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I am interested in finding out why some Jewish people grow their beards and have earlocks (i think thats what the curly hair at side of face is called) and also why the men wear black suits with top hats? Curious.

2007-03-09 21:55:37 · 5 answers · asked by Narelle T 2 in Society & Culture Cultures & Groups Other - Cultures & Groups

5 answers

First off, anyone that observant will not be using a computer on Shabbat.

Earlocks (payis or peot) : “You shall not clip your hair at the temples or mar the edges of your beard." (Lev. 19:27)

Ultra-orthodox Jewish men often continue to wear the clothing that was common in the part of Europe where their particular group originated. The hat in particular is regionally distinctive and is a ready identifier to other Hasidim.

2007-03-09 22:07:20 · answer #1 · answered by The angels have the phone box. 7 · 2 0

The Torah, the Five Books of Moses, has a commandment not to shave the
corners of the head. [Specifically, Leviticus 19:27 says, "Do not
round the corner of your head."] The Torah also forbids a male Jew
from removing hair from one's sideburns and temple are (known as
pei'ot ha-rosh). Actually, the sideburns merely have to be long enough
that one can pull on the hair, and the beard area can be shaved with
something other than a sharp blade (many people accept the use of
electric shavers). But specifically within the Chassidic community,
there is a custom not to shave (and frequently not even to trim) the
beard, and to permit the sideburn area (all the way up to the top of
the ear) to grow long as well (the long sideburns are called peyot) .
Some tuck the hair up under their kipot/skullcaps, while others curl
the hair. Many Orthodox say the payes (a.k.a. earlocks/sidelocks)
begin right at the temple, to just behind the ear, and must grow no
shorter than the top of the cheekbone. Then they are to be worn pushed
forward of the ear so as to be visible. Many, following Rabbi Nachman,
grow them long because he said he could "pull them by their payess out
of hell" once he was in Paradise!

Another note related to the "not rounding of the corners". This is in
direct relation to the passage about not harvesting the corners of the
field, but leaving it alone for G-d. Finally, in not rounding "the
four corners" of the face, we have a comparison with the tzitzis at
the four corners of the tallit. People forget that the hair, the
harvesting, and the tallit are all mitzvot.

On a practical level, shaving or trimming of the beard is not
permitted on the Sabbath or Holidays, and for a few stretches during
the year [such as portions of the time between Pesach and Shavuos]. A
beardless man will grow days or weeks of stubble, but a bearded man
who doesn't shave or trim his beard during that time will not look
significantly different.

To be specific, the Law is that one must not use a straight razor
(including safety-razors) on one's temples or to shave one's beard.
Those Jewish men who have wanted to be clean-shaven have had various
options; in the past century, either depilatory powder (ancestor to
Nair), or electric shavers. Electric shavers (at least most of them;
check with your local Orthodox rabbi for acceptable brands) function
like a scissors: two relatively dull blades pinch off the hair, rather
than one very sharp blade slicing it off.

Chasidim and some others have kabbalistic reasons for growing a beard,
so they will not take advantage of modern technology. Otherwise,
Jewish men having beards have it for other reasons, be they simply "to
look Jewish" or style or whatever.

As for sidelocks, that is a result of a peculiar interpretation of the
law against shaving one's temples. The basic law is that there must
remain enough hair to bend it over with one's fingers; that can be as
little as 1/2 inch or so. Some, notably Hungarian chasidim and
Yemenites, do not cut the sidelocks at all, and they grow very long.
Most chasidim have short sidelocks: thin, 2-3", that they tuck behind
their ears, so you won't see them.

Many who grow long peyos do so for Kabbalistic reasons. One of the
opinions in Kabbalah is that the peyos need to be worn long only until
the beard grows in. Once the beard grows, the peyos of the side of the
head should not be allowed to grow down beyond where the sides of the
beard begin to appear.

Finally, some Jewish men just don't like to shave.

2007-03-09 22:03:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

One is not permitted by the Torah to shave .

The Jews have managed to survive as a people by not changing their dress, their language and their beleifs.

2007-03-10 05:35:26 · answer #3 · answered by Ivri_Anokhi 6 · 0 1

Short hair is also mainstream, I love lOng hair upon guys more, it looks sexy: three short hair can look nice but it looks really common

2017-02-22 22:17:12 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

We have had mid-back to waist length tresses most of my life.

2017-01-20 05:23:38 · answer #5 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

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