JOIN SLP Alum Rabbi Lauren Tuchman Featured as First Blind Woman Rabbi in USCJ Article

“Rabbi Tuchman received her rabbinical ordination from JTS in 2018—making her, as far as she is aware, the first blind woman in the world to enter the rabbinate. Now a sought after speaker, spiritual leader and educator, she has taught at numerous synagogues and other Jewish venues throughout North America and was named to Jewish Week’s “36 under 36” for her innovative leadership concerning inclusion of Jews with disabilities in all aspects of Jewish life.”

Rabbi Lauren Tuchman is an alum of our Seminary Leadership Project, our online course Don’t Kvetch, Organize, and a trainer for JOIN for Justice. Read the full featured article on the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism website here

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Karla’s Siyyum Welcome: Blessings on Becoming

Below is the welcome that Karla Van Praag, JOIN’s Executive Director, gave at the opening of our 21st Siyyum Graduation about the theme, “Blessings on Becoming.”

Karla at the podium, speaking into a microphone.

We were walking back from the library in April, Aitana and I, carrying a bag full of books.  My daughter is an avid reader: she reads on the bus, on the train, while walking down the stairs from the train…. Basically everywhere. This heavy bag I hoped would last a week.  We walked silently, and then, in passing, without thinking much of it, I said aloud, I wish I had your daily habit of reading. We continued walking silently. Then Aitana asked, “Well, what would motivate you to read more?” I thought of rewarding myself with a coffee, then a cookie, then a smoothie; unfortunately everything I thought of involved spending money or eating more, and were new habits I didn’t wanted to indulge in. “I don’t know.” I said. Then she asked, “What if, for a month, I did a chore for every hour you read?” I was shocked. She did it. She found me a motivation I couldn’t refuse.

 So, I read almost every day for a month. In my reclaimed time, I read almost three books. And in that time my daughter cooked dinner, put away dishes, set the table. It was wonderful. And I told this story to everyone who would listen. Later that month, I asked Aitana if I could tell this story at the Siyyum, as I’ve told stories about her brothers previously; she said with enthusiasm “sure”. I was a proud mom, and proud of my success. I would reflect on my accomplishment, why it worked, and what the story meant to me.

 Then May came around. I got busy, and well, maybe I didn’t have a good enough book or maybe I wasn’t feeling well. Regardless, I stopped reading daily. My habit was no longer a habit anymore. And the story I had planned to tell all of you, if I were to be honest, became something I wasn’t sure I wanted to tell anyone anymore. 

 Truth is, you don’t set a goal with the underlying purpose of trying to learn from your mistakes. You set a goal with the intention of meeting it. You want a happy ending you can shout from the rooftops. It’s possible to entertain failure as a detour on the path to success, but the detour should end by getting to your destination. When it leads somewhere else, well, you’re less likely to share the experience.  I, like most people who fail, was ashamed.

 Yet, the shame associated with failure is misguided. Because failure is inevitable. So, if you can get over the discomfort, you’ll figure out something exciting: sharing failure stories is usually met not with criticism, but with understanding and curiousity. Organizers know this. I’ll let you in on a little secret.  One way we judge trainers is by whether they are vulnerable enough to tell stories of their failures. And luckily, there are usually plenty of them.

That’s why I loved the Fellows theme the second I heard it. Or, once I understood it. Because the idea reassured me that my story still had a lot of value if I could overcome my need to conform to our cultural obsession with success by erasing my story from the Siyyum. My failed habit is still a story full of lessons and blessings. The concept of Blessings on Becoming is so rich because it embraces the fact we are always becoming something – there is no end point until it is truly all over – and that we should bless and celebrate the many points of the journey, even if they are failures.  

 So bless the fact that I learned again how valuable reading can be, even if two books were great and one was meh. Bless the daughter who acted as teacher, and who learned to cook a few new dishes that month. Bless the journey of setting a goal, and accomplishing it. Heck, bless the damn failure, for this lessons I learned because of it. And bless these fellows who taught me to recognize that the journey can matter as much as the destination. And that we are all still becoming.

 An aside: As I was writing this speech, I realized that the book I am in the middle of right now is Becoming by Michelle Obama. You know who her husband is – his first name is sometimes translated as to bless. Anyway, Becoming was auto-returned to the library before I finished it. But I enjoyed the four chapters I completed. I’ll eventually take it out again.

 

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Siyyum Graduation 2019: Blessings on Becoming

Our graduating cohort, posing for the camera as a group at Siyyum.

 

On June 24th, around 200 people gathered to celebrate our 15 graduating Jewish Organizing Fellows at our Siyyum Graduation. The evening was a beautiful gathering to support our graduating 2018-2019 Jewish Organizing Fellows, with family and friends coming from far and wide, as well as alumni from all eras of JOIN’s history showing up in full force. See photos from the evening here (and please tag yourself!), and watch each of our Fellows tell a story from their year as a Jewish Organizing Fellow below. You can read Karla’s opening speech here.

The theme, Blessings on Becoming, was chosen by the fellows. In the Fellows’ own words:

“To bless is to join our ancestors in the art of compressing attention… As a cohort this past year, we have both re-imagined old blessings and created new ones…Blessings for leaving a job, for haircuts, for action and song. We have disagreed. We have argued. We have struggled to find clarity or consensus. Amidst all of the tension, we have chosen to honor and celebrate our splintered process through the practice of blessing. 

Tonight, as we each share our stories, we continue our collective blessing tradition. We bless our work from this past year to forge a community and a movement that can hold us all. We bless the frustration and the transformation, the mundane and the blissful.  We bless the moments of learning and laughter, strategy and surprise….As we share and remember the year behind us, we ask for you to bless us back.  Witness our stories, our work, our becoming-in-process, and mark it sacred alongside us.” 

~except from our Siyyum Program book, Blessings on Becoming

 

 

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Alum becomes assistant rabbi at Lexington’s Temple Emunah

 

Rabbi Leora Kling smiling in front of the camera.

Rabbi Leora Kling Perkins

After a comprehensive search, Lexington’s Temple Emunah welcomed Rabbi Leora Kling Perkins to join Rabbi David Lerner as the new assistant rabbi of the congregation on July 16.

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DAME publishes “The Case for Civil Disobedience,” article penned by JOIN alum

Abbi Goldberg with her hands behind her back as a police officer is arresting her.

Abbie Goldberg (’19) under arrest.

On July 2, I was one of 18 Jews arrested in Boston for shutting down the South Bay Detention Center, and one of over 100 people arrested across the country protesting Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the migrant detention camps at the border. This was part of a national mobilization calling attention to the fact that Never Again Is Now. We called on our ancestry as Jews to say that we know we can’t wait until it’s too late to fight injustice of this magnitude. We also know that vigils, marches, and spreading the word alone did not stop the Holocaust and they alone will not close these modern-day concentration camps. We grew up hearing “Never Again” and committing civil disobedience is our way of saying it now.

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