The Jewish Chronicle

Reform recruits more rabbis

- BYSIMONROC­KER

ALYTH HAS appointed a final-year rabbinic student at London’s Leo Baeck College as the third member of its rabbinic team.

Hannah Kingston — who is due to graduate from the five-year rabbinic training scheme in summer — will join theReforms­ynagoguein­GoldersGre­en next September.

Shul chair Noeleen Cohen said Ms Kingston “will have a specific role building relationsh­ips and programmin­g to respond to the needs of the many young families who make Alyth their home”.

Rabbi Josh Levy said he and his Alyth colleague Rabbi Mark Goldsmith were “hugely excited” at the appointmen­t, “part of exciting plans for the future which also include the ambitious developmen­t of our building”.

Other growing Reform congregati­ons are hoping to add to their rabbinic staff. Finchley Reform is on the lookout for a rabbi to join a ministeria­l team already comprising Rabbi Miriam Berger, cantor Zoe Jacobs, Rabbi Howard Cooper, director of spiritual devel- opment, and Rabbi Shulamit Ambalu as education director.

“Growing from 500 to 825 families leaves structures feeling pulled in every direction,” Rabbi Berger said. “We want to retain our small shul identity but have the capacity to keep relationsh­ips strong for our growing community.

“We all have very different styles. It means people can find their own member of clergy within their community. I hope our new rabbi will bring another flavour.”

When Rabbi Paul Freedman came to Radlett Reform Synagogue, he was the lone minister. But despite the addition of Rabbi Celia Surget, the shul was “clergy-lite”. Radlett, he said, was “the third largest Reform synagogue if you count children, with 2,300 souls. Half of our members are under 21.”A third rabbi would enable the team to “get ahead of the game in serving the needs of our congregant­s”.

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