Ofir Ben Shitrit

Ofir Ben Shitrit (Hebrew: אופיר בן שטרית) is an Israeli Orthodox Jewish singer. She came to prominence in 2013 as a contestant on the reality singing competition The Voice Israel. She received additional media attention due to her religious background, which led to controversy and opposition in her Orthodox Jewish religious community. She launched her professional singing career in 2013, performing Hebrew, English, Arabic and Spanish songs and covers.

Ofir Ben Shitrit
אופיר בן שטרית
Background information
Born20 December 1995
Occupation(s)Singer
Years active2013–present
Websitehttps://ofirbs95.wixsite.com/ofirbenshitrit

Early life and education

Ofir Ben Shitrit was born to an Orthodox Jewish family in 1995.[1][2] Her parents, Avram and Odelia Ben Shitrit, are Mizrahi Jews of Moroccan Jewish heritage.[3][2] She has three siblings.[2] The family lives on the religious moshav of Nir Galim.[2]

Ben Shitrit enjoyed singing from a young age.[2] She began writing her own songs at age 11, and won her school's annual singing context for six years in a row.[2]

She enrolled at the ulpana (religious girl's high school) in Ashdod.[4] Shitrit graduated from her ulpana in spring 2013.[5] She signed up for a year of Sherut Leumi (National Service),[2] after which she planned to study music in university.[5] As of 2016 she was studying music at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance,[6] receiving her bachelor's degree in music in 2018.

The Voice Israel

I think the Torah wants us to be happy. It wants music to make people happy. I think you can combine Torah and music, and this is why I chose to come on the show.

–Ofir Ben Shitrit, appearing on The Voice Israel[1]

In fall 2012, Ben Shitrit's aunt brought her to an audition for The Voice Israel. Though she didn't prepare in advance, she qualified for a slot on the season 2 debut.[2] In January 2013, the seventeen-year-old[2] 12th-grader[7] appeared as one of 50 contestants on the show.[1] Ben Shitrit's performance of Ofra Haza's Od Mechaka La'Echad ("Still Waiting for the One") won plaudits from the celebrity judges, and she chose Aviv Gefen to be her mentor.[1] Ben Shitrit shook Gefen's hand to seal the deal.[1]

The response from Ben Shitrit's ulpana was swift in coming. As women singing in front of men and handshaking between genders are forbidden by rabbinic law, the school suspended her for two weeks.[1] The school also ordered Ben Shitrit to take classes in Judaism.[4] Since Ministry of Education regulations do not allow a school to suspend a student for appearing on a television show, the school asked Ben Shitrit's parents to initiate the penalty.[4] Ben Shitrit's mother told Maariv: "This is a punishment that we took upon ourselves, so that the girls in the institution will see that we will do something with the child".[4]

Ben Shitrit accepted the suspension, saying, "I understood that what I did was against the spirit of the ulpana, and didn't want to create an opening for other girls to do the same. The punishment is symbolic".[1] In later interviews, she pushed back against the rabbinic law prohibiting women singing in front of men, saying she thought it was more about modesty than an outright ban on singing. "I feel like there is no problem to sing in public as long as I do so in a modest way, not a provocative way, as long as I'm doing it with a pure intention", she said.[2]

Ben Shitrit was viewed as a "heroine" by traditional Israeli Jews who wish to be part of secular society while maintaining their religious observance.[1][5] One commentator dubbed her "the religious Rosa Parks", noting that she had become "an icon and a figure for thousands of girls who look at you and see the fulfillment of their dreams in poetry, dance and theater", as well as "a symbol of the collision between the binding law of God (so to speak) and the realization of freedom and creativity".[8] Ben Shitrit received support from Minister of Education Naftali Bennett, a Religious Zionist himself, who praised her voice on his Facebook page.[4] In response, the Ministry of Education issued a statement that ulpana students are required to follow the rules of their school if it mandates a religious lifestyle.[4] Ben Shitrit was also supported by the progressive Jewish organization Tzohar.[1] Ben Shitrit ultimately finished in second place on The Voice Israel, losing to Lina Makhul.[9]

In December 2013, the Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance invited Ben Shitrit to New York City to sing at its international conference. The organization posted her name and face on a billboard in Times Square saluting the "key personalities at the forefront of the Orthodox feminist movement".[5]

Professional career

Ben Shitrit launched her professional music career in 2013, performing original songs and covers of Hebrew, English, and Spanish songs.[5] She has performed with the Israeli Andalusian Orchestra in Ashdod. She has also performed piyyutim with the Israeli women's group "Neshot Chava" ("Women of Eve"), and recorded a song for the Religious Zionist political party, The Jewish Home's 2015 election campaign.[6]

In 2016 she began modeling modest clothing for the Modesto fashion website.[10]

Personal life

Ben Shitrit married Harel Amsalem, a photographer, in March 2016.[6][11] In June 2017 the couple had their first child, a boy.[12]

gollark: Um, to remove everyone from the broken area.
gollark: The anti-laser shielding of my Lunar Exclusion Zone base is powered by... that groundside reactor.
gollark: As well as probably breaking the lunar facility, among other things, but eh.
gollark: The reactor powering it should be able to handle that load fine, but the shield seems to also be inside its plasma containment, which SHOULD break it.
gollark: Er, not crashes.

References

  1. Lebovitz, Liel (11 February 2013). "An Orthodox Star is Born". Tablet. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  2. Brown, Elicia (17 December 2013). "The Sound and the Fury". The New York Jewish Week. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  3. סיכום אירוע לציון היציאה והגירוש של היהודים מארצות ערב ומאיראן
  4. Maniv, Omri (22 January 2013). "אולפן או אולפנה: כוכבת "דה וויס" הושעתה מהלימודים" [Studio or Ulpana: Star of 'The Voice' Suspended from School]. Makor Rishon (in Hebrew). Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  5. Ghert-Zand, Renee (3 December 2013). "Q&A: Orthodox Singing Sensation Ofir Ben Shitrit". The Forward. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  6. Farkash, Tali (24 February 2016). "בואי כלה: ההתחלות החדשות של אופיר בן שטרית" [Come, O Bride: The New Beginnings of Ofir Ben Shitrit]. Ynetnews (in Hebrew). Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  7. Steinberg, Jessica (25 January 2013). "School bans religious 'Voice' contestant". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  8. Hersh, Avinoam (8 February 2013). "את כבר לא רק אופיר בן שטרית" [You Are No Longer Just Ofir Ben shitrit]. Makor Rishon (in Hebrew). Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  9. Gottlieb, Tzvi (3 April 2013). "Reality TV: The Way To Israeli Consensus?". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  10. Misheli, Linui (4 September 2016). "כבר לא חלום: בגדים צנועים במחיר שמתאים לכולן" [No Longer a Dream: Modest clothing that suits all budgets]. Srugim News (in Hebrew). Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  11. Arzoan, Shai (15 April 2015). "קול ששון: כוכבת "דה וויס" מתחתנת" [The Voice of Gladness: 'The Voice' Star Weds]. Walla! (in Hebrew). Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  12. "מזל טוב: אופיר בן שטרית ילדה בן" [Congratulations: Ofir Ben Shitrit Gives Birth to a Son]. Kan Darom: Ashdod (in Hebrew). 8 June 2017. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
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