decision to attend rabbinical school and hearing her- self finally say, 'All right, God, I'm going. I'm going." Cantor Corrsin's inspiration for her chosen piofes- sion came first from her grandfather, Hyman Rottenberg, who had been a lay cantor at Congregation B'nai David. As an adult in New York City, Cantor Corrsin worked as a cantorial soloist in a small Brooklyn synagogue. "I loved it," she says. "So, after consultation with my husband, I decided to apply to cantorial school." By the end of her first year at the HUC-JIR School of Sacred Music's Jerusalem campus, Cantor Corrsin says, "I knew I had made the right choice for my life. It was intensely inspiring." She is not surprised at the recent influx of women cantorial students. "Women had been blocked from the cantorial field for thousands of years, so once it was opened to women, we eagerly entered the gates," Cantor Corrsin says. "Women who love Judaism, love Jewish music, love connecting with other Jews and love touching the essence of God through song, are flooding into the field." For Rabbi Jerris, the road to the rabbinate was a long one. "In some way, I worked my whole adult life toward this," says the rabbi. "In 1970, just before graduation from college, I naively wrote a let- ter to HUC-JIR, inquiring about being a rabbi. I was astounded to get a letter back telling me there were no women rabbis in the Reform movement." In childhood, she was a member of the Windsor Reform congregation of Rabbi Sherwin Wine, founder of the Humanistic Judaism movement. As a young married woman, she moved to Detroit and became part of his Birmingham Temple. After spending 17 years as a non-rabbinic religious leader, Rabbi Jerris was ordained as a Humanistic rabbi in 2001, alongside her future son-in-law, Rabbi Adam Chalom of Birmingham Temple. "My rabbinate is about reaching out to marginal Jews and helping them connect with Jewish life," says Rabbi Jerris, who spends much of her time working with interfaith couples. "I want to let them know there is a place to raise their children in a Jewish environment." In 1990, she married former advertising and pro- duction manager Stephen Stawicki. As co-founders of the Wedding Connection, "we're quite a unique team," she says. "He does the wedding planning and I perform the ceremonies." A_ Role Model "Parents were excited when they heard I would be joining Hillel," says Detroit-born Rabbi Faudem, her- self a former Hillel student. "They had expectations of what that would bring to their kids as a role model." She believes girl students get something special from her being a rabbi. "I know they look at Judaism more seriously because of me," says Rabbi Faudem, who is married to Jeffrey Ershler. Their children are Tal Erschler, 2, and Ari Erschler, 1. "It's important for girls to have a role model who is a rabbi," says Rabbi Bolton, who, in addition to her chaplaincy and community-education work, has accepted a position as scholar:in-residence at the Jewish Academy of Metropolitan Detroit. She looks forward Where Do Our Clergy Come From Schools across the United States ordaining rabbis and investing cantors Rabbinical Schools: CONSERVATIVE • Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at University of Judaism in Los Angeles "Originally an affiliate of the JTS, the Ziegler School has been involved in training rab- bis for over 30 years," says Rabbi Cheryl Peretz, assistant dean of the school. "However, the school's independent full ordination program began in 1997." As of May, the school had ordained four classes, with a total of 38 students, includ- ing 14 women. "In the Conservative move- ment, the numbers of female rabbis has been on a steady increase since the mid-'80s when women were first admitted into the rabbinical schools and into the Rabbinical Assembly," Rabbi Peretz says. "As more women build successful careers in the rabbinate, more worrien are attracted to the rabbinate, as they see it is feasible and possible to be a woman and a rabbi." • Rabbinical School of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in New York City. The school ordained its first woman rabbi in 1985. RENEWAL • ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal-Rabbinic Program. The program, open to both men and women, ordains rabbis through a guidance and mentor- ship program. The school began registration for its new Rabbinic Pastor Program this spring. • International Institute for Humanistic Judaism rabbinic program in Farmington Hills. The program has been ordain- ing rabbis since 1999. The four rabbis who have been ordained through the movement include two men and two women. Cantorial Programs: REFORM • Hebrew Union College- Jewish Institute of Religion. Rabbis are ordained at their New York, Cincinnati, Los Angeles and Israeli campuses. Since the 1972 ordination of Rabbi Sally Priesand, the school's first woman rabbi, HUC-JIR has ordained 392 women in their American pro- grams and 26 in their Israeli program. While the 2002 class includes 19 women and 12 men, the typ- ical year's ratio is 50-50 in American programs, with more men than women in the Israel- based program. "The Reform movement and HUC-JIR were the first Jewish denomination to affirm women's rights to be rabbis and philo- sophically support an egalitarian view on Jewish spiritual and professional leadership," says Jean Bloch Rosensaft, New York-based HUC national direc- tor for public affairs. "Women are entering into Jewish professional leader-ship in ways comparable to other pro- fessions — law, medicine, busi- ness — where the doors have opened. This is mirrored in the large numbers of women faculty (10) hired within the past five years at HUC-JIR, two of whom were ordained as rabbis at HUC-JIR." RECONSTRUCTIONIST • Reconstructionist Rabbinical College in Wyncote, Penn. Although the school was found- ed as an egalitarian institution in 1968, the first woman did not enter until the second ordi- nation class and was ordained in 1974. Since then, 102 of the 235 rabbis ordained have been women, with six women among the class of 11 rabbis this Month. CONSERVATIVE • H.L. Miller Cantorial School of JTS in New York City. The program ordains men and women. RECONSTRUCTIONIST • Reconstructionist Rabbinical College cantorial program in Wyncote, Penn. The cantorial program will invest its first can- tor this month — a woman — in a program that combines can- torial training at the school, with an M.A. degree in music from Gratz College in Philadelphia. REFORM • HUC-JIR School of Sacred Music in New York City. "More than two-thirds of our cantorial school are women," says Cantor Israel Goldstein, director of HUC-JIR School of Sacred Music. The program, which invested its first woman cantor in 1975, has an enrollment of 16 men and 24 women. Like the HUC-JIR rabbinical class this year, the 2002 class of graduating cantors also has more women than men, with nine women and only one man. While Cantor Goldstein says this in an unusual phenome- non, he maintains that for the last six or seven years the pro- gram has included more women than men. "It's hard to pinpoint why we went from no women to predom- inantly women," he says. "Maybe congregations look to include women as a different approach from a musical standpoint." RENEWAL • ALEPH: Alliance for Jewish Renewal-Cantorial Program. The first class in the school's cantorial program entered in 2001 and is open to men and women. 3N 6/7 2002 17