Rachel Adler

Rachel Adler (born Ruthelyn Rubin; July 2, 1943[1]) is Professor Emerita of Modern Jewish Thought and Judaism and Gender at Hebrew Union College, at the Los Angeles campus.[2]

Rachel Adler
Born
Ruthelyn Rubin

(1943-07-20) July 20, 1943
Chicago, Illinois, United States
NationalityAmerican
EducationUniversity of Southern California
Occupationprofessor
Theological work
Main interestsJewish feminism

Adler was one of the first theologians to integrate feminist perspectives and concerns into Jewish texts and the renewal of Jewish law and ethics. Her approach to God is Levinasian and her approach to gender is constructivist.[3]

Life

Adler was born in Chicago on July 20, 1943, to Herman Rubin, an executive at a large insurance company, and Lorraine Rubin (née Helman), the chairwoman of a large guidance department at a suburban high school.[4] In 1946, the Rubins had another daughter, Laurel. While Adler was raised Reform, she became Orthodox in her teens as a Baal teshuva.[5]

On December 20, 1964, while still studying at Northwestern University, Adler married Moshe Adler, an Orthodox rabbi. Adler went on to graduate with her B.A. and M.A. degrees in English Literature from Northwestern University in 1965 and 1966. Adler's early publications "The Jew Who Wasn't There: Halacha and the Jewish Woman," in Davka and "Tum'ah and Toharah: Ends and Beginnings" in 1971 and 1972, respectively, gained her international attention as a feminist spokesperson and Orthodox feminist.

Adler gave birth to a son, Amitai Bezalel, in 1973. During the 1970s, while active as an Orthodox Rebbetzin at the Los Angeles and Minnesota Hillel Houses, Adler completed all coursework for her doctorate in English. She went on to receive a Master of Social Work in 1980 and worked as a therapist for several years. In the 1980s, Adler's writings became increasingly critical of Niddah and classical rabbinics; she ultimately separated from the Orthodox movement and returned to Reform Judaism.[5] In 1984, she divorced Moshe Adler.[4]

In 1986, Adler enrolled in the Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion-University of Southern California doctoral program in Religion. The next year, she married Los Angeles attorney David Schulman, who she divorced in 2008.[4]

In 1992, Adler began a women's Talmud class in her home, teaching the text (in its original Hebrew and Aramaic). This created the first rigorous Talmud study opportunity for lay women outside of New York and Israel.

Adler completed her PhD degree in 1997 with her doctoral dissertation was titled "Justice and Peace Have Kissed: A Feminist Theology of Judaism."[6] Following her graduation, she was appointed to the joint faculty of Religion at USC and Jewish Thought at HUC-JIR. In 2001, she decided to serve only on the HUC-JIR faculty.

In 2008, Adler chose to enter HUC-JIR's rabbinical institute. On May 13, 2012, she was ordained as a rabbi by the Reform seminary Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Los Angeles.[7][8] In 2013, Adler became the first person to hold the Rabbi David Ellenson Chair in Jewish Religious Thought at Hebrew Union College.[9]

In 2020, Adler retired, though she has continued to teach virtually as a Professor Emerita at HUC-JIR.[10]

Religious Perspectives

In 1971, while identifying as an Orthodox Jew (though she previously and later identified as Reform Jewish), she published an article entitled "The Jew Who Wasn't There: Halacha and the Jewish Woman," in Davka magazine; according to historian Paula Hyman, this article was a trailblazer in analyzing the status of Jewish women using feminism.[11][12][5][13][14][4]

In 1972, she published an article entitled "Tum'ah and Toharah: Ends and Beginnings." In this article she argued that the ritual immersion of a niddah (a menstruating woman) in a mikveh did not "oppress or denigrate women." Instead, she argued, such immersion constituted a ritual reenactment of "death and resurrection" that was actually "equally accessible to men and women." However, she eventually renounced this position. In her essay "In Your Blood, Live: Re-visions of a Theology of Purity", published in Tikkun in 1993, she wrote "purity and impurity do not constitute a cycle through which all members of society pass, as I argued in my [1972] essay. Instead, impurity and purity define a class system in which the most impure people are women."[6]

