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Kisui Rosh
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A
With regard to the same issue,
Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi says:
It is
prohibited for a person to walk
even
four cubits with an upright posture,
which is considered an arrogant manner,
as it is stated: “The entire world is full of His glory”
(Isaiah 6:3). One who walks in an arrogant manner indicates a lack of regard for the glory and honor of God that is surrounding him, and thereby chases God from that place, as it were. The Gemara relates:
Rav Huna, son of Rav Yehoshua, would not walk four cubits with an uncovered head…
Kiddushin 31a:3
Rabbi Yitzḥak stated: An
exposed
handbreadth in a woman
constitutes
nakedness.
The Gemara asks: Regarding
which
halakha
was this said?
If you say
that it comes to prohibit
looking at
an exposed handbreadth in
her, didn’t Rav Sheshet say: Why did the verse enumerate
“anklets and bracelets, rings, earrings and girdles” (Numbers 31:50),
jewelry that is
worn
externally,
over her clothing, e.g., bracelets,
together with jewelry
worn
internally,
beneath her clothing, near her nakedness, e.g…
Berakhot 24a:15-17
The hair of a woman that it is the practice (lit. way) to cover is forbidden to recite [the Recitation of the Sh'ma] in front of it.
Rem"a: Even his wife
. But unmarried women for whom it is their way to go with an uncovered head, it is permitted.
Rem"a: And so too is the law with the hairs of women that regularly come out of their covering (Beit Yosef in the name of Rashba) and certainly foreign hair (i.e. a wig) even if it is her practice to cover (Hagahot Alfasi haChadashim).
Shulchan Arukh, Orach Chayim 75:2
Torah Sages conduct themselves with exceptional modesty. They do not demean themselves and do not bare their heads or their bodies.
Even when one enters a latrine, he should be modest and not uncover himself until he is seated. He should not wipe himself clean with the right hand. He should stay away from all others and enter a chamber beyond a chamber, a cave within a cave, and relieve himself. If he [must] relieve himself behind a fence, he should move far enough away that no one can hear the sound if he breaks wind…
Mishneh Torah, Human Dispositions 5:6
And from
that which transpired to
Rav Naḥman bar Yitzḥak as well
it can be derived that
there is no constellation for the Jewish people, As Chaldean
astrologers
told Rav Naḥman bar Yitzḥak’s mother: Your son will be a thief. She did not allow him
to
uncover his head. She said to
her son:
Cover your head so that the fear of Heaven will be upon you, and pray for
Divine
mercy. He did not know why she said
this
to him. One day he was sitting and studying beneath a palm tree
that did not belong to him, and
the cloak fell off of his head…
Shabbat 156b:6
§ The mishna stated:
And who is
considered a woman who violates the
precepts of Jewish
women? One who
goes out and her head is uncovered.
The Gemara asks: The prohibition against a woman going out with
her head uncovered
is not merely a custom of Jewish women. Rather,
it is by Torah
law,
as it is written
with regard to a woman suspected by her husband of having been unfaithful:
“And he shall uncover the head of the woman”
(Numbers 5:18). And
the school of Rabbi Yishmael taught:
From here there is a
warning to Jewish women not to go out…
Ketubot 72a:19
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