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dinabrawer

~ from Rebbetzen to Maharat

dinabrawer

Category Archives: Uncategorized

End of Term Report (1 of 12)

05 Monday Jan 2015

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2013-10-07 04.14.10I’m currently looking out onto bright and fluffy clouds from an altitude 31000 feet above the Atlantic, heading west towards New York. This is going to be my second term at Yeshivat Maharat, where I am studying for semikha (rabbinical ordination). The bright sunshine above the clouds takes me back to the summer day four months ago when I entered Bet Midrash (study hall) for my first day of yeshiva.  I was rather excited to meet my classmates, some entirely new, some whom I knew ‘virtually’ through social media and a couple who I had met and studied with a few years ago at Pardes in Jerusalem.  Attending orientation week in person was particularly important to me because I am studying as a remote student. This means that while I continue to live in London, I am able to study with the help of technology, following the yeshiva’s 9-5 EST schedule at GMT.

My yeshiva day begins at 2pm and ends at 10pm. The bulk of yeshiva time is spent studying set text with a peer. Both the peer and the study method are known as havruta. The taught classes build on the material studied independently. Like classic semikha courses, the curriculum focuses on halakha (Jewish law) and Talmud. In addition, the Maharat course includes subjects such as  bible, hassidic philosophy and the development of halakhah which are not strictly part of a classical semikha course. Being designed for practical rabbinic and communal leadership, it includes Pastoral Torah, a fusion of the clinical and spiritual aspects of pastoral counselling, as well as a customized leadership track.

After three intensive days in September faculty, students and subjects were introduced, I returned home and set-up my virtual bet midrash. I found three elements key to recreating the bet midrash atmosphere at home; people, sounds and sights. I’m incredibly fortunate to have Leah Sarna as a steady havruta to study with.  She (with her macbook!) provides me with a portal into the students, dynamics and sounds of the Yeshivat Maharat bet midrash in New York.  Having a book lined study from which to work is an additional bonus, as I find it fosters the feeling of being in a bet midrash and is handy for chasing up references.

I have found spending eight hours a day immersed in Torah study both exhilarating and exhausting.  The exhilarating aspect begins during morning prayer, which includes Birkat haTorah, a blessing for Torah study, which I now recite with new inspiration, knowing that a good chunk of my day will be indeed dedicated to studying Torah. It continues when my sons return from school and find me surrounded by books, often in the midst of an animated discussion with my havruta, or my husband peeks into the study and gives me the thumbs up. While the intellectual aspect of study is enjoyable, adjusting to fitting all of the more mundane tasks into my mornings and week-ends has been more challenging.

As  the end of the first term was approaching it felt a little like the battery low warning was flashing. My initial week in the Yeshivat Maharat bet midrash gave me a charge of energy, passion and enthusiasm which fueled the subsequent weeks I spent studying in my virtual bet midrash. I now look forward to spending the next 10 days physically present in the bet midrash, holding havruta discussions in person,  catching the small talk at lunchtime and joining my fellow students for prayers and occasional songs.

Time for spiritual refueling.

A Hanukkah Meditation on Peshawar: Shed Light not Fire

18 Thursday Dec 2014

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Just after we lit candles on the first night of Hanukkah, news broke of the school massacre in Peshawar. I sat gazing at the little single flickering flame and tried to process the horrifying news. Irrational acts of terror such as this make us feel utterly helpless. But they also ignite in us strong passions; anger and hatred towards the perpetrators. We feel like unleashing a firestorm. Yet this is neither practical nor meaningful. Looking at the small Hanukkah flame burning brightly amid the surrounding darkness, its message became clear.  We must channel our burning, passionate anger and use it to kindle the light that resides deep within each of us. “God’s candle is the human soul” says proverbs (20:27).  A favourite saying of the Hasidic masters was “A little light can banish much darkness.” Hanukkah beckons us to dispel darkness through living our lives brightly. Each day adding a little more light, consistently, until our world, like our Hanukkah Menorah, is brightly illuminated.

