metro » Family Simchah Notable female rabbis join forces for special Shabbat services at Beth Shalom. Rabbi Cantor Marcia Tilchin with her daughter, Yaira, who will be celebrating a second bat mitzvah at Beth Shalom Barbara Lewis | Contributing Writer A n international family with Metro Detroit roots will have an extra-special Shabbat Jan. 13-14 at Congregation Beth Shalom in Oak Park. At late evening ser- vices that Friday, native Detroiter Rabbi Cantor Marcia Tilchin, who holds degrees and ordination from both the Jewish Theological Seminary of America and the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Rabbi Cantor Studies in Los Angeles Marcia Tilchin and now lives in Tustin, Calif., will lead services with her husband and children. Special guest speaker will be her cousin Rabbi Miri Gold, who grew up in Oak Park and gained fame as one of the first non-Orthodox rabbis to be recognized by the government of Israel. A special oneg Shabbat will follow the service, sponsored by the rabbis’ families, in honor of their late mothers, Jeannette Tilchin and Lillian Gold. The Tilchins were mem- bers of Congregation Beth Shalom in its early days, and Jeanette was a past president. Lillian Gold and her husband, Ruben, were longtime members of Congregation Shaarey Zedek. In her later years, Lillian joined Beth Shalom to be closer to her sister Jeannette. She celebrated her adult bat mitz- vah there at age 80 and was a stalwart of the daily minyan for the last 20 years of her life. At Shabbat morning services, Tilchin’s youngest child, Yaira Spitzer-Tilchin, will celebrate her bat mitzvah at Beth Shalom. She will lead the prayers, read Torah and haf- tarah and present a d’var Torah (teaching). 14 January 5 • 2017 degree from HUC-JIR. Since her ordination, Gold has served as the religious leader of Birkat Shalom, a small regional congregation that serves Kibbutz Gezer and the surrounding community. In Israel, the designated rabbis of regional councils are paid government employees. But, until three years ago, the government recognized only Orthodox rabbis. Even though the region’s residents turned to Gold for clerical services and recognized her as their rabbi, their tax dollars were used to pay the salary of a local Orthodox rabbi. Residents had to raise additional funds to support Gold. Israel Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein decided the case at the end of May 2012, recognizing Gold and 14 PIONEERING RABBI other Masorti (Conservative) and Miri Gold achieved worldwide Progressive (Reform) rabbis. It took recognition in 2005, when she and until 2014 for Gold to draw her first the Israel Religious Action Center salary. (IRAC), the legal arm of the Weinstein’s decision also enabled Israel Movement for Progressive the regional council to use funds Judaism, petitioned for her to from the Ministry of Religious Affairs Rabbi Miri Gold to build a 1,500-square-foot building be recognized as the rabbi of the regional council that includes for the congregation, located at the Kibbutz Gezer. center of Kibbutz Gezer. Gold has lived on the kibbutz in central Gold and the other non-Orthodox regional Israel since making aliyah in 1977. She and council rabbis do not have the ability to her husband, David Leichman, have three officiate at Jewish ceremonies and have no adult children, Eliora, Arishai and Alon. authority over Jewish law. A graduate of Berkley High School and Gold’s visit to Detroit is part of a tour to the University of Michigan, Gold decided to raise awareness and funds for completion of become a rabbi in 1993 after she officiated at the Birkat Shalom building. At Beth Shalom her daughter’s bat mitzvah. She was ordained and elsewhere, she’ll talk about the accom- by the Reform Hebrew Union College-Jewish plishments and challenges facing liberal Jews Institute of Religion in Jerusalem in 1999, in Israel, including her own case and the when she was 44. She also holds a master’s ongoing efforts of Women of the Wall. Tilchin and her husband, Scott Spitzer, decided to observe Yaira’s coming of age both in Michigan and in California to accommo- date family members unable to travel. “Our son, Avi, had three bat mitzvah celebrations in 2010-2011, one in Detroit, one in Syracuse and one in California, so the precedent is set,” Tilchin said. She and Spitzer also have another daughter, Sheindl Spitzer-Tilchin, who is named after her bub- bie, Jeannette. Yaira said she didn’t mind celebrating her bat mizvah so far from her California home. “I am grateful to Beth Shalom for opening its doors to me so that I can celebrate this spe- cial day in a place that was and is meaningful to my family,” she said. INNOVATIVE RABBI Marcia Tilchin’s story is also impres- sive. She enrolled in the cantorial school at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in the early 1990s and added the rabbinic program a few years later. After being ordained as a cantor, she moved to California to take a position at Conservative Congregation B’nai Israel in Tustin, which she served for 13 years. She transferred her rabbinic studies to the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at American Jewish University and was ordained as a rabbi in 2015. About a year ago, Tilchin left the congregation and started the Jewish Collaborative of Orange County (JCoOC), a creative approach to Jewish engagement that includes partnership with area syna- gogues and agencies as well as a range of mobile independent programs designed to reach the underserved in her commu- nity. “Some have called it a ‘Jew Truck’ without the truck,” Tilchin said. Tilchin knew Beth Shalom’s Rabbi Robert Gamer from her Jewish Theological Seminary days. He was happy to turn his pulpit over to her and her cousin for Erev Shabbat services and to invite the Detroit Jewish community to hear Gold speak. The challenges of Jewish pluralism in Israel is something that every non-Orthodox Jewish American should understand, he said. “Our moms would be very happy that we are doing this,” Tilchin said. * The service will start at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, Jan. 13. Beth Shalom is at 14601 Lincoln in Oak Park.