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Rabbi David Ellenson, PhD Inaugurated as 8th President of Hebrew Union College–Jewish Institute of Religion, October 13, 2002

October 13th Inauguration in Cincinnati
Historic Birthplace of Reform Judaism and HUC-JIR, Established in 1875
Inauguration Address Affirms HUC-JIR's Commitment to Israel; Pluralism, Inclusivity, and Equality in Jewish Life; Pioneering Curriculum; and Responsibility to Humanity
From left, Rabbi David Ellenson, inaugurated by Burton Lehman, Chair, HUC-JIR Board of Governors, at ceremony at the historic landmark Plum Street Temple, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Photo by Janine Spang
Rabbi David Ellenson, PhD, was inaugurated as the eighth President in the history of Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion (HUC-JIR), the academic and professional leadership center of Reform Judaism, on Sunday, October 13, 2002, at Cincinnati's landmark Isaac M. Wise / K.K. B'nai Yeshurun Plum Street Temple. The Inauguration was attended by over 1000, including the leadership of the Reform Movement, representatives of colleges, universities, and seminaries, and leaders of Jewish organizations and congregations from across North America, Israel, and abroad. The ceremony featured the participation of alumni, faculty, and students. Rabbi Ellenson was inducted into office by Burton Lehman, Chair of HUC-JIR's Board of Governors. The Inauguration Committee was chaired by Ilene and Stanley P. Gold, immediate past Chair of HUC-JIR's Board of Governors; the honorary chairs were Joan and Richard J. Scheuer, former Chair of HUC-JIR's Board of Governors.
As HUC-JIR President, Rabbi Ellenson serves as the Chief Executive
Officer of the four-campus, international university. HUC-JIR's
centers of learning in Cincinnati, Jerusalem, Los Angeles and New
York provide the academic and professional training programs for
the Reform Movement's rabbis, cantors, educators, and communal service
professionals, and offer graduate programs for scholars of all faiths.
Rabbi Ellenson, who was ordained at HUC-JIR in 1977, is the eighth
President in its 127 year-long history and succeeds Dr. Norman J.
Cohen, Acting President and Provost.
In his Inauguration Address, Rabbi Ellenson stressed the College-Institute's
commitment to the people and State of Israel, saying "the destiny
of the College-Institute will remain intertwined and interlocked
with the fate of our people in the State of Israel, and I intend
to do all in my power to enhance the presence and influence of HUC-JIR
in Jerusalem by expanding our faculty and increasing our student
body in the years ahead....Our students in Cincinnati, Los Angeles,
and New York who prepare for careers in the cantorate, communal
service, education and the rabbinate will continue to study in Israel
at our Jerusalem campus, and there they will learn the true meaning
of 'areivut, the idea of mutual responsibility that binds Jews worldwide
into one people. Our graduates will know that when Jews are in distress
in Argentina or Europe or any place on earth that their responsibility
to the people Israel is absolute....More than thirty Israeli rabbinic
students and dozens of Israeli teachers also currently attend our
Jerusalem school, and they constitute the most precious resource
for the growth of liberal Judaism on Israeli soil. In a country
where an extremist and coercive form of Judaism on the one hand
and a strident and unyielding secularism on the other have provided
the only two meaningful options between which Israeli Jews can choose,
the need for us to educate native Israelis as rabbis and educators
who speak the language of liberal Judaism is urgent."
Rabbi Ellenson also addressed the College-Institute's responsibility
to a pluralistic North American Jewry, in stating "we must recognize
that the foremost concern of the College-Institute is the education
and formation of scholars and k'lei kodesh who will be imbued with
the spirit of Torah. At the same time, our graduates must be bilingual
-- they must speak the language of America as well as the language
of Judaism. This means that our alumni must be prepared to speak
to Jews in the synagogue. No venue can be more meaningful for the
future of the Jewish people. However, the spiritual hunger of Jews
in this country is acute, and we must not rest content to confine
our Jewish passion to the synagogue alone. Nor can we gaurd or own
denominational boundaries too jealously. Our students must be equipped
to address Jews across what are already often-outmoded denominational
lines. Our graduates must be found wherever the possibilities for
Jewish renewal appear -- in the settings of Jewish community centers
and Jewish organizational life, as well as in the university."
