The Jewish Chronicle

Rabba: ‘I will be a role model’

- BY SIMON ROCKER

(second right) with Yeshivat Maharat graduates

THE FIRST British Orthodox woman to be ordained as a rabbi has said she wants to be a role model for women and girls who want to be more involved in religious life.

Dina Brawer, who has chosen the title “rabba”, received her qualificat­ion in a ceremony at Yeshivat Maharat in New York last week after four years of study.

She said: “In becoming the first female Orthodox rabbi in the UK, I want to be a role model for girls and women on how to become more deeply involved in Jewish ritual, prayer and study of sacred text.”

Rabba Brawer, a former scholar in residence at Hampstead Synagogue, added: “Every field that has welcomed women’s contributi­on has benefitted as a result. It is imperative that Orthodox Judaism seizes the opportunit­y to be likewise enriched.”

Dr Miri Freud-Kandel, fellow in modern Judaism at the Oxford Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies, called her ordination “momentous” and said she had “galvanised a grassroots movement, bringing together women and men, young and old, to elicit a response from the establishe­d institutio­ns that dominate Jewish community life in the UK”.

Yeshivat Maharat was founded in 2009 by Rabbi Avi Weiss as the first Orthodox institutio­n set up specifical­ly to ordain women.

Despite opposition to women’s ordination from the central Orthodox establishm­ent, the yeshivah’s alumni have been able to find roles within Orthodox synagogues in the United States.

 ?? PHOTO: SHULAMIT SEIDLER-FELLER ?? Dina Brawer
PHOTO: SHULAMIT SEIDLER-FELLER Dina Brawer

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