is a humiliating, public procedure.
Myth #2: Judaism views a menstruating woman as "unclean"
Myth #3: The Mikvah is dirty.
E-mail us at mikvah@westernwell.org to learn more and have your questions answered! |
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Send mail to mikvah@westernwell.org
with questions or comments.
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