No there is no such rule.
Men and women would sleep separately and their bedrooms would be on opposite sides of the house. Usually women and children would be upstairs along with the gynaikon(the women's gathering room) while men would sleep down stairs.
No, the men fought the men and the women fought the women. Otherwise it would be no contest.No, the men fought the men and the women fought the women. Otherwise it would be no contest.No, the men fought the men and the women fought the women. Otherwise it would be no contest.No, the men fought the men and the women fought the women. Otherwise it would be no contest.No, the men fought the men and the women fought the women. Otherwise it would be no contest.No, the men fought the men and the women fought the women. Otherwise it would be no contest.No, the men fought the men and the women fought the women. Otherwise it would be no contest.No, the men fought the men and the women fought the women. Otherwise it would be no contest.No, the men fought the men and the women fought the women. Otherwise it would be no contest.
women antisuffragist
Men -Apex
Women are not inferior to men, although many men believe that this is true.
Men and women sit separately (men on the left and women on the right usually).
They pray separately in the synagogue.
I don't know exactly the age for men and women separately, but i know that on the ages is 83.
In Orthodox synagogues, men and women are seated separately.
In Orthodox synagogues, men and women would be called separately, while the other branches of Judaism men and women get called up together.
Because the Halakah requires the men and women to sit separately. One reason this is so is because prayer is supposed to be a serious time when a person concentrates on nothing but his relationship with his Creator. The mingling of the sexes can be a cause of frivolity and thus tends to be a distraction to the very essence of what prayer is supposed to be.
In Orthodox synagogues, men and women are seated separately.
At all religious functions in near eastern and orthodox Jewish traditions, men and women worship separately from one another to avoid *cough* distracting thoughts.User:67.148.120.72
It's a synagogue where men and women sit separately and the bimah is facing the Ark of the Covenant.
If you mean to ask why men and women pray in different rooms, they don't have to; in many mosques, men and women pray in the same room. On the other hand, if you mean why do men and women pray in separate lines, it is to prevent people from getting distracted during prayer.
Men and women would sleep separately and their bedrooms would be on opposite sides of the house. Usually women and children would be upstairs along with the gynaikon(the women's gathering room) while men would sleep down stairs.
It's all about avoiding "inappropriate" sexual behaviors.