British Reform rabbi (born 1948)
Jacqueline Hazel "Jackie " Tabick (née Acker ; born 1948) is a British Reform rabbi . She became Britain 's first female rabbi in 1975.[ 1] [ 2] She retired in 2023 as convenor of the Movement for Reform Judaism 's Beit Din ,[ 3] the first woman in the role,[ 3] [ 1] and until its closure in 2022 was also Rabbi of West Central Liberal Synagogue in Bloomsbury , central London.[ 4]
Early life and training
Born in Dublin , Tabick spent most of her early life in England [ 5] and grew up in the community of South West Essex & Settlement Reform Synagogue .[ 6] After reading Medieval History for her degree at University College London , she enrolled at the Leo Baeck College where she completed her rabbinical training.[ 5] She graduated to become Britain's first female rabbi in 1975.[ 2]
Rabbinical life
Starting as the assistant rabbi at West London Synagogue under Rabbi Hugo Gryn ,[ 7] she left in 1998 to become the rabbi of North West Surrey Synagogue .[ 2] She held this position until July 2013,[ 8] [ 9] combining it with her role, since 2012, as the first female convenor of the Reform Movement's Beit Din .[ 1] She has previously been the Movement's vice-president and is patron of the Jewish Council for Racial Equality (JCORE).[ 10] She currently leads services at London's West Central Liberal Synagogue .[ 4]
Tabick has played a leading role in interfaith initiatives .[ 11] She is an executive of The Inter Faith Network .[ 2] She was, for many years, chair of the World Congress of Faiths and is now co-president.[ 12]
Family life
She has been married to Rabbi Larry Tabick since 1975 and was the first female rabbi to marry a rabbi.[ 13] Born in Brooklyn, New York in 1947,[ 14] Larry came to England to study at the Leo Baeck College in the early 1970s and retired as rabbi of Shir Hayim in Hampstead in 2017.[ 14] He and Jackie have three children,[ 2] [ 15] one of whom, Roni Tabick, is rabbi of the Masorti synagogue New Stoke Newington Shul in Stoke Newington , London.[ 3] [ 16]
Other
The 2022 art exhibit “Holy Sparks”, shown among other places at the Dr. Bernard Heller Museum , featured art about twenty-four female rabbis who were firsts in some way;[ 17] [ 18] Sandy Bleifer created the artwork about Tabick that was in that exhibit.[ 19]
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