Rabbi Ellenson affirmed the concern for equality and inclusiveness
that has long been the hallmark of Reform Judaism, noting "We proudly
salute a full generation of women rabbis who have made remarkable
contributions to Jewish life, and we are proud that the number of
women on our faculty has increased significantly in recent years
-- these gains must be cultivated. The open embrace of persons of
diverse sexual orientations must continue to be affirmed. We recognize
the voices of those people who were previously prevented from participation
in the public discourse of the Jewish people now contribute immeasurably
to the fulfillment of the messianic vision of justice that lies
at the heart of Jewish religious tradition."
The College-Institute's pioneering advances were also noted, as
Rabbi Ellenson stated "the core curriculum project envisioned by
our faculty, supported by the holdings of our libraries, archives
and museums...seeks to integrate the academic, personal, and professional
components of the education HUC-JIR provides its students so that
our graduates will be optimally prepared to serve our community
in diverse ways and settings. Our students must apply the values
and wisdom of our tradition to the different venues where they will
be called upon to serve in this new century. The future and fate
of the Jewish people and the Jewish religion are at stake."
Rabbi Ellenson stressed the College-Institute's responsibility
for the betterment of the world and urged that HUC-JIR take the
lead, in cooperation with other Jewish institutions devoted to Jewish
intellectual and professional development, to create an Institute
for Advanced Studies to foster study and intellectual reflection
in an open and liberal Jewish spirit on the great questions of our
time. He said, "During these past few years, the world has borne
witness to the terror and destruction that monists and fundamentalists
of all types have wreaked upon humanity. Our task is therefore to
create a setting where a decisive liberal religious spirit might
emerge, an institute where all types of persons -- Jews and non-Jews,
academics and activists, clergy and laity -- of different viewpoints
and convictions could come together to consider how the ethical
and social obligations contained in the Torah might find expression
in practical programs and policy initiatives....Such an institute
might potentially become a central actor in the life of the Jewish
people, and would hopefully contribute towards a better future for
humanity."
In his charge to the new President, Burton Lehman, Chair of HUC-JIR's
Board of Governors, called upon Rabbi David Ellenson "to sustain
the chain of Jewish learning and teaching; to preserve Judaism's
sacred texts, values and history to ensure Jewish survival; to promote
the living interpretation of Judaism through a dynamic engagement
with contemporary life and liberal thought; and to inspire all to
build a better world where ignorance and injustice are eradicated,
and justice and understanding prevail."
The Inauguration Address and Inauguration Charge can be found
on the HUC-JIR website at www.huc.edu/inauguration/address.shtml
and www.huc.edu/inauguration/charge.shtml.
The Inauguration processional featured faculty, alumni, and students
carrying seven Torah scrolls -- one of which had been rescued during
the Holocaust and is permanently on view at HUC-JIR's Skirball Museum
in Cincinnati. In a symbolic moment, the scrolls were transferred
from the generation of faculty and alumni to the generation of students,
and then placed in the Plum Street Temple's Ark. The Holocaust Torah
scroll was used for the Torah reading during the ceremony and was
passed from Rabbi Wolli Kaelter, Rabbi Laureate, Temple Israel,
Long Beach, California, who had fled Nazi Germany to study at HUC-JIR,
to Rabbi Ellenson.
The liturgy for the Inauguration ceremony was composed by Rabbi
Lawrence A. Hoffman, Barbara and Stephen Friedman Professor in Liturgy,
Worship and Ritual at HUC-JIR/New York, together with the assistance
of Dr. Rachel Adler, Associate Professor of Jewish Religious Thought
and Feminist Studies, HUC-JIR/Los Angeles; Cantor Israel Goldstein,
Director, School of Sacred Music, HUC-JIR/New York; Rabbi Lewis
H. Kamrass, Senior Rabbi, Isaac Mayer Wise Temple / K.K. B'nai Yeshurun,
Cincinnati; Rabbi Richard S. Sarason, Professor of Rabbinic Literature
and Thought, HUC-JIR/Cincinnati; Cantor Benjie Ellen Schiller, Professor
of Cantorial Arts, HUC-JIR/New York; and Composer Bonia Shur, Director
of Liturgical Arts Emeritus, HUC-JIR/Cincinnati.