In 1983, she published an essay in Moment entitled "I've Had Nothing Yet, So I Can't Take More," in which she criticized rabbinic tradition for making women "a focus of the sacred rather than active participants in its processes," and declared that being a Jewish woman "is very much like being Alice at the Hatter's tea party. We did not participate in making the rules, nor were we there at the beginning of the party."[6]

In 1998, she published Engendering Judaism: An Inclusive Theology and Ethics[15] for which she won the Tuttleman Foundation Book Award of Gratz College and was the first female theologian to be awarded the Jewish Book Council's National Jewish Book Award for Jewish Thought.[9] Among the book's contributions to Jewish thoughts was the creation of a new ritual, brit ahuvim, to replace the traditional erusin marriage ceremony,[16] which Adler viewed as not according with feminist ideals of equality between the sexes.

Adler is the author of many articles that have appeared in Blackwell's Companion to Feminist Philosophy, Beginning Anew: A Woman's Companion to the High Holy Days, Contemporary Jewish Religious Thought, Lifecycles, The Jewish Condition, and On Being a Jewish Feminist.

Recognition

  • 2023: IBPA Benjamin Franklin Award silver medal in religion for Holy Mysticat: Jewish Wisdom Stories by a Feline Mystic
  • 2022: The art exhibit "Holy Sparks", which opened in February 2022 at the Heller Museum and the Skirball Museum, featured 24 Jewish women artists, who had each created an artwork about a female rabbi who was a first in some way.[17][18][19] Marilee Tolwin created the artwork about Adler.[19]
  • 2008: Jewish Book Award, best book of the year in any category, for The Torah: A Women's Commentary, for which Adler was on the editorial board and contributed “Contemporary Reflections” commentaries on Bereishit, Mishpatim, and Va’yakheil[4]
  • 2000: Tuttleman Foundation Book Award of Gratz College Engendering Judaism: An Inclusive Theology and Ethics[20]
  • 1999: National Jewish Book Award for Jewish Thought by the Jewish Book Council, Engendering Judaism: An Inclusive Theology and Ethics[15]

Publications

The following is an incomplete list of Adler's publications.

Books

  • 1998: Engendering Judaism : An Inclusive Theology and Ethics. ISBN 0827605846
  • 2020: Holy Mysticat: Jewish Wisdom Stories by a Feline Mystic ISBN 978-0976305019

Articles

  • 1971: The Jew Who Wasn't There: Halacha and the Jewish Woman, Davka (republished in 1978 in Menachem Marc Kellner (ed.), Contemporary Jewish Ethics, pp. 347– 54. New York: Sanhedrin Press. ISBN 978-0884829218)
  • 1972: Tum'ah and Toharah: Ends and Beginnings, The Jewish Catalogue
  • 1974: Feminism, a Cause for the Halachic, Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas[21]
  • 1974: Abortion -the Need to Change Jewish Law, Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas[22]
  • 1976: Reprint of Tum'ah and Toharah: Ends and Beginnings in E. Koltun (ed.), The Jewish Woman: New Perspectives, pp. 63– 71. New York: Schocken., ISBN 978-0805236149
  • 1983: I’ve Had Nothing Yet, So I Can't Take More, Moment
  • 1985: A Letter to Fahtma, Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas[23]
  • 1992: Talking Our Way In, Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas[24]
  • 1993: In your blood, live: re-visions of a theology of purity, Tikkun[25]
  • 2004: "To Live Outside the Law, You Must Be Honest"- Boundaries, Borderlands and the Ethics of Cultural Negotiation, The Reconstructionist[26]
  • 2008: "Contemporary Reflections” commentaries on Bereishit, Mishpatim, and Va’yakheil in The Torah: A Women's Commentary ISBN 9780807410813
  • 2013: Critiquing and Rethinking Kiddushin, AJS Perspectives: The Magazine of the Association for Jewish Studies[27]
  • 2013: An Extraordinary Light, Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas[28]

Liturgy

  • 1982: Second Hymn to the Shekhinah, Response: A Contemporary Jewish Review[29]
  • 1985: Third Hymn to the Shekhina, Response: A Contemporary Jewish Review[30]

