Asher Lopatin (born September 1, 1964) is the Director of Community Relations at the Jewish Federation of Greater Ann Arbor.[1] He is an American pluralist, Open Orthodox[citation needed] rabbi and leader of Kehillat Etz Chayim, an Open Orthodox[citation needed]synagogue in Oak Park, MI.[2] He is also the founder and executive director of the Detroit National Center for Civil Discourse, which has run a Fellowship in Civil Discourse at Wayne State University since September 2019. Previously, he was the President of Yeshivat Chovevei Torah (2013–2018) and the spiritual leader of Anshe Sholom B'nai Israel Congregation in Chicago before that. He is a Rhodes Scholar and a Council on Foreign Relations member.
In 2006, during the political battle over the Chicago City Council ban on the sale of "foie gras," Lopatin was widely quoted supporting the ban on the grounds that the Torah prohibits cruelty to animals, saying: "Chopped liver is good, but foie gras is bad."[7][8][9][10]
In 2009, Lopatin announced plans to lead a proposed group of 200 families immigrating to Israel to settle in the Negev.[11][12] The plan was postponed indefinitely due to a serious illness in the Lopatin family.[13]
In February 2012, Lopatin participated in an Indonesia Interfaith Middle East Peace Tour. Five rabbis, four members of the Christian clergy, and three American Muslim clerics traveled through Indonesia (meeting with 12 Indonesian Muslim clergymen), Dubai, Jerusalem, Ramallah, and Washington, D.C. Lopatin made blog posts about the journey on the website Morethodoxy.[14]
On August 30, 2012, Yeshivat Chovevei Torah Rabbinical School (YCT) announced that Lopatin would succeed Avi Weiss, its founder, as president of the organization
In August 2017, Lopatin announced that the 2017–18 academic year would be his last as president of YCT.[15]
Affiliations
Chicago Board of Rabbis; Vice President (Open Orthodox)[16]International Rabbinic Fellowship; Board Member (Open Orthodox)[17]
Chicago Jewish Day School; Board of Trustees, Ex Officio ("halachic, inclusive")[18]
Honors
American Jewish Congress Young Leadership Award, 1998
Maimonides School Pillar of Maimonides Award, 2000
Associated Talmud Torahs of Chicago Keter Torah Award, 2001
Yeshivat Chovevei Torah Honorary Smicha, 2002
Newsweek Top 25 Pulpit Rabbis (#22), 2008
Newsweek America's 25 Most Vibrant Congregations (Anshe Sholom B'nai Israel), 2009
Newsweek Top 50 Rabbis (#21), 2011
Newsweek Top 50 Rabbis (#24), 2012[19]
Ideological positions
Lopatin has expressed a lack of affinity to Orthodox Judaism, expressing that the denominational lines separating Jews are less important than the commitments shared by Orthodox, Conservative, Reform and non-aligned Jews.[20][21]
"I am a pluralist: We need to learn from all Jews, and connect and relate to all Jews – Reform, Conservative, Renewal; I believe it is critical for Judaism that we engage with the greater society as well.... While there is a lot to critique in the Orthodox world – Modern, Centrist and Chareidi – all of us sometimes take a strident attitude that may not exhibit sufficient respect and love for our fellow Jews and their motivations. All of us can make an effort to try to make our first response be one of embracing all of Orthodoxy – all Jews of course, and all human beings – and being open to learning – sometimes with a critical, but respectful ear – from our fellow Orthodox Jews."[22]