These Israeli women are breaking barriers in the Orthodox community
Five additional women were recently certified as halachic and spiritual leaders by the Susi Bradfield Women’s Institute of Halachic Leadership (WIHL). These newly certified leaders, who some would see as female orthodox rabbis, go by the definition of Rabbanit, which is how the religious Zionist community refers to female scholars, as opposed to Rabba, the term used by the Reform and Conservative Movements for female rabbis.
WIHL emphasized to The Jerusalem Post, that these women are certified as Morat Hora’a and Manhiga Ruchanit, [a leader who can give guidance in matters of Jewish law]. These women have successfully passed exams on all of the areas that men do to receive rabbinic ordination. This is a sensitive topic amongst modern orthodox and religious zionist rabbis, most of whom have not approved this type of breakthrough.
Historically, rabbis were always men. The Reform movement has been ordaining female rabbis since 1972.
The five graduates of the program are Rabbanit Yaffa Aranoff, Rabbanit Aluma Florsheim Dor, Rabbanit Ravit Kalech, Rabbanit Tikva Spira and Rabbanit Moriah Taasan Michaeli, who have all successfully completed the grueling course of study in the intensive, five-year Ohr Torah Stone (OTS) program.
According to an OTS statement, the graduates passed exams on halacha and “demonstrated a high level of proficiency in a wide range of topics, with a focus on areas associated with communal leadership such as the laws of Shabbat, kashrut, family purity, marriage and divorce and bereavement.” In addition to being trained to adjudicate on halachic questions, WIHL students were also trained in areas of communal leadership and managing personal and family crises.

The new graduates join previous WIHL alumnae who are already providing halachic and spiritual leadership throughout Israel and the Jewish world.
Ohr Torah Stone President and Rosh HaYeshiva Rabbi Dr. Kenneth Brander saluted the five women, saying “When the sun rises, that’s all you see. But when the moon rises, you can also see the stars. This is your role: to lead and enlighten our people, while also igniting the sparks within others and illuminating the communities around you.”
As each of the graduates spoke at the event they were cheered on by younger students whom they teach and mentor in various settings, an entire busload of Rabbanit Spira’s students traveled from the coastal town of Ashdod to pay tribute. “After so many generations of girls and women who had only male spiritual leaders to turn to on matters of Jewish law, for our generation it is really exciting to have female role models to turn to and also to emulate,” said one according to a statement on behalf of OTS.
WIHL Director Rabbanit Devorah Evron said in her congratulatory remarks that “we are blessed to live in a generation where the number of women learning Torah is on the constant rise. Each and every woman has the potential and the power to become teachers and inspire others to join this important journey.
Rabbi Ohad Teharlev, the head of OTS’s Midreshet Lindenbaum women’s seminary, of which the WIHL is a part also spoke at the event. “Fifteen years after we launched our program for women’s halachic study we witnessed five more women being certified for completing the program,” Teharlev said. “Just last week, a group of male rabbis came together in a room to decide who would be the next Religious Zionist Chief Rabbi, without a single woman involved,” he continued. “What we are commemorating here tonight is our response. May each of these scholars have the strength and wisdom to serve as our leaders in their own right and place,” Teharlev said.
These five rabbaniot have joined 14 of the graduates of this program across Israel.
Female religious leaders in Orthodox Judaism
The subject of female rabbis in Orthodox Judaism is complex. Although some Orthodox women have been ordained as rabbis, many major Orthodox Jewish communities and institutions do not accept the change. In an alternative approach, other Orthodox Jewish institutions train women as Torah scholars for various Jewish religious leadership roles. These roles typically involve training women as religious authorities in Jewish Law but without formal rabbinic ordination, instead, alternate titles are used. Yet, despite this alteration in title, these women are often perceived as equivalent to ordained rabbis.
There are a number of rabbis and organizations that ordain the equivalent of a female rabbi in modern orthodox circles. Between 2013 and 2022, the “Open Orthodox” Yeshivat Maharat in the US conferred rabbinic ordination upon 57 women. However, the titles Rabbi, Rabba, Maharat, Rabbanit, and Darshan are used interchangeably among the program’s graduates. Additionally, private institutions in Israel have ordained tens of female rabbis, including Beit Midrash Har’el.
There have been a number of women who were considered to have been ordained by a number of modern orthodox rabbis at the beginning of the 2000s, but since then, as mentioned, a number of organizations have institutionalized the process. Sara Hurwitz, an Orthodox Jewish spiritual leader aligned with the “Open Orthodox” faction of Modern Orthodoxy is considered by some to be the first female Orthodox rabbi. She serves as Rabba at the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale and is the president and co-founder of Yeshivat Maharat.
Comments are closed.