Was Rabbi Ovadia Yosef a Protofeminist? A Look at His Oral Sermons

Main Article Content

Netta Schramm

Abstract

This article examines Rabbi Ovadia's sermons, exploring his stance on women through folktales and narratives dedicated to halakhic scenario-building. Yosef's editorial intervention in a folktale by Yosef Hayyim of Baghdad is discussed, revealing his departure from the trope of woman as seducer and a shift in the status of the evil inclination. In short narratives of halakhic scenarios, Yosef prefers depicting religiously empowered "good" women. However, the subtext of these sermons is not an untheorized feminism; instead, they express Yosef's pragmatic worldview. Yosef's positive concept of the human psyche and its capacity for reason, dignity, and virtue guided his editorial decisions in severing the link between women and sin, endowing women with responsibility and agency. Yosef believed negative depictions of women as temptation's embodiment, lacking inherent religious value, harmed the religious well-being of both men and women. Thus, pragmatic considerations led him to craft narratives with reduced misogyny and gynophobia.

Article Details

How to Cite
Schramm, N. (2024). Was Rabbi Ovadia Yosef a Protofeminist? A Look at His Oral Sermons. Women in Judaism: A Multidisciplinary E-Journal, 20(1), 1–23. https://doi.org/10.33137/wij.v20i1.43959
Section
Articles
Author Biography

Netta Schramm, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Be’er Sheva

Netta Schramm is a post-doctoral fellow at the Center for the Study of Conversion and Inter-Religious Encounters, Ben Gurion University. She completed her PhD at the Hebrew University in modern and contemporary Jewish thought. Netta founded and runs the interdisciplinary research group I'm Not a Text.

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