Featured participants included Rabbi Jacqueline Koch Ellenson,
the wife of Rabbi David Ellenson; Dr. Alfred Gottschalk, Chancellor
Emeritus, HUC-JIR; Rabbi Norman J. Cohen, Provost, HUC-JIR; Ilene
and Stanley Gold, Pas Chair, HUC-JIR Board of Governors; Richard
J. Scheuer, Former Chair, HUC-JIR's Board of Governors; Rabbi Eric
H. Yoffie, President, Union of American Hebrew Congregations; Rabbi
Martin S. Weiner, President, Central Conference of American Rabbis;
Rabbi Uri Regev, Executive Director, World Union for Progressive
Judaism; Rabbi Na'aman Kelman, Director of Educational Initiatives,
HUC-JIR/Jerusalem; Rabbi Robert N. Levine, Senior Rabbi, Congregation
Rodeph Sholom, New York; Rabbi Jonathan W. Malino, Professor of
Philosophy, Guilford College; Rabbi Laura J. Geller, Senior Rabbi,
Temple Emanuel, Beverly Hills, California.
Liturgical music was performed by the School of Sacred Music (SSM)
Choir -- an ensemble of 26 cantorial students -- and Cantor Israel
Goldstein, Cantor Eliyahu Schleifer, Associate Professor of Sacred
Music, HUC-JIR/Jerusalem, Cantor Benjie Ellen Schiller, and Cantor
Sharon Kohn, Cantor of Plum Street Temple. The ceremony featured
the world premiere of an Inaugural Musical Composition composed
by Bonia Shur, performed by the SSM Choir and instrumentalists from
the Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music.
The Plum Street Temple clergy -- Rabbi Lewis H. Kamrass, Rabbi
Ilana Baden, and Cantor Sharon Kohn -- also participated in the
ceremony.
Preceding the Inauguration was an Academic Symposium, "World Jewry:
Retrospective and Prospective" at the HUC-JIR/Cincinnati campus.
The symposium was moderated by Paula Hyman, Lucy Moses Professor
of Modern Jewish History, Yale University, and included presentations
by Ruth Gavison, Haim H. Cohn Professor of Human Rights at the Hebrew
University in Jerusalem; Beate Klarsfeld, crusader against anti-Semitism,
Nazi criminals, and Holocaust denial; and David N. Myers, Professor
Jewish History, UCLA.
Visitors to the campus were also invited to tour its scholarly
resources, including The Dalsheimer Rare Book Room, The Jacob R.
Marcus Center of the American Jewish Archives, The Skirball Museum
Cincinnati, and The Center for Holocaust and Humanity Education.
Following the Inauguration, guests celebrated at a festive dinner
on campus, hosted by Ilene and Stanley P. Gold, Inauguration Chairs
and Richard J. Scheuer, Honorary Chair.
Profile of Rabbi David Ellenson, Ph.D
Rabbi David Ellenson holds the Gus Waterman Herrman Presidential
Chair and is the I.H. and Anna Grancell Professor of Jewish Religious
Thought at HUC-JIR in Los Angeles. A member of HUC-JIR's faculty
since 1979, he has served as Lecturer, Assistant Professor, Associate
Professor, and Professor of Jewish Religious Thought. From 1981-1997,
he also held the post of Director of the Jerome H. Louchheim School
of Judaic Studies.
Rabbi Ellenson received his PhD from Columbia University in
1981 and was ordained a rabbi at HUC-JIR's New York School in 1977.
He holds M.A. degrees from Columbia University, HUC-JIR, and the
University of Virginia. He received his B.A. degree from the College
of William and Mary in Virginia in 1969.
Rabbi Ellenson is a Fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute of
Jerusalem and a Fellow and Lecturer in the Institute of Advanced
Studies at Hebrew University in Jerusalem (1999 to present). He
has served as Visiting Professor of History at the Jewish Theological
Seminary in New York, Lady Davis Visiting Professor of Humanities
in the Department of Jewish Thought at Hebrew University in Jerusalem,
and Visiting Professor in the Center for Jewish Studies and a member
of the Near Eastern Languages and Cultures Department at the University
of California, Los Angeles (1986-97). In addition, he has been the
Blaustein Scholar at the Jerusalem Pardes Institute for Jewish Studies
and regularly serves as a faculty member of the Wexner Heritage
Foundation.
