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    • Jewish Coming of Age Tradition: Bar and Bat Mitzvah. Flickr: Krista Guenin. Around the world, young Jewish boys and girls celebrate their Bar and Bat Mitzvahs at age 13 and 12 in order to demonstrate their commitment to their faith and recognize that they are now responsible for following Jewish law.
    • The Sateré-Mawé Coming Of Age Tradition: Bullet Ant Initiation. Infinitus Possibilis. In the Brazilian Amazon, young boys belonging to the indigenous Sateré-Mawé tribe mark their coming of age when they turn 13 in a Bullet and Ant Initiation.
    • Amish Coming of Age Tradition: Rumspringa. Wikimedia Commons. In Amish tradition, Rumspringa marks the time when youth turn 16 and are finally able to enjoy unsupervised weekends away from family.
    • Hispanic Coming of Age Tradition: Quinceanera. Flickr: Christopher Michael. In many parts of Central and South America, young girls celebrate their Quinceanera when they turn 15 years old.
  2. D.G. Hewitt - May 3, 2019. Throughout much of history, societies have marked the moment when their boys became ‘men’. And most continue to do so to this day. However, while in modern Western societies ‘coming-of-agerituals are largely fun and care free celebrations, in the past, they were far more dramatic.

  3. Coming of age is a young person's transition from being a child to being an adult. The specific age at which this transition takes place varies between societies, as does the nature of the change. It can be a simple legal convention or can be part of a ritual or spiritual event.

  4. Apr 9, 2021 · Learn how different cultures and religions recognize a child's transition from childhood to adulthood. Find out about bar mitzvah, confirmation, quinceanera, sweet 16, and other coming of age rituals and their meanings.

  5. Feb 10, 2020 · The Ojibwe, a Native American group, are reviving a coming-of-age ritual for girls that involves fasting from strawberries for a year. The ritual is a time of spiritual growth, vision and learning from elders, and is celebrated with a feast at the end.

  6. Learn how different cultures celebrate the transition from childhood to adulthood with various rituals and ceremonies. From Latin America's quinceañera to Japan's seijin no hi, discover the diversity and beauty of coming of age traditions.

  7. The full range of stages of passage rites is often followed in rituals at coming-of-age. Ordeals or other tests of manhood and womanhood are also common. Some of these practices in preliterate societies seem incomprehensible or absurd until their nature as evidence of qualification for the new social statuses is understood.

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