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Elisa Klapheck
Elisa Klapheck
from Wikipedia

Elisa Klapheck (born 10 December 1962) is the first female rabbi to serve in the Netherlands, although she was born in Germany.[1][2] She was also one of the organizers of Bet Debora [de] Berlin, a conference of European women rabbis, cantors, scholars, and rabbinically-educated Jews in Berlin in 1999.[3] She was ordained in 2004 by the Aleph Rabbinic Program, and in 2005 she became the rabbi of "Beit Ha'Chidush" (House of Renewal) in Amsterdam.[4] In 2009 she returned to Germany and has since been the rabbi of the "Egalitarian Minyan" in the Jewish Community of Frankfurt am Main. She is a member of the General Conference of Rabbis of Germany (ARK) and an associate member of the Rabbinic Board of "Liberal Judaism" in London.

Klapheck is also the author of Fraulein Rabbiner Jonas: The Story of the First Woman Rabbi, as well as How I Became a Rabbi, Jewish Challenges Here and Now. [5][6]

She was profiled in the book Turning the Kaleidoscope: Perspectives on European Jewry. [7] There is also an entry on her in Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. [8] In 2010, she was featured in the documentary Kol Ishah: The Rabbi is a Woman, directed by Hannah Heer. [9]

Publications

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  • Fräulein Rabbiner Jonas : the story of the first woman rabbi, 2004
  • Margarete Susman und ihr jüdischer Beitrag zur politischen Philosophie, 2013
  • Regina Jonas : die weltweit erste Rabbinerin, 2003
  • Wie ich Rabbinerin wurde, 2012
  • So bin ich Rabbinerin geworden jüdische Herausforderungen hier und jetzt, 2005
  • Säkulares Judentum aus religiöser Quelle, 2015

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Elisa Klapheck is a German rabbi known for her pioneering role as the first woman to serve as a rabbi in the Netherlands, her advocacy for women's emancipation in Judaism, and her leadership in liberal Jewish communities in Germany. Ordained in 2004 by the Aleph Rabbinic Program, she served as rabbi of Beit Ha’Chidush in Amsterdam from 2004 to 2008, marking a historic milestone in Dutch Jewish life. Since 2009, she has been the rabbi of the Egalitarian Minyan in Frankfurt am Main’s Jewish community, where she continues to promote progressive interpretations of Jewish tradition. Klapheck's work bridges rabbinic practice, academia, and activism. A trained political scientist and former journalist for outlets such as Der Tagesspiegel and Die Tageszeitung, she became active in Berlin’s Jewish community in the 1990s, co-founding the liberal Oranienburger Strasse synagogue and organizing the first Bet Debora conference for female rabbis, cantors, and scholars in 1999. Her 1999 book Fräulein Rabbiner Jonas: The Story of the First Woman Rabbi (English translation 2004) brought renewed attention to Regina Jonas, the first female rabbi in history, and influenced Klapheck's own path to the rabbinate. She has also held academic positions, serving as professor of Jewish studies at the University of Paderborn. In 2023, Klapheck became the first woman to chair the Allgemeine Rabbinerkonferenz Deutschland (ARK), the organization of non-Orthodox rabbis in Germany, where she focuses on fostering unity and substantive dialogue within Jewish religious life. Her efforts in interreligious dialogue, political engagement, and combating antisemitism have been widely recognized, including with the Marie-Juchacz-Frauenpreis in 2024 for her commitment to women's emancipation in Judaism and religion-politics dialogue. Klapheck remains a prominent voice in contemporary European Jewish thought and progressive religious leadership.

Early life

Birth and background

Elisa Klapheck was born in 1962 in Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany. She studied political science while simultaneously pursuing independent studies of Torah and Talmud.

Career

Elisa Klapheck worked as a journalist for major German newspapers including Der Tagesspiegel and Die Tageszeitung, as well as for radio and television. In 1997 she served as spokesperson for the Jewish Community in Berlin and editor-in-chief of the magazine Jüdisches Berlin. Active in Berlin’s Jewish community since the 1990s, she co-founded the liberal Oranienburger Strasse synagogue and initiated the Bet Debora project, organizing the first Bet Debora conference for female rabbis, cantors, and scholars in 1999. Ordained as a rabbi in 2004 by the Aleph Rabbinic Program, she served as rabbi of the progressive Jewish community Beit Ha’Chidush in Amsterdam from 2004 to 2008, becoming the first female rabbi in the Netherlands. Since 2009 she has been rabbi of the Egalitarian Minyan in Frankfurt am Main’s Jewish community. She is professor of Jewish studies at the University of Paderborn. In 2023 she became the first woman to chair the Allgemeine Rabbinerkonferenz Deutschland (ARK). Her media appearances are limited to interviews and documentaries on Jewish topics, feminism, and rabbinic history, including the 2008 documentary Kol Ishah: The Rabbi Is a Woman.

Personal life

Family and private life

Elisa Klapheck is married to Abraham de Wolff, a lawyer who serves as spokesperson for the Arbeitskreis jüdischer Sozialdemokratinnen und Sozialdemokraten. She has a younger brother, David Klapheck. No further details about her immediate family, such as children, or other aspects of her private life are documented in available public sources.
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