16 Friday, January 26, 1919 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Women Rabbis to be Major Topic of Rabbinical Assembly By REENA FRIEDMAN NEW YORK (JTA) — Members of the Rabbinical Assembly will decide at their 97th annual conven- LOCKS...SAFES ...DOORCLOSERS Mikes Mobile Locksmith Service Bonded and Insured Reasonable Rates call 967-3361 REMEMBER - THE BLUE BOX AND EVERYTHING. IT STANDS FOB ON EVERY IMPORTANT OCCASION. 557-6644 ' ■ toc) . SMALLEST tion Sunday through Thursday in Los Angeles whether or not women are to become spiritual leaders within the Conservative movement. Their moment- ous decision will be based on recommendations made by the Commission for the Study of the Ordination of Women as Rabbis, an inter- disciplinary advisory body charged with studying all aspects of this complex question. Soon after the commis- sion presents its report, the RA membership and the administration of the Jewish Theological Semi- nary of America (JTS) will independently evaluate it, since there is a tacit agree- fnent that no one arm of the Conservative movement may legislate for another. Created in September 197j by Dr. Gerson D. Co- hen, JTS chancellor, the AD ON A BAGGEST DISCOUNTS WINDOW COVERINGS HURTIG WINDOW INTERIOR 559-8209 OUR REPUTATION SPEAKS FOR ITSELF FREE ESTIMATES AGENT OF THE MONTH It is a pleasure to announce that JOEL F. GARFIELD has received the agent-of-ae-month award as the most out- . standing Representative of our Detroit-Rosenwasser Agency. , The award is in recognition of his excellent service to his policyholders and our Agency. Seymour M. Rosenwasser, C.L.U. General Agent 30800 Northwestern Hwy., Suite 200, Farmington Hills 48018 855.1010 IOASOACNINNITTS rimmum steINUUICII COMPANY Springfield, Massachusetts, Organised 1854 k/ commission developed out of a compromise resolution passed at the 1977 annual convention of the RA after lengthy and heated debate. The original resolution, which encouraged the JTS "to consider and admit to the Rabbinical School all qualified candidates re- gardless of sex," was ulti- mately tabled. At that time, Cohen formed a study group to deal with the question and agreed to accept its findings "only if-all ac- tivity is suspended for two years so our faculty will not be exploded." According to Rabbi Gor- don Tucker, assistant to Cohen and executive direc- tor of the Commission, the JTS will draw upon the legal expertise of its out- standing Talmudic scholars as well as the experience of other commission members. Consideration will also be given to the written state- ments received from RA members throughout the country whose opinions, legal and otherwise, have been solicited. Tucker made it clear that a definitive halakhic deci- sion against the ordination of women could override a show of public opinion to the contrary. - According to Rabbi David Weiss Halivni, chairman of the JTS' Department of Talmud and Rabbinics, who has previously opposed the ordination of women, "The only real halakhic problems would be marriage and di- vorce since women cannot be witnesses in ritual mat- ters." That is, under Jewish law, a woman may not be a witness at a wedding (where the rabbi's role is to be sure that everything is done properly , and that the two witnesses are legitimate), not can she serve as a judge on the rabbinical court granting a Jewish divorce. Although Halivni is willing to consider the idea of female rabbis, he feels that the halakhic prohibitions against women cantors are more absolute. He explained CAN YOUR KLUNKER GET THRU THE WINTER? WE ARE DEALING ON NEW 1979 PONTIACS ORDER YOURS NOW! ART MORAN PONTIAC 29300 TELEGRAPH JUST NORTH OF TEL-TWELVE MALL , • AL STEINBERG 353-9000 that anyone not obligated to' fulfill positive time- bound mitzvot cannot serve as the "shaliakh tzibur," the representa- tive of the community leading in prayer and reading from the Torah scrolls. On the other hand, a number of scholars are con- vinced that these obstacles can be overcome. For exam- ple, Rabbi David Silverman of the JTS suggested that women be ordained and that subsequent provisions be made regarding the difficult issue of "edut" (witnessing). Furthermore, Judith Hauptman, instructor in Talmud at the JTS, noted that it "was possible to have two other witnesses at wed- dings in addition to the woman rabbi. !Rabbi' means teacher, that the person has attained a certain level of education." In addition to consulting scholarly opinion, the Commission has sampled the views of members of Conservative congregations who will be intensely af- fected by this decision. The results of a survey, of 14 selected congregations throughout North America conducted by Yankelovich, Skelly and White, a highly respected public opinion re- search firm, have been com- puterized for the commis- sion's review. Also, public forums have been held in Los Angeles, Vancouver, Minneapolis, Chicago, Washington, D.C., New York and Toronto. number of those arguing in favor of the ordination of women spoke from a sociological standpoint. Some as- serted that the time re- quired for housekeeping and child rearing has been dramatically