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For the Orthodox, tradition is at the heart of who we are

The title 'rabba' is emblematic of a wider issue

June 24, 2021 12:53
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2 min read

Five years ago, the Chief Rabbi asked me to take responsibility for a new ‘portfolio’ in his office — to proactively consider how our Orthodox communities can better provide for women, both spiritually and educationally, in order to deliver a meaningful cultural shift. The role has been both an honour and a challenge.

That challenge has never felt greater than when reading, with a heavy heart, the media coverage about the situation at LSJS and the decision regarding Dr Lindsey Taylor Guthartz’s research fellowship there. It has created such misunderstanding which, on a topic provoking such strong feelings as this, threatens to divide people who in fact are broadly in agreement. As such, I feel a need to try to provide some clarity.

Dr Taylor-Guthartz has worked hard towards a qualification of which she is understandably proud, but which has subsequently meant losing her research fellowship. Is then the Orthodox view that women should not seek advanced qualifications in Torah learning? The number of advanced learning programmes that exist for women, whose graduates hold senior positions within Orthodox communities in the UK and abroad, demonstrates otherwise. Is it that women may not hold leading positions in our communities? On the contrary, it is critical that there are strong, female role models, alongside their male counterparts, in our communities. Indeed, one example of this is the Chief Rabbi’s Ma’ayan Programme, currently training its second cohort, who will be well positioned to take up roles in the leadership teams of communities, serving in both educational and pastoral roles, as the first cohort already does, ensuring that both men and women can seek their guidance.

What then is the problem with the title ‘rabba’? In fact, the title is emblematic of a wider issue.

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