Rabbi Ellenson has published and lectured extensively on diverse
topics in modern Jewish history, ethics, and thought. He is the
author of Tradition in Transition: Orthodoxy, Halakhah and the Boundaries
of Modern Jewish Identity (1989), Rabbi Esriel Hildesheimer and
the Creation of a Modern Jewish Orthodoxy (1990) (nominated for
the National Jewish Book Council's Award for outstanding book in
Jewish History, 1990), and Between Tradition and Culture: The Dialectics
of Jewish Religion and Identity in the Modern World (1994).
His work describes the writings of Reform, Conservative, Orthodox,
and Reconstructionist leaders in Europe, the United States, and
Israel during the last two centuries and employs a sociological
approach to illuminate the history and development of modern Jewish
religious denominationalism. His application of this method has
allowed him to emphasize the interplay between Jewish religious
tradition and modern society in unique ways, and has prompted him
to write and lecture on diverse topics, including early Reform and
Orthodoxy in 19th century Germany, conversion to Judaism at the
beginning of the 1900s, and the problems of medical ethics in present-day
America.
Along with Dr. Stanley Chyet, Rabbi Ellenson co-edited Bits of
Honey: Essays for Samson H. Levey (1993), and is the author of the
commentary entitled "How the Modern Prayerbook Evolved" in the acclaimed
Eight Volume Series on the Jewish Prayerbook, Minhag Ami – My People's
Prayerbook, edited by Dr. Lawrence Hoffman (Jewish Lights Publishing).
He is currently at work on another book-length collection of his
essays for HUC Press.
He has written over 200 articles and reviews in diverse academic
and religious journals and books, including The Hebrew Union College
Annual, The Journal of American Academy of Religion, Religious Studies
Review, The Leo Baeck Institute Year Book, Journal of Religion,
Modern Judaism, Jewish Book Annual, CCAR Journal, Conservative Judaism,
Reconstructionist, and Tradition. His academic lectures have been
delivered at such institutions as Charles University in Prague,
Ben Gurion and Bar Ilan Universities in Israel, Haverford College,
Harvard University, Yale University, Brown University, and the Jewish
Theological Seminary of America.
Rabbi Ellenson is a member of several professional and academic
societies, including the Association for Jewish Studies, the American
Academy of Religion, the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion,
the Southern California Board of Rabbis, and the Central Conference
of American Rabbis. He has served as a pulpit rabbi in Port Washington,
New York, and Keene, New Hampshire, and has worked at several summer
camps of the Reform and Conservative Movements.
Born in Brookline, Massachusetts, in 1947, Rabbi Ellenson was
raised in Newport News, Virginia. He is married to Rabbi Jacqueline
Koch Ellenson, who was ordained at HUC-JIR/New York in 1983. They
are the parents of Ruth (married to Robert Guffey Ellenson), Micah,
Hannah, Naomi, and Raphael.
Rabbi Dabid Ellenson Statement
The Covenant lies at the heart of our Jewish tradition. We must
continue to have this biblical notion guide and inspire us as we
strive to have the values of Jewish tradition speak in a relevant
and humane way to the challenges and dilemmas of our time.
We Jews today, not less than our ancestors in generations past,
are called to covenantal responsibility by the God of Israel, Who
asks that we serve as partners -- shutafim -- with God in forming
and mending the world. Each of us is challenged personally to see
to it that mitzvot are performed, to strive for the realization
of kindness, grace and mercy -- hein, hesed, v'rahamim -- in the
world.
The notion of Covenant -- brit -- asserts itself collectively
as well, for we also stand as part of a people, in dialogical relationship
with other members of the household of Israel. We educate our students
to affirm Jewish peoplehood and Jewish solidarity as the core values
of their vocational tasks. We teach them words of Torah, so that
they can bring these words alive and translate them into guidelines.
These guidelines will cause them to perform ma'a'sim tovim -- good
works that will direct and inspire the lives of the people and the
communities that they will one day serve.
