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・ Bar Aftab-e Seyyedi
・ Bar Aftab-e Shidan
・ Bar Aftab-e Shirani
・ Bar Aftab-e Silab
・ Bar Aftab-e Sipeh
・ Bar Aftab-e Sofla
・ Bar Aftab-e Sofla, Khuzestan
・ Bar Aftab-e Sofla, Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad
・ Bar Aftab-e Tahlivan
・ Bar Aftab-e Zafari
・ Bar Aftab-e Zirdu
・ Bar Aftab-e Zizi
・ Bar Ahang
・ Bar Ahui
・ Bar Ahui, Hirmand
Bar and Bat Mitzvah
・ Bar Aqueduct
・ Bar association
・ Bar Association of Metropolitan St. Louis
・ Bar Association of Puerto Rico
・ Bar Association of San Francisco
・ Bar aux Folies-Bergère (ballet)
・ Bar Avard Shodeh
・ Bar B C Dude Ranch
・ Bar Bahlul
・ Bar Bar
・ Bar Bar Bar
・ Bar Bar Marg Sar
・ Bar Beach
・ Bar Beach (New York)


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Bar and Bat Mitzvah : ウィキペディア英語版
Bar and Bat Mitzvah

Bar Mitzvah () and Bat Mitzvah () (Ashkenazi pronunciation: "Bas Mitzvah") (plural: ''B'nai Mitzvah'' for boys, and ''B'not Mitzvah'' – Ashkenazi pronunciation: "B'nos Mitzvah" – for girls) are Jewish coming of age rituals.
Bar () is a Jewish Babylonian Aramaic word literally meaning "son" (), while bat () means "daughter" in Hebrew, and mitzvah () means "commandment" or "law" (plural: ''mitzvot''). Thus ''bar mitzvah'' and ''bat mitzvah'' literally translate to "son of commandment" and "daughter of commandment". However, in rabbinical usage, the word ''bar'' means "under the category of" or "subject to". ''Bar mitzvah'' therefore translates to "an () who is subject to the law". Although the term is commonly used to refer to the ritual itself, in fact the phrase originally refers to the person.
According to Jewish law, when Jewish boys become 13 years old, they become accountable for their actions and become a bar mitzvah. A girl becomes a bat mitzvah at the age of 12 according to Orthodox and Conservative Jews, and at the age of 13 according to Reform Jews. Prior to reaching bar mitzvah age, the child's parents hold the responsibility for the child's actions. After this age, the boys and girls bear their own responsibility for Jewish ritual law, tradition, and ethics, and are able to participate in all areas of Jewish community life. Traditionally, the father of the bar mitzvah gives thanks to God that he is no longer punished for the child's sins (Genesis Rabba, Toldot 23:11). In addition to being considered accountable for their actions from a religious perspective, b'nai mitzvah may be counted towards a minyan (prayer quorum) and may lead prayer and other religious services in the family and the community.
Bar mitzvah is mentioned in the Mishnah (Ethics of the Fathers, 5:21) and in the Talmud. In some classic sources, the age of 13 appears for instance as the age from which males must fast on the Day of Atonement, while females fast from the age of 12. In the late Middle Ages this was systematized in Europe into a general rule as to when a young person was obligated to observe the mitzvot. The age of b'nai mitzvah roughly coincides with physical puberty.〔Niddah, 45b.〕 The bar or bat mitzvah ceremony is usually held on the first Shabbat after a boy's thirteenth and a girl's twelfth birthday.
==Significance==
Reaching the age of bar or bat Mitzvah signifies becoming a full-fledged member of the Jewish community with the responsibilities that come with it. These include moral responsibility for own actions, eligibility to be called to read from the Torah and lead or participate in a minyan, may possess personal property, may be legally married according to Jewish law, must follow the 613 laws of the Torah and keep the halakha, may testify as a witness in a Beth Din (Rabbinical court) case.
Many congregations require pre-bar mitzvah children to attend a minimum number of Shabbat prayer services at the synagogue, study at a Hebrew school, take on a charity or community service project, and maintain membership in good standing with the synagogue. In addition to study and preparation offered through the synagogue and Hebrew schools, bar mitzvah tutors may be hired to prepare the child through the study of Hebrew, Torah cantillation and basic Jewish concepts.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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