I CLOSE-UP IN NEW HANDS How women have changed the rabbinate. RIFKA ROSENWEIN Special to The Jewish News ost: Half of Judaism. We're Forming a Search Committee for Women in Judaism," the announcement read.The sheet of paper was tacked onto the wall of an elevator last fall at the Hebrew Union College — Jew- ish Institute of Religion in New York City — a place, one would think, where Jewish women had already been found. It was here, at the rabbinical school of the Reform movement, that the first woman rabbi in Amer- ica was ordained 20 years ago this spring. When the Reconstructionist and, years later, the Conser- vative movement followed suit, it seemed to many that the "search" for women in Judaism had ended. They were to be found in the same places as men — in the minyan, or quorum of ten needed for public prayer; in the classroom studying Talmud; and finally, in the pulpit. And yet as more women have stepped into these roles from which they were formerly excluded, they have found it un- rewarding merely to mimic men. Today, years after the first flush of egalitarianism, wom- en rabbis and rabbinical students are beginning to focus more on their own identity as women, fleshing out their own per- spective and addressing their own concerns. In this new light, they are re-examining every corner of Jewish life — from life-cycle events to liturgy, from the interpretation of historic texts to synagogue youth programs. In so doing, women are revitalizing the seminaries, challenging the dogma of their respective movements, and changing the very nature of the rabbinate. Impact Felt "There's a feeling within the Reform movement that we've accomplished everything the feminist movement has asked of us, in that women and men are equal," says Jordan Mill- stein, a senior rabbinical student at Hebrew Union College (HUC). "But there are some deeper, attitudinal issues not re- solved." 'What remained undefined is what it means to be a Con- servative woman rabbi," echoes Sara Paasche, a first-year rabbinical student at the Conservative movement's Jewish Rifka Rosenwein is a reporter in New York. This article was made possible by a grant from The Fund For Journalism on Jewish Life, a project of the CRB Foundation of Montreal, Canada and the Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Any views expressed are solely those of the author. 26 FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1992 Theological Seminary. The first victories allowed women to fulfill what had always been a man's role, she explains. `That was fine then. Now there's a shift. Women do bring some- thing different. We want to figure out where the impact will be on the rabbinate," Ms. Paasche says. According to the 30 rabbis, academics, students and lay leaders interviewed for this article, women rabbis and rab- binical students have already had quite an impact — on cam- puses, in congregations, and in community life — though much remains to be done. Even in the Reform movement, where women have been rabbis for 20 years, "there are still glass ceilings" as Rabbi Sally Finestone, the Reform rabbi and director of the Harvard-Radcliffe Hillel, puts it. Salary disparities still exist between men and women. In the Re- form and Conservative movements, women have not risen to leadership ranks within the professional rabbinic organi- zations. And there are no women serving as senior rabbis in the largest, most visible pulpits in the country. In each of the movements, there are more women rabbis than men who choose to go into education, or campus Hillel work or chaplaincies. This is due in part to the fact that many congregations are still resistant to hiring women — and in part because many women find congregational work too tax- ing to manage while raising a family. While these stumbling blocks remain, many of those in- terviewed believe it is just a matter of time before women in- filtrate all walks of rabbinic life, even in the Orthodox movement, which does not permit women in the rabbinate. In community work, on college campuses and in charita- ble activities, Orthodox men and women are coming into con- tact with women rabbis. They serve as "a very powerful model" for Orthodox women who are making increasing gains in re- ligious education and observance, says Blu Greenberg, an Orthodox feminist and author. Eventually, says Mrs. Green- berg, Orthodox women are going to ask, "why not me?" In the meantime, it is in the rabbinic school of the liberal denominations where women have made their most profound impact. Women now constitute almost half of each gradu- ating class at HUC, JTS and the Reconstructionist Rab- binical College. Having women in the classroom has changed the way students and teachers look at texts and how they view the pastoral and religious responsibilities awaiting them. Feminist Slant "I was a student here before women were ordained. It's [now] a different college altogether," says Professor Lawrence