Tehora

(Fernsehfilm)
alle Plakate

Inhalte(1)

Israeli filmmaker Anat Zuria examines the Tharat Hamishpaha (family purity), the ancient laws and rituals, which shape women’s lives and sexuality within Jewish Orthodoxy. Giving a subtle voice to female rebellion within the religious world, Zuria presents her own experiences adhering to Orthodox practices, as well as those of her friends Natalie, Katie and Shira. At the heart of their stories is the nidda – a ten to twelve day period restricting women from touching or engaging in sexual intimacy with their husbands, which culminates with a trip to the mikve (cleansing baths). Their openness to the camera breaks a profound taboo of silence rooted in 2000-year-old laws, as they speak to the rigidity and confines of Orthodox rituals. Purity presents the hidden struggle of religious women to maintain their cultural traditions and individual needs within the framework of strict religious law. It looks as if the director admires the ritual and its meaning, but at the same time disagrees with having it arranged so strictly and immutably in society. (DOK.fest München)

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