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Meet the trailblazer who was the UK’s first woman rabbi

Jackie Tabick overcame prejudice to be accepted and changed the face of the British Jewish community

January 11, 2024 12:34
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Rabbi Jackie Tabick (Photo: Gary Manhine)

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

7 min read

Few would give a second thought these days to the fact that both chairs of the Reform movement’s rabbinic assembly are women or that one of the joint chief executives of Progressive Judaism (the union in the making between Reform and Liberals) is a female rabbi. Women have served as rabbis in the UK for almost half a century.

But the road to the rabbinate was anything but smooth for the first, Rabbi Jackie Tabick, who recently took a step back from communal life when she retired as convenor of the Reform Beit Din at the age of 75.

While younger colleagues have hailed her as the example who inspired them to follow, she is something of a reticent trailblazer. “I am amazed at the number who have now come out and said ‘You’re the reason why I became a rabbi’ or ‘When I became a rabbi, I realised I didn’t have to fight all the battles because you had done it’,” she says.

“It took me a long, long time to realise I had this odd situation of being the first woman rabbi that I had to live up to.”

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Judaism