For newborns: Brit Milah for boys; Zeved Habat for girls;
At age 3 years (In Chassidim) Upsherins for boys; First Shabbat candle lighting for girls.
For Teens; Bar Mitzvah for boys; Bat Mitzvah for girls.
Marriage.
Judaism doesn't have a rite of passage for either girls or boys. Many people commonly hold the mistaken belief that a 'bat mitzvah' is a ceremony. However, the reality is that on a girl's 12th birthday she reaches the age where she is considered old enough to take on the religious responsibilities of a Jewish adult, this makes her a bat mitzvah.
The huge celebration that people are familiar with today is a modern practice and doesn't impact whether or not a girl becomes a bat mitzvah. The same can be said for boys becoming a bar mitzvah.
Yes. The Bar Mitzva is the most well-known. For more:
Traditionally it is the bar mitzvah (for boys) and the bat mitzvah (for girls).
Bar mitzvah for boys and bat mitzvah for girls.
See the attached Related Link.
Bar & Bat Mitzvahs.
Bar Mitzva.
They are important to Jews. See for example:The importance of the Bar Mitzva ceremonyThe importance of a Jewish wedding
Rites of passage is a noun.
Rites of Passage - 1999 is rated/received certificates of: USA:R
If there are different kinds of religions there are different kinds of rites of passage.
Rites of Passage - 2003 TV was released on: USA: 2003
Rites of Passage - Roger Hodgson album - was created in 1997.
They will normally go through rites of passage 4 times...
The rites of passage is when you change your social status
The Last Rites of Passage - 2007 was released on: USA: 11 February 2007
Both believe in one God.Both have many rituals.Both have rites of passage into adulthood.But otherwise, they are philosophically quite different.
Rites of Passage - Part 1 2011 was released on: USA: November 2011
Rites of passage certainly have their supporters and enthusiasts, as well as detractors and critics. The basic argument against rites of passage is that one can pass into some new status without a rite; for example, if you believe that a Jewish boy acquires the status of adulthood at the age of 13, that can happen with or without a Bar Mitzvah ceremony (much in the way that legally, Americans are considered to be adult at the age of 18, with no ritual being required, it happens automatically). Rites can be considered superfluous. But then, there are those who enjoy them.