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While I don't like the oppressiveness it's seems to have sprung from, I can understand your point of maintaining the Jewish identity. As for myself, I think I might choose another ritual to keep than that one. The whole idea of menstruating women being impure rubs me the wrong way.
To be fair, some of the women interviewed did not see it as oppressive. One woman, who had moved to Israel from New York, described her experiences with miqveh in New York as being like an escape, like a day at the spa, almost. She did admit that the ritual in Israel is not like that, and that it was more just something she had to do. She was kind of indifferent to it. Another couple described how they decided, together, before marriage, to observe this ritual. I guess for them, they were able to get past the oppressive connotations of it. In both these cases, the woman decided it would be something they would do for their husbands. It seemed more a personal gift/promise to the spouse than it did a religious ritual.
However, there was one woman interviewed who wound up divorced because she would not follow the ritual. And another woman was consulting a doctor because her periods were very erratic; she spotted in between cycles almost every month. It was causing problems and they were seriously discussing histerectomy. From the description of the problem, it didn't seem truly medically necessary, but more elective. I had problems with that, too.
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