This vision of Covenant provides an ideal of freedom and responsibility
that animates the educational endeavors we undertake at Hebrew Union
College-Jewish Institute of Religion. Our students internalize the
history and memory of the Jewish past into their very being. This
knowledge inspires them to feel a responsibility to the past and
gives them the courage to respond creatively in their own voices
to the demands of the present, so that the life-affirming values
and enduring beauty inherent in our tradition can assure a vibrant
Jewish future.
Rabbi David Ellenson, PhD
President
Hebrew Union College–Jewish Institute of Religion
Hebrew Union College was established in 1875 in Cincinnati by
Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise, the founder of American Reform Judaism,
and is the oldest institution of higher Jewish education in America.
Throughout its 127 years, HUC-JIR has been characterized by a continuity
and stability of leadership unknown to most other institutions.
Rabbi Isaac Mayer Wise led the College for 25 years, succeeded by
the leadership of Rabbi Kaufman Kohler (1903-1921), who strengthened
HUC-JIR's commitment to the scientific investigation of the Jewish
tradition; followed by Rabbi Julian Morgenstern (1921-1947), who
rescued European scholars from the threat of the Nazis. Rabbi Stephen
S. Wise (1922-1948), the founder and leader of the Jewish Institute
of Religion in New York from its inception in 1922 to 1948, was
a pioneer of the American Zionist Movement and a social justice
activist. Dr. Nelson Glueck (1947-1971), who merged HUC and JIR
in 1948, was a renowned biblical archaeologist who established HUC-JIR's
campuses in Jerusalem and Los Angeles. He was succeeded by Dr. Alfred
Gottschalk (1971-1996), a Zionist and modernist who enhanced HUC-JIR's
commitment to Jewish scholarship and community service, followed
by Rabbi Sheldon Zimmerman (1996-2000), a 26-year veteran of congregational
leadership and former President of the Central Conference of American
Rabbis (CCAR).
HUC-JIR's Los Angeles campus was opened in 1954 to serve the growing
Jewish community on the West Coast. The Jerusalem campus, founded
in 1963 as a postdoctoral school of archaeological and biblical
studies, has grown to serve as the center for HUC-JIR students'
first year of study and the Israel Rabbinic Program training rabbis
for Israel's Progressive movement.
The College-Institute has ordained 2586 rabbis, including 392
women rabbis since 1972, when HUC-JIR was the first Jewish seminary
to ordain a woman rabbi in America, Rabbi Sally Priesand. Since
1980, HUC-JIR has ordained 26 Israeli rabbis to serve Israel's Progressive
Movement, including 6 Israeli women rabbis since 1992, when HUC-JIR
ordained the first woman rabbi in Israel, Rabbi Naamah Kelman. The
College-Institute's School of Sacred Music, established in 1948
to sustain Jewish liturgical music after the Holocaust, has invested
390 cantors, including 162 women since HUC-JIR invested the first
woman cantor, Cantor Barbara Ostfeld, in 1975.
HUC-JIR has 295 education alumni leading and teaching temple religious
schools, 483 Jewish communal service alumni heading Federations
and Jewish communal and social service agencies, and 359 graduate
studies alumni teaching at HUC-JIR and other distinguished universities
and seminaries throughout the world. There are 915 Reform congregations
that are served by HUC-JIR's alumni and students.
Over 500 courses and 20 advanced degree programs in rabbinic,
cantorial, education, communal service and graduate studies are
offered at the four campuses. Continuing education and public programs
are offered through HUC-JIR's New York Kollel, Academy for Interfaith
Studies in Cincinnati, Beit Midrash/A Liberal Yeshivah in Jerusalem,
and at the Los Angeles School.
HUC-JIR's libraries, with nearly 700,000 volumes, are ranked among
the world's largest repositories of Judaica and Hebraica from the
10th century to the present day. HUC-JIR's American Jewish Archives
comprise over 10 million documents preserving the history of the
Reform movement and Jewish life in the Western Hemisphere, and include
2 million World Jewish Congress documents, establishing it as an
international center for Holocaust research. HUC-JIR's Skirball
Museums in Los Angeles, Cincinnati, and Jerusalem, HUC-JIR Museum
in New York, and archaeological excavations in Israel, present 4,000
years of Jewish history and culture.
HUC-JIR is accredited by the Middle States, North Central, and
Western Association of Colleges and Schools.
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