Reconstructionist rabbis unanimously approve transgender rights policy

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There are several reasons why the rights of transgender individuals is a Jewish issue, according to Rabbi Fred Scherlinder Dobb of Adat Shalom Reconstructionist Congregation in Bethesda.

The first reason is simple.

“Because there are transgender Jews,” he said.

Rabbi Fred Scherlinder Dobb

His colleagues agree. Last month the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association, to which Dobb belongs, unanimously approved a resolution affirming the full equality of transgender, non-binary and gender non-conforming individuals.

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The vote follows similar resolutions passed by rabbinic bodies of the Reform and Conservative movements.

“I think what is interesting is how the non-Orthodox [community] seems to be speaking with one voice, or many voices in unanimity, on this issue,” said Rabbi Elyse Wechterman, executive director of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association.

The resolution, voted on by nearly 100 Reconstructionist rabbis, commits the association to work for full inclusion and acceptance “of people of all gender identities in Jewish life and in society at large.”

The document also “strongly advocates for the full equality of transgender, non-binary, and gender non-confirming people and for equal protections for people of all gender identities under the law” in North America and Israel.

Non-binary individuals do not identify as either male or female. Gender non-conforming individuals do not follow “society’s expectations of gender expression based on the gender binary,” according to the University of California at Berkeley’s Centers for Educational Justice and Community Engagement.

Dobb, who attended the meeting in Portland, Ore., where the resolution was passed, called the recognition of transgender individuals “an overdue moment.”

“Judaism has always been keenly aware of prevailing trends” in the broader world, he said. “Raising the profile of transgender folks in light of the broader society is an authentically Jewish response to [those] important prevailing trends.”

Those trends include the rise in advocacy by the transgender community as well as legislation such as North Carolina’s H.B. 2, otherwise known as the “bathroom bill,” that he said is an attack on the transgender community.

The attacks on the transgender community go beyond politics.

In 2016, at least 25 transgender people were killed by violent means in the United States, according to the Human Rights Campaign. Two of those individuals were killed in Maryland and Washington.

The resolution affirms the values Dobb said Adat Shalom has followed for years. Dobb said he worked as a pastoral consultant for a wedding involving a transgender individual. He also knows several young adults at Adat Shalom who are either transgender or gender-fluid, meaning they do not identify as a fixed gender.

The congregation’s ethos is to let “others be fully who they are,” said Dobb. “Ours is a uniquely sensitive and welcoming community, even as we continue to work on it further — inclusion is in our mission statement, on our new banner, woven into worship, preached and practiced.”

Rabbi Sonya Starr

Rabbi Sonya Starr of Columbia Jewish Congregation, who also attended the Portland meeting, said society has come a long way in terms of understanding the needs of transgender individuals.

“It’s important for the Jewish community to be a safe haven for all people who want to be part of our community,” she said. “This [resolution] is one way of doing that.”

A study conducted by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and National Center for Transgender Equality found that suicidal thoughts and attempts are significantly higher among transgender adults compared to the general population.

A separate study by New York University’s Arnold Grossman and Pennsylvania State University’s Anthony D’Augelli found 50 percent of transgender youth have seriously thought about suicide, and 25 percent have attempted suicide.

Starr said the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association has a moral obligation to make its voice heard.

“Part of what we’re doing by saying we accept them is we’re saying they don’t have to kill themselves to find a place in our community,” she said.

The resolution was approved after an 18-month process, during which time representatives from Reconstructionist congregations, as well as the board of governors of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College, approved similar resolutions, JTA reported.

Rabbi Gilah Langner

Rabbi Gilah Langner, of Kol Ami the Northern Virginia Reconstructionist Community, was not present at the Portland meeting, but said she supports the resolution and hopes her congregation approves a similar resolution in the future. Clergy of other congregations interviewed for this story expressed similar sentiments.

Stuart Berlin, president of Columbia Jewish Congregation, said the resolution only affirms what congregations such as his had already been practicing.

He said: “There is nobody that has ever come to me, publicly or privately, and pointed the finger about why we are [accepting] these people.”

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