S2E6: Bad Blood: The Period Talk in Rabbinic Judaism and Zoroastrianism

 
 

With Dr. Shai Secunda

Join our conversation with Dr. Shai Secunda about the Babylonian rabbis’ science of blood, breaking taboos through sex education, and menstruation as a cure for rabies.

Today, taboos about menstruation keep thousands of girls from attending school. For Jewish sages in late antique Persia, such beliefs led to laws that required women to stay away from their husbands during their periods and to wash at prescribed times. (Whether women followed these laws is another question!) Blood could pollute, yet it could also purify. And practices around menstruation may have helped religious communities define their identity.

 
Perhaps menstruation functions for women as a space of asserting religious identity. Jewish women were not circumcised, but they did have this thing that was related somehow to their gender. And perhaps that was one of the ways in which they built identity out of this realm of ritual.
— Dr. Shai Secunda


BIO

Dr. Shai Secunda is Jacob Neusner Professor in the History and Theology of Judaism at Bard College. He earned a bachelor's degree in Talmudic Literature from Ner Israel Rabbinical College, a master's in Liberal Arts from Johns Hopkins University, and an MA and PhD from Yeshiva University. He was previously the Blaustein Postdoctoral Fellow at Yale University, and he served as a member of the Martin Buber Society of Fellows at Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Shai has written two books, The Iranian Talmud: Reading the Bavli in Its Sasanian Context and The Talmud’s Red Fence: Menstruation and Difference in Babylonian Judaism and Its Sasanian Context. The latter was a finalist for the 2022 Jordan Schnitzer Book Award. Shai has also edited two volumes on Jewish and Iranian studies.

 
 

Cover Image:

The New Testament Gospels tell the story of a woman who suffered with an issue of blood for twelve years before Jesus healed her (Mark 5 and Luke 8). Traditionally interpreters believed the woman’s issue of blood had left her in a state of ritual impurity, limiting her social and religious life. More recently scholars have questioned that reading. They have suggested that the woman was ill, but not necessarily prohibited from society.

Image Credit: The Woman with the Flow of Blood. Fresco from the Catacombs of Marcellinus and Peter. Rome. 4th century CE. Image from Wikimedia Commons.

 

Women Who Went Before is written, produced, and edited by Rebekah Haigh and Emily Chesley. The music is composed and produced by Moses Sun.

Sponsored by the Center for Culture, Society, and Religion, the Program in Judaic Studies, the Stanley J. Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies, and the Committee for the Study of Late Antiquity at Princeton University

Views expressed on the podcast are solely those of the individuals, and do not represent Princeton University.

 
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S2E7: To Have and To Hold: Sexual Violence and the Bible

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S2E5: The Pee Test: Pregnancy and Childbirth in Ancient Egypt