PROFILE 7 Amy Bigman reads Torah with two young congregants rksdale Press Regis K JENNIFER GUBKIN Special to The Jewish News W hen people ask Carol Bigman why her daughter Amy, 24, wants to be a woman rab- bi, she replies, "because that's the only rabbi she can be." Bigman, a native of Detroit and a third-year rabbinical student at Hebrew Union Col- lege — Jewish Institute of Religion, is also a rabbi for a bi-weekly congregation in Mississippi. Twice a month, Bigman wakes up at 7 a.m. Friday to catch a plane from Cincinnati to Memphis. From there it is a Ph hour drive to Clarksdale, Miss., where Bigman leads Beth Israel Temple, a Reform congregation with 70 members. After checking into her hotel, Bigman drives her rented car to the synagogue to prepare for the Friday evening service. Most of the congregants are old enough to be her parents. They call her Amy and often worry about her as if she were their own daughter. "It's a dif- ficult situation to deal with because you know they're just concerned and being nice," Bigman said. "On the other hand, I am an adult and can take care of myself." Bigman and the congrega- tion have compromised to in- sure her safety. She will not arrive before the 8 p.m. Hav- dala service while one person from the community is designated to meet her so that she is not alone at the synagogue after dark. She said it's one of the few times being a young woman has af- fected her job. 94 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1990 veling Preacher What's a nice girl from West Bloom- field doing in a small town in Mississippi twice a month? Bigman vividly remembers her first weekend in Clarks- dale last fall. She was viewed as an oddity, but says the con- gregation welcomed her with Southern hospitality. One male congregant exclaimed, "We finally got a rabbi we can kiss, too." Louis Rnoden, treasurer of Beth Israel, said although a few members would prefer a male on the pulpit, no one has criticized Bigman's perfor- mance. "I've received nothing but good reports about Amy," he said. When Bigman returned to West Bloomfield in December for vacation, she attended ser- vices at Temple Kol Ami to visit her friend Rabbi Norman Roman. He introduced Amy as "the Chief Rabbi of Clarksdale, Miss:' He was on- ly half-joking. Bigman has almost all the responsibilities of an ordained rabbi. Rabbi Gary Zola .of Hebrew Union College says student rabbis fulfill 90 percent of a full-time congregational rab- bi's duties. Rabbinical students are required to have a bi-weekly congregation for one year of their five-year pro- gram. Rabbi Zola says the on- ly limitations are that students may not officiate alone at a wedding or conversion. In Mississippi, Bigman leads the service, delivers her sermon and teaches three Sunday school students. Bigman finds providing music for the service one of her most challenging duties. "I enjoy singing, but I cannot lead a congregation in song worth a darn," Bigman said. "I don't know how to project my voice, and I don't read music so I'm limited to old standards. Whatever I grew up with, that's what they get." Bigman was raised at Thrn- ple Beth-El with a strong sense of Jewish identity. She says her family was always friends with the temple's rab- bis, who had a steady in- fluence on her life. Her parents, Carol and Ronald, are founding members of Shir Shalom. Bigman describes herself as "one of those weird kids who enjoyed Sunday school and services:' She was active in National Federation of Thmple Youth at Beth El while attending An- dover High School. She helped found Chavarah, a Reform group, at the University of Michigan. At Andover, Bigman considered the rab- binate as a career but opted "to do something more prac- tical," she said. Bigman decided in her sophomore year at Michigan to become a rabbi. "Through the process of applying to business school, I realized business wasn't really what I wanted to do. Being a rabbi was the only other thing I could possibly picture myself doing. From then on, I had no other thoughts about being anything other than a rabbi." Being a rabbi allows her to combine many interests, especially preserving her Jewish heritage and working with people. "The way I was raised, with the influence from my parents and rabbis in my life, has made it important for me to pass my heritage on and have an affect on others," Bigman said. When Bigman announced her career choice, few people were surprised. "I'm not sur- prised she chose a career within the Jewish communi- ty," said Rabbi Roman, a former Beth El assistant rab- bi. "I have a sense of ap- preciative surprise in her deci- sion to become a rabbi. Amy has patience, sensitivity and empathy. I see her as a Hillel or chaplain rabbi. I'm not sure she has the self-confidence and drive, at least not yet, to be a congregational rabbi?' Bigman was accepted to HUC in January of her senior year at Michigan, three weeks before her bat mitzvah. Bigman emphasizes that she did not have a bat mitzvah because she planned to be a rabbi. She did not have a bat mitzvah at the traditional age of 12 1/2-13 because she quit Hebrew school after fourth grade. She says she regretted it almost immediately but did not resume Hebrew classes un- til her junior year of college. Bigman's bat mitzvah was particularly meaningful because she planned her own service. Her mother and father lit the Shabbat candles together; her younger brother and sister handed the Torah to her. Now Bigman is determined to "pass down the Torah" throughout the Jewish com- munity. She spends most of her time either studying or preparing for Clarksdale because rabbinical school leaves her little time for a social life. She does not picture herself getting married before her scheduled ordination in