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Yalta and the Place of Anger in Leadership

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Manage episode 430613806 series 3581219
Content provided by Valley Beit Midrash. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Valley Beit Midrash or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

A virtual event presentation by Rabba Sara Hurwitz

The event was co-sponsored by Congregation Or Tzion

About the Event:

Is anger ever a useful tool to bring about change? Or is anger destructive and unbecoming for leaders? Does gender bias inherently affect the way we experience angry male or female leaders? Finally, can Yalta, one of the few named women in the Talmud, teach us anything about the place of anger and social change?

*Source Sheet: https://docs.google.com/document/d/122lvmLSbfgbvQZKeZe4yulxrEdR1ZrT6/edit

About the Speaker:

Rabba Sara Hurwitz, Co-Founder and President of Maharat, the first institution to ordain Orthodox women as clergy, also serves on the Rabbinic staff at the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale.

Rabba Hurwitz completed Drisha’s three-year Scholars Circle Program, an advanced intensive program of study for Jewish women training to become scholars, educators, and community leaders. After another five years of study under the auspices of Rabbi Avi Weiss, she was ordained by Rabbi Weiss and Rabbi Daniel Sperber in 2009.

In 2013 Rabba Hurwitz was awarded the Hadassah Foundation Bernice S. Tannenbaum prize and the Myrtle Wreath Award from the Southern New Jersey Region of Hadassah in 2014. In 2016, she was the Trailblazer Award Recipient at the UJA Federation of New York. She was named one of the Forward50 most influential Jewish leaders and Newsweek’s 50 most influential rabbis. In 2017 Rabba Hurwitz was chosen to be a member of the inaugural class of the Wexner Foundation Field
Fellows. She received the Rabbi Israel and Libby Mowshowitz Award from the New York Board of Rabbis in 2023.

She and her husband, Josh Abraham, are parents to Yonah, Zacharya, Davidi, and Natan.

★ Support this podcast ★
  continue reading

906 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 430613806 series 3581219
Content provided by Valley Beit Midrash. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Valley Beit Midrash or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

A virtual event presentation by Rabba Sara Hurwitz

The event was co-sponsored by Congregation Or Tzion

About the Event:

Is anger ever a useful tool to bring about change? Or is anger destructive and unbecoming for leaders? Does gender bias inherently affect the way we experience angry male or female leaders? Finally, can Yalta, one of the few named women in the Talmud, teach us anything about the place of anger and social change?

*Source Sheet: https://docs.google.com/document/d/122lvmLSbfgbvQZKeZe4yulxrEdR1ZrT6/edit

About the Speaker:

Rabba Sara Hurwitz, Co-Founder and President of Maharat, the first institution to ordain Orthodox women as clergy, also serves on the Rabbinic staff at the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale.

Rabba Hurwitz completed Drisha’s three-year Scholars Circle Program, an advanced intensive program of study for Jewish women training to become scholars, educators, and community leaders. After another five years of study under the auspices of Rabbi Avi Weiss, she was ordained by Rabbi Weiss and Rabbi Daniel Sperber in 2009.

In 2013 Rabba Hurwitz was awarded the Hadassah Foundation Bernice S. Tannenbaum prize and the Myrtle Wreath Award from the Southern New Jersey Region of Hadassah in 2014. In 2016, she was the Trailblazer Award Recipient at the UJA Federation of New York. She was named one of the Forward50 most influential Jewish leaders and Newsweek’s 50 most influential rabbis. In 2017 Rabba Hurwitz was chosen to be a member of the inaugural class of the Wexner Foundation Field
Fellows. She received the Rabbi Israel and Libby Mowshowitz Award from the New York Board of Rabbis in 2023.

She and her husband, Josh Abraham, are parents to Yonah, Zacharya, Davidi, and Natan.

★ Support this podcast ★
  continue reading

906 episodes

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