About Rabbi Jack Abramowitz
Rabbi Jack Abramowitz served as Director of Programs for NCSY before becoming Associate Director of the Pepa and Rabbi Joseph Karasick Department of Synagogue Services. Rabbi Abramowitz holds degrees in Jewish studies, communications and Higher Education Administration. Among his accomplishments, he authored NCSY's Torah on One Foot series of educational pamphlets and created negiah.org, the first abstinence web site for Jewish teens. Rabbi Abramowitz is the author of The Shnayim Mikra Companion on Torah, The Nach Yomi Companion volumes 1 and 2 on the books of the Prophets and the Writings, and The Tzniyus Book.

Recent Posts

Taryag: A Mitzvah a Day

Questions? Contact us at taryag@ou.org


PARSHAT DailyPARSHAT Ki Teitzei
MITZVAH COUNTER
Mitzvos to date: 543
Positives:221
Negatives:322
That can be performed today:234
Plus those that can be performed only in Israel:23

543. What a Drag: The prohibition against men wearing women’s clothes


…and a man must not wear a woman’s garment… (Deuteronomy 22:5)

The previous mitzvah prohibits a woman from wearing a man’s clothes; this mitzvah addresses the ban against a man wearing a woman’s clothing. The reason is the same for both mitzvos: to serve as a deterrent to immorality, with men passing as women and women passing as men.

This prohibition includes not only wearing women’s clothes but also beauty practices that are associated with women such as tweezing one’s eyebrows or dying one’s hair. (See Talmud Shabbos 94b.) Targum Onkelos reflects this halachic reality in his translation by rendering our verse “a man shall not adorn himself in the manner of women.”

This mitzvah applies in all times and places. It is discussed in the Talmud in the tractates of Nazir (59a) and Makkos (20b). It is codified in the Mishneh Torah in the twelfth chapter of Hilchos Avodas Kochavim. This mitzvah is #40 of the 365 negative mitzvos in the Rambam’s Sefer HaMitzvos and #179 of the 194 negative mitzvos that can be observed today as listed in the Sefer HaMitzvos HaKatzar of the Chofetz Chaim.



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