See also

References

  1. Mary Faulkner (1 August 2011). Women's Spirituality: Power and Grace. Hampton Roads Publishing. pp. 153–. ISBN 978-1-61283-135-0.
  2. "HUC-JIR > Faculty & Administration > Faculty > Rachel Adler". Archived from the original on 2002-03-17. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  3. Libenson, Dan and Lex Rofeberg, hosts. "God and Gender - Rachel Adler." Judaism Unbound, episode 138, 5 Oct. 2018.
  4. "Rachel Adler | Jewish Women's Archive". Jwa.org. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  5. "Velveteen Rabbi: Reprint: Interview with Rachel Adler (in anticipation of OHALAH)". Velveteenrabbi.blogs.com. 2013-01-10. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  6. "Rachel Adler".
  7. "Leading feminist theologian to be ordained … at last - Religion". Jewish Journal.
  8. "HUC-JIR Graduation and Ordination Ceremonies in Los Angeles - Hebrew Union College - Jewish Institute of Religion". Huc.edu. 2012-06-25. Retrieved 2017-01-29.
  9. "Inauguration of the Rabbi David Ellenson Chair in Jewish Religious Thought".
  10. Rullo, David (May 2023). "Groundbreaking rabbi now calls Pittsburgh home". jewishchronicle.timesofisrael.com. Retrieved 2023-05-08.
  11. "Paula E. Hyman | Jewish Women's Archive". Jwa.org. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  12. Dr. Paula Hyman (2014-01-31). "American Jewish Feminism: Beginnings". My Jewish Learning. Retrieved 2017-06-26.
  13. Nelly Las (2015). Jewish Voices in Feminism: Transnational Perspectives. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 85–. ISBN 978-0-8032-7704-5.
  14. "THE JEW WHO WASN'T THERE: Halacha and the Jewish Woman". Jewish Women's Archive.
  15. "Past Winners". Jewish Book Council. Retrieved 2020-01-23.
  16. "Brit Ahuvim". The Kiddushin Variations. 30 July 2006.
  17. "2022 Gala, Rabbi Levy's Shabbat Message, Tzedek Council and more... ✨". www.kol-ami.org.
  18. Gelfand, Janelle (May 13, 2022). "Celebrating community: Exhibits hail 200 years of Jewish contributions in Cincinnati". Cincinnati Business Courier. Retrieved June 22, 2022.
  19. "VIDEO: HOLY SPARKS – Celebrating 50 Years of Women in the Rabbinate". Jewish Art Salon. January 30, 2022.
  20. "Rachel Adler: Engendering Judaism | Literature Reviews | The Feminist Sexual Ethics Project | Brandeis University". www.brandeis.edu. Retrieved 2023-05-08.
  21. Adler, Rachel (6 September 1974). "Feminism, a Cause for the Halachic". Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas. 4 (76): 125–126.
  22. Adler, Rachel (15 November 1974). "Abortion -the Need to Change Jewish Law". Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas. 5 (81): 163–164.
  23. Adler, Rachel (6 September 1985). "A Letter to Fahtma". Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas. 15 (296): 121.
  24. Adler, Rachel (13 November 1992). "Talking Our Way in". Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas. 23 (441): 5–6.
  25. Labovitz, Gail (2020-08-04), 6. Rachel Adler, "In Your Blood, Live: Re- visions of a Theological Purity", Academic Studies Press, pp. 260–265, doi:10.1515/9781644693629-045, ISBN 978-1-64469-362-9, S2CID 234609569, retrieved 2023-05-09
  26. Adler, Rachel (1 January 2004). ""To Live Outside the Law, You Must Be Honest"- Boundaries, Borderlands and the Ethics of Cultural Negotiation". The Reconstructionist. 68 (2): 4–15.
  27. Adler, Rachel (1 January 2013). "Critiquing and Rethinking Kiddushin". AJS Perspectives: The Magazine of the Association for Jewish Studies. Spring 2013: 44–45.
  28. Adler, Rachel (1 September 2013). "An Extraordinary Light". Sh'ma: A Journal of Jewish Ideas. 44 (702): 4–5.
  29. Adler, Rachel (1 January 1982). "Second Hymn to the Shekhinah". Response: A Contemporary Jewish Review. 13 (1, 2): 60.
  30. Adler, Rachel (1 January 1985). "Third Hymn to the Shekhina". Response: A Contemporary Jewish Review. 14 (3): 52–53.

Sources

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