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Gender Roles in the Abrahamic Faiths in the United States

Decent Essays

Gender roles, like all other facets of society, have changed greatly since the Pilgrims landed in 1620. While Christians were the first to practice an Abrahamic religion in what is now the United States, Jews and Muslims quickly followed, and they had to situate themselves within a predominantly Christian societal framework. In the early 1800s, Charleston, South Carolina, was home to many Jews (Marcus 64), though nowadays there tend to be large Jewish communities in large cities. In 1806, Myer Moses gave an address to the Jewish Orphan Society, a group that helped poor women and their children make ends meet. He specifically addresses women in his speech, meaning that his audience was probably primarily women. He characterizes women as sympathetic, persuasive, anxious, affectionate, virtuous, and dutiful (Marcus 65-66). Moses is asking these women to donate to help women and children. His goal is to tug at the heartstrings of these wealthier women as wives and mothers. He claims that feminine affection and persuasion are the best tools against distress, painting these less-fortunate women and children as distressed. Giving to these distressed people makes the donors more virtuous, he says (66). Roughly thirty years later, Isaac Leeser, a Philadelphia preacher, spoke to fellow Jews about educating women. He was a conservative young bachelor (Marcus 129), three qualities that no doubt influenced his views on education. Some people claim that women do not need the same amount

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