re- duced, leaving women freer to observe the posit- ive, time-bound mitzvot from which they had previously been excused, and to play a more prom- inent role in communal religious life. Others urged the com- mission members to ac- knowledge the impact which the women's libera- tion movement has had upon all aspects of Ameri- can society. Above all, they said, feminist demands have compelled people to recognize that, in both the religious and secular spheres, it is necessary to grant to all people the opportunity to realize their potentials to the full. Dr. Sarah Lieberman, a religious school principal in Framingham, Mass and the wife of a Conservative rabbi, - cited historical pre- cedent in support of her argument. Her own re- search, she said, has re- vealed that, in the past, women often occupied prominent positions within the Jewish community, as the spirit and the needs of the time dictated. For example, they served as professional mourners and dirge reciters long be- fore the establishment of the modern rabbinate. "The rabbis of today," she de- clared, "have taken away from women what was rightfully theirs by tradi- tion." Many pleas were of a more personal ; emotional nature. Some speakers suggested that women could not only perform rabbinic functions as well as men, but would contribute a uniquely feminine perspec- tive, particularly a heightened sensitivity, to the rabbinic role. Other women described the alienation they had felt from a Judaism that excluded them, as well as their elation upon having an aliya or leading services for the first time. Somewhat surpris- ingly, the presentations of those speakers who opposed the ordination of women were emotion- ally charged as well. Sev- eral plainly stated that they were, as yet, psychologically unpre- pared to see a woman in the pulpit and to entrust. her with their confi- dences and other rab- binic functions. Others contended that they were acting in the best interest of the women them- selves for, as they were quick to point out, the female graduates of Reform and Reconstructionist rab- binical seminaries have not been well accepted by the public and have had diffi- culty finding pulpits. Above all, these speakers stressed their heartfelt con- cern for the future of the Conservative movement. They reiterated that main- taining a balance between tradition and change has always been a hallmark of Conservatism, and warned against jumping on the con- temporary bandwagon without giving the ordina- tion question long and seri- ous thought. Moreover, as Rabbi Wayne Allen of Staten Is- land New York argued, such a radical departure would undermine the authority of the JTS as well as that of its rabbinical school graduates. - 4 4 - Murdered Terrorist Leader Engineered Munich Massacre TEL AVIV (JTA) — The bomb death in Beirut Mon- day of Ali Hassan Salameh, the notorious "Abu Hassan" who engineered the 1972 Munich Olympics mas- sacre, was greeted with grim satisfaction in Israel. The terrorist leader, a member of the top echelon of El Fatah and a close per- sonal associate of Palestine Liberation Organization chief Yasir Arafat, left a trail of murder and bloodshed in his wake.. Is- •raeli security sources re- called that Salameh, 38, in- ALI SALAMEH herited a legacy of violence. His father, Hassan Arab world generally. This Salameh, led Arab maraud- group was behind the assas- ers during the 1936-38 dis- sinations of numerous Arab turbances in Palestine. He terrorist and political fig- fled to Germany and offered ures in European capitals. Salameh was indirectly his , services to the Nazis during World War II. He involved in the ill-fated was dropped by parachute Liel-Hammer Affair in near Jericho in 1944 to or- Norway several years ago ga.nize an Arab uprising be- when Israeli undercover hind Allied lines. He failed agents, assigned to elimi- in that mission and was kil- nate him, mistakenly killed , led four years later during a Moroccan, Ahmed Israel's war for indepen- Boushiki. They were ar- rested by the Norwegian dence. The younger Salameh authorities and sentenced was an early member of to prison terms. Salameh met a violent El Fatah, the terrorist arm of the PLO, and rose death. According to reports rapidly in its ranks. He from Beirut, he and four was one of the "brains" aides were killed when a behind the murderous remote-controlled bomb "Black September" gang exploded near their car in that carried our numer- that city. Salameh was ous assassinations, ter- married to the 1972 Miss rorist attacks on civilians Universe, Georgina Rizk. and aerial hijackings, culminating in the mas- sacre of 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich BEER,SHEBA — Ben- Olympic Games in Sep- Gurion University of the tember 1972. He headed the so-called Negev has dedicated the first medical library build- "Force 17," Arafat's per- ing in the Negev, at Soroka sonal bodyguard which was a unit of the "Black Sep- Medical Center. The library will house tember" assigned the task of 16,000 books and 600 pro- eliminating Arafat's oppo- nents in El Fatah and the fessional journals. • .4 4 4 Medical Library Is Completed 41