From Rebbetzin to Maharat

17 Wednesday Dec 2014

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Female Clergy, Female leadership, Feminism, Halakah, Maharat, Orthodox Judaism, Torah, Yeshivah

Did I always want to be a Rabbi?

The answer is no. It never occurred to me.

Growing up I already had a defined, robust role for me to serve my community as a woman. As a Chabad teen, I aspired to be a shlucha, a role that provided a clear path to spiritual leadership – regardless of marital status. As a result, I took up numerous communal responsibilities – from teaching to coordinating a Lag B’Omer parade to designing interactive educational exhibitions – all of them enjoyable and fulfilling. When I later married a rabbi, my position as a shlucha remained unchanged, as did my desire to serve my community. The reason the role of shlucha was so effective in enabling me to serve, therefore, was because it was understood, defined, and clearly labeled.

After five years on shlichut, my husband and I moved to the UK where he took up a position as a congregational rabbi. Over the next fifteen years we served two London congregations.  As a Rebbetzin, I led community development strategy, counseled congregants, taught Torah – and baked plenty of challah. And yet, while I clearly had carved out a communal role for myself, I couldn’t avoid the nagging feeling that if it weren’t for my husband, I wouldn’t have that role. I felt this most acutely when at events outside the Jewish community. People asked us what we did. My husband replied that he was a rabbi. But what was I? What could I say? A rebbetzin? A rabbi’s wife? That would just beg the question – what exactly does a rabbi’s wife do? My husband’s title could capture, in one word, who he was, whereas I had to spend fifteen minutes explaining what exactly I did.

The sense of not having a leadership role in my own right was driven home quite forcefully, when an invitation arrived to join communal leaders for the launch of an important report concerning the role of women in the Jewish community. It was addressed solely to Rabbi Brawer. The title of Rebbetzin evidently did not mark me out as a leader; it merely indicated that I had married a rabbi.

I am not being dismissive of the important and varied work many Rebbetzins do for their congregations. Rabbinic spouses should be recognized, appreciate and respected.   But the “two for one” deal – the status quo in many Orthodox communities – is as detrimental as it is prevalent. The widespread expectation that rabbis’ wives will assume the role of rebbetzin very often burdens women who choose to pursue their own careers. By the same token, hiring rabbis based on the expected role their wives will play unfairly disadvantages able leaders with much to offer. Simply put, our communities deserve the best leaders: the best male leaders, irrespective of their wives; the best female leaders, irrespective of their husbands.

What message does a community convey when the role of female leader is limited to women who happen to be married to a rabbi? It is insulting to women’s intellectual and pastoral capabilities. It also severely limits the pool of potential leaders to spouses of rabbis.

Moreover, since the title rebbetzin is not earned, but rather conferred on anyone who happens to be married to a rabbi, it has become essentially meaningless, by not distinguishing between those who are Torah scholars and actively engaged in serving their communities, and those who are not.

Some communities have recognized the value of clearly defined female leadership, appointing women as community scholars, who in addition to teaching Torah and counseling congregants, facilitate life cycle events, and address the congregation from the pulpit. These women are occupying roles that extend far beyond the remit of the traditional rebbetzin, and the congregations who hire them should be commended for their vision.

However, whilst these women are highly proficient in Torah study, there is no uniform standard to their training, and a dearth of courses designed specifically for their leadership. Furthermore, the lack of a defined qualifying designation means that these highly capable and dedicated women are still at a disadvantage, being denied the authority and influence, as well as the recognition, which comes with a bona-fide rabbinic title.

For me, still seeking the defined leadership role I had as a young shlucha, Yeshivat Maharat offers a solution. In creating a formal qualification to deliver the skills required for women in the clergy, Yeshivat Maharat has opened a space, in which able women can truly be heard as leaders within the Jewish community. Crucially, it grants institutional semikha, conferring on  women the authority to make halakhic decisions for their congregations. Personally, it has given me the opportunity to better serve my people by further developing my pastoral skills, broadening my leadership vision, and deepening my understanding of Halakha.

Yeshivat Maharat is an exciting and positive development within Orthodox Judaism, and it is something that we should all celebrate and support.

This Blog first appeared on Time of Israel on 1 December , 2014

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