The Jewish Chronicle

JANNER’S JOURNEY

REFORM CHIEF STEPS DOWN

- BY SIMON ROCKER

V RABBI LAURA Janner-Klausner said it was two weeks ago that she finally decided it was time to quit as the senior rabbi of the Movement for Reform Judaism.

“It’s been in the back of my mind for a while but there’s nothing like lockdown and Covid to make you reassess what’s really important and what you want,” she said this week after the announceme­nt of her October exit.

A senior colleague told the JC Rabbi Janner-Klausner had always “envisaged doing it for a while and then moving onto something else”. But another rabbi was “shocked” at the news. “We tend to know what’s going on but this was a surprise.”

When she bows out, it will be almost nine years since her appointmen­t to the newly created role as the national voice of the movement.

While she felt it was “good to replenish every decade” and find a fresh challenge, she admitted it was “scary”.

In autumn, Rabbi Janner-Klausner will begin studying for a doctorate at Durham University on how the online experience of young Jews affects their perception of, and participat­ion in communitie­s. It follows a growing interest in the impact of the digital world — “I was at Data Science Africa for my last holiday”.

Increasing­ly, she has been preoccupie­d with questions such as “where are our members going to come from? What will our communitie­s need to look like?”

She also plans to set up a business in leadership training, which will draw on her extensive experience of speaking in public and in the media to coach others.

Rabbi JannerKlau­sner discounts any suggestion her departure from her Reform role has anything to do with her involvemen­t in the defence of her father, Lord Janner — the Independen­t Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse is due to begin examining the police handling of the allegation­s against him in October. She, her brother and sister “just do our best to look after dad, alive and dead”.

She was always careful what she said in her public platforms and her recently published book on resilience — where she spoke of the impact on the family of the accusation­s against him — was written in “a personal capacity”.

Her highlights as senior rabbi include work with the Muslim community and refugees, while more generally consolidat­ing Reform’s place in cross-communal endeavours.

“No one is going to marginalis­e us, no one is looking over their right shoulder,” she said.

And among her most inspiring moments have been watching how rabbis from across the board “managed to reinvent Judaism” by taking it online during the coronaviru­s crisis.

This week, she was shedding “happy tears” in response to the many warm words she had received following her announceme­nt from across the religious spectrum, from “the Archbishop of Canterbury to the chairman of Southport Synagogue. I feel chuffed and blessed and appreciati­ve.”

Reform chairman Geoffrey Marx said Rabbi JannerKlau­sner had “transforme­d Reform Judaism”, which had become acknowledg­ed as a major player “in debates of national importance, standing up for our values on issues that matter — refugees, antisemiti­sm, LGBT+, progressiv­e Zionism.

“From our leading efforts on the campaign for equal marriage and our front-line role standing up for refugees, I know that her work has made Britain better.”

Rabbi Fabian Sborovsky, chair of the Assembly of Reform Cantors and Rabbis, praised her “wise and inspiratio­nal leadership” adding that she had been “a wonderful colleague and mentor to many of us”.

Lockdown makes you reassess what’s really important ’

I know that her work has made Britain better’

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 ?? PHOTO: TWITTER ?? Rabbi Laura JannerKlau­sner has shed “happy tears” over kind messages
PHOTO: TWITTER Rabbi Laura JannerKlau­sner has shed “happy tears” over kind messages

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