Nation's 1st female rabbi set to retire



Rabbi Sally Priesand will close out her career June 30.
TINTON FALLS, N.J. (AP) -- Sally J. Priesand, the first U.S. female rabbi, arrived at Jewish seminary nearly 40 years ago determined to fulfill her dream to become a teacher of her faith. Many people thought she came for a different reason.
"I think at first they thought I came to marry a rabbi rather than be one," Rabbi Priesand said, chuckling as she sat in her synagogue office, a space decorated with awards she's received since her 1972 ordination from Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. "So they didn't take me all that seriously."
Now as she prepares to retire more than three decades later, Rabbi Priesand is widely seen as a role model who's helped change contemporary Judaism. Since she was ordained in the Reform movement, nearly 1,000 women have become rabbis. The Reconstructionist movement ordained its first female rabbi in 1974, and the Conservative movement followed in 1985. The Orthodox movement does not have female rabbis.
A difficult road
Rabbi Priesand, 59, downplays her accomplishment, saying that she did not intend to be a pioneer. She credits Nelson Glueck, the late president of the Reform seminary with championing her cause and ironing out problems in the "background" so she could concentrate on her studies.
"In some cases, it was very difficult for professors who were accustomed to teaching only men ... to suddenly have a woman in the class and often they would start, 'Gentlemen, and lady,'" Rabbi Priesand said.
During the 1920s, the Reform movement ruled that there was nothing in Jewish law forbidding women from becoming rabbis, but that it represented such a break from Jewish custom, people might not be ready for it, according to Rabbi David Ellenson, the current president of the Reform seminary, which has U.S. campuses in Cincinnati, New York and Los Angeles.
"Sally Priesand was a genuine innovator in American Jewish life and in Jewish history," said Rabbi Ellenson, whose school graduated 23 women in a combined class of 42 at three seminaries this spring. "Her decision to study for the rabbinate paved the way for the inclusion of half the Jewish population."
Glueck arranged for Rabbi Priesand to tour the country the year before her graduation, speaking at congregations and at Jewish organizations so that people could get used to the idea of a woman on the bima, the altar in a synagogue.
Still, there were problems for Rabbi Priesand. After graduating, she took a position at the Stephen Wise Free Synagogue in New York City as an assistant rabbi, but left after seven years because she believed her gender was keeping her from becoming the senior rabbi.
She then served as the rabbi at a temple in Elizabeth, a part-time position, and was chaplain at a hospital in Manhattan. But it took her two years to find a full-time rabbi position, this time at the Monmouth Reform Temple in Tinton Falls, where she's been for the past 25 years.
When she arrived at Monmouth, a synagogue of about 365 families, many in the congregation -- including Rabbi Priesand herself -- assumed it would be a stepping stone to a bigger, more prestigious assignment.
True calling
But Rabbi Priesand eventually chose to stay at the temple, in a small town on the Jersey Shore, realizing that, while a bigger congregation might be a feather in the cap for her gender, she enjoyed the job she had.
"There was a time when most of the things that I did, I made decisions as to what was best for women in the rabbinate, not necessarily what was best for me, because everyone judged the whole idea of women in the rabbinate by what I did and how I acted," said Rabbi Priesand, who decided to remain single because of the 24/7 demands of her calling.
Rabbi Priesand said that, while she was growing up, God was always seen as a "father" and "clearly male." But children today have many different images of God, some masculine and others feminine, and she said that's partly the result of having women in the rabbinate.
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