Profiling the First Generation of Transgender Rabbis

July 15, 2013Kate Bigam Kaput

In a fantastic series this week, The Jewish Daily Forward profiles six rabbis and rabbinical students who identify as transgender, including two who were ordained by Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion, the seminary of the Reform Jewish Movement.

  • Rabbi Reuben Zellman, who was ordained in 2010, currently serves as the assistant rabbi at Congregation Beth El in Berkeley, CA. The Forward reports that he "has written widely about gender and Judaism. His thesis at HUC-JIR focused on figures in Jewish medieval law that are neither male nor female, such as the tumtum, a person in rabbinic literature whose sex is unknown." In 2007, Rabbi joined fellow transgender rabbi Elliot Kukla in writing “Making Your Jewish Community Trans Friendly,” a short guide for congregations and organizations. Read Rabbi Zellman's story.
  • Rabbi Elliot Kukla, who now serves as a chaplain at the Bay Area Jewish Healing Center, says his friend Rabbi Zellman paved the way for his ordination. Together, they created TransTorah.org, which The Forward calls "a clearinghouse for information on gender diversity in Judaism; it includes several rituals, such as a transgender and gender-nonconforming wedding service, a blessing for gender transition and a prayer for binding the chest." Read Rabbi Kukla's story.

Also profiled are:

  • Rabbi Evily Aviva Kapor, the only out transgender female rabbi, was ordained "Conservadox" (a blend of Orthodox and Conservative Jewish traditions) prior to coming out as transgender. Read Rabbi Kapor's story.
  • Jacob Lieberman, a fourth-year rabbinical student at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, helped found the school's Transgender/Genderqueer Committee. Read Jacob's story.
  • Leiah Moser, a third-year rabbinical student at the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, says that as a transgender rabbi-to-be, it is her obligation "be out there, front and center, as role models for other trans people and particularly trans women in the Jewish community.” Read Leiah's story.
  • Ari Lev Fornari, a fifth-year rabbinical student at Hebrew College, "has sought to frame gender transition as a cause for celebration in the Jewish tradition rather than something to be muted or hidden," the Forward reports. Read Ari's story.

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