Fashion show faux pas?
Tu B’av – the fifteenth day of the Jewish month of Av – is the closest Israelis have to a Valentine’s Day: just substitute a bit of ribald wisdom from the rabbis of the Talmud for a martyred Roman saint and a lot of cuddly Cupids.
According to tradition (and Wikipedia), on Tu B’av, “unmarried girls would dress in simple white clothing (so that rich could not be distinguished from poor) and go out to sing and dance in the vineyards surrounding Jerusalem.” Young men who had not yet married would “go to watch and choose among them wives for themselves.”
That spirit of joy and free love has been expanded over the years. This week, the City of Jerusalem pulled out all the stops with a jam-packed evening of Tu B’av events at the German Colony’s Beit Yehudit community and cultural center.
The evening featured a marathon of movies with “love” as a theme; a festive world music dance party put on by the Boogie organization; a provocative lecture entitled “Forbidden Love in the Talmud” by Dr. Micha Friedman; and a special concert by former Friends of Natasha co-founder and front man Micha Shitrit hosted by rocker Erez Lev-Ari.
The most popular event of the evening was the concert. An only-in-Jerusalem mix of secular and religious young adults (my wife Jody joked that we brought the average age of the crowd up by several percent) packed the grass to cheer on Lev-Ari who deftly blends spiritual and physical longing in his atmospheric compositions.
But before the show started, TV star Sharon Fauster, who played the lovelorn Reut in the popular series Srugim about religious singles in the very neighborhood where the event was taking place, took to the stage to introduce a Tu B’av-inspired “white” fashion show.
Onto the improvised catwalk paraded four models in skimpy miniskirt and strapless ensembles. They paraded and preened, blowing kisses to the crowd and tossing back their heads of ample (and mostly blond) hair.
The audience shifted uncomfortably. You could see some of the religious men (not the women, mind you) look around, avert their eyes and even get up to step out until the show was over. Others lapped it all up – Jerusalem doesn’t see a lot of long legged, high-heeled models strolling the Ben Yehuda Pedestrian Mall (they’d probably get stoned, and not in a Tel Aviv kind of way).
Then a strange thing happened: about half way through, the models started wearing scarves and jackets. The cleavage, which had been so abundant just moments before, was now obscured (although tastefully and still in white, in keeping with the evening’s Tu B’av theme).
Jody and I couldn’t figure it out. Was this part of the show? Or did someone run backstage brandishing fashionable cover-ups? Was this subtle religious coercion, along the lines of the Bridge of Strings debacle, where a pre-teen dance troop was forced to wear sweaters while going through their routines in order not to offend local sensibilities? Or was the point to demonstrate that Jerusalemites could be both sexy and modest at the same time?
Indeed, the scarves and jackets didn’t seem alien – in most cases, they served as nicely matching accessories rather than some hastily improvised capitulation.
We may never know (I’m not on a first name basis with Fauster…yet – I did try to friend her Facebook). So I can only report what I saw from first hand observation – and, oh yes, I stayed firmly in my seat, eyes forward.
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One Comment on Fashion show faux pas?
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Joel Katz on
Tue, Jul 27th 2010 3:23 PM
re: “Was this subtle religious coercion, along the lines of the Bridge of Strings debacle, where a pre-teen dance troop was forced to wear sweaters while going through their routines in order not to offend local sensibilities?”
Not sure about your reference to “sweaters” — but the photo in the article: ‘Modesty police’ patrols bridge ceremony shows the brown plastic garbage bag-like coverings and black head-gear the girls were